Rutashubanyuma
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- Sep 24, 2010
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Football News
Junior football coach lands job as Seychelles manager following mistaken identity
A junior football coach landed a job as the manager of Seychelles' national team after the country's football association mistook him for former Manchester City defender Andy Morrison.
Blue sky thinking: Seychelles may not have much of a team but their training facilities aren't too bad
By Telegraph staff 9:25AM GMT 24 Dec 2010
Andrew Amers-Morrison got the job while he was on holiday in the tropical island.
The local federation managed to confuse Amers-Morrison, 40, with the former City player who turned out for Kevin Keegan's side - handing the holidaymaker a two-year contract.
Chairman Suketu Patel said: "We thought we were getting the real Andy Morrison, but instead we have an impostor."
After realising that a mistake had been made Amers-Morrison's new bosses called him in for a meeting - where they incredibly gave him six months grace in which to prove he was up to the task.
Amers-Morrison did attempt to become a professional player in his youth, but saw his progress hampered by a series of injuries, before he turned his attention to coaching and set up the Samba Street Soccer School in London in 2005, a centre that helps disadvantaged children.
Junior football coach lands job as Seychelles manager following mistaken identity
A junior football coach landed a job as the manager of Seychelles' national team after the country's football association mistook him for former Manchester City defender Andy Morrison.
By Telegraph staff 9:25AM GMT 24 Dec 2010
Andrew Amers-Morrison got the job while he was on holiday in the tropical island.
The local federation managed to confuse Amers-Morrison, 40, with the former City player who turned out for Kevin Keegan's side - handing the holidaymaker a two-year contract.
Chairman Suketu Patel said: "We thought we were getting the real Andy Morrison, but instead we have an impostor."
After realising that a mistake had been made Amers-Morrison's new bosses called him in for a meeting - where they incredibly gave him six months grace in which to prove he was up to the task.
Amers-Morrison did attempt to become a professional player in his youth, but saw his progress hampered by a series of injuries, before he turned his attention to coaching and set up the Samba Street Soccer School in London in 2005, a centre that helps disadvantaged children.