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Jairzinho (m)
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I hope all young African players read & learn: Former Manchester United midfielder Eric Djemba-Djemba, now plying his trade in Qatar, was in such dire financial straits when at Old Trafford - despite his £75,000-a-month wage - that it is alleged he relied upon appearance and win bonuses to get by. It is also claimed he ran a fleet of 10 4x4 vehicles and juggled 30 bank accounts at the time. He was declared bankrupt in at a Birmingham court last September.http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/sport/football.html?in_article_id=533530&in_page_id=1779
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segunpc (m)
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djemba djemba ti rundown 
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4 Play (m)
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Mongay said: "Eric is on a different planet. He simply has no notion of money. At one point, he had 30 different bank accounts. He was juggling between credits.
"There was a time when he owned 10 4x4-drive cars — 10! I kept telling him all the time to watch out. When he arrived at Manchester United, I decided to take over the running of his accounts. It used to take me four hours a day! At United he was earning about £75,000 basic per month. But every penny was going straight to loan repayments. He was having to live on bonuses and extras. He started to ask United for advances and, at a club like that, something like that doesn't go down well."
Djemba-Djemba made his name first with Nantes, where he emerged as a hard-tackling midfielder. He was identified by United boss Sir Alex Ferguson as a potential replacement for Roy Keane and signed for £2.5million in 2003.
An unequivocal failure during one-and-a-half seasons with United, Ferguson has subsequently hinted at problems off the field but has never expanded on them. Here, it appears, is the remarkable truth.
French sources have revealed that Djemba-Djemba's troubles with money began when he began to earn decent wages at Nantes. As the player himself admitted: "African footballers tend to give all their money to their compatriots. I even helped complete unknowns. I was young, I was cocky, I took no account of anything. Nowadays, I say no." http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/sport/football.html?in_article_id=533530&in_page_id=1779
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subice (m)
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The guy was even asking for advance payment!  An EPL and Man Utd player. No wonder he didn't make it in the EPL, his focus was elsewhere. http://www.tribalfootball.com/article.php?id=83132 When he arrived at Manchester United, I decided to take over the running of his accounts. It used to take me four hours a day! At United he was earning about £75,000 basic per month.
"But every penny was going straight to loan repayments. He was having to live on bonuses and extras. He started to ask United for advances and, at a club like that, something like that doesn't go down well
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Jairzinho (m)
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Quite sad.
I hope our young players learn.
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tkb417 (m)
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he chose to be poor so be it 
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akinalabi (m)
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That's why I laugh when people say premier league players can never go broke again.
Financial indiscipline is the same at all levels. If you can't manage N100k monthly now, you wont be able to manage £100k.
A lot of premier league players get their cars withdrawn because they can't make up the repayments.
Sad!
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folahann (m)
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Intelligent players will never go broke once playing in Europe and even in some African leagues what was that guy doing with 10 cars; a typical african
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