Former Ghana assistant coach, George Boateng believes his coaching experience has fully prepared him for a managerial role, reflecting on the valuable lessons he has learned over the past 12 years.
Boateng, who was Otto Addo’s assistant during Ghana’s successful qualification for the 2022 FIFA World Cup, shared his thoughts on how his coaching journey has shaped him into a more capable and experienced leader.
Having spent the last several years as an assistant, Boateng feels he is now ready to take on the responsibility of managing his own team.
“I have been coaching now for 12 years and I have to say that it has been a great learning curve, a good journey filled with great moments,” he told Tribal Football.
“I have been an assistant in the last few roles that I have had and right now I feel that I am much more advanced as a coach and that I have learned a lot now and evolved myself and I am ready now to take my own team whether that would be in Australia, Europe, US because I don’t mind and I am up for a challenge as long as the club has the same philosophy as mine,” he added.
Boateng, who also served as Black Stars assistant coach under Chris Hughton left his role after the 2023 AFCON tournament in Ivory Coast.