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EXPOSED: TS Galaxy coach Ramovic’s time in one of the best leagues
The 'beef' between Sead Ramovic and Rulani Mokwena that has been simmering ringside has provided stimulating episodes for the football fraternity.
Ramovic has not shied away from returning his punches straight into the face of Mokwena with his series of utterances in what has now also led to a court case.
READ: Let's meet in court, Rulani tells TS Galaxy
"If a guy wants to advertise his ignorance, you don't have to do anything," said Ramovic in reference to the Mamelodi Sundowns head coach.
"If you see what financial power we have and what other teams have, especially Mr Sunshine...," he added this week, in words directed at Mokwena after the 1-1 draw with Sundowns.
"I don't like attention, because I played in one of the best leagues, and the other one probably played badminton," uttered Ramovic on another occasion this month in response to Mokwena addressing him as an attention seeker.
The best league referred to being the German Bundesliga, where he spent three years as cover-up goalkeeper at VfL Wolfsburg.

KickOff.com breaks down the three years that Ramovic spent in the top tier of German football playing under Wolfgang Wolf, Jurgen Rober and Eric Gerets.
In his first season (2001/02), Wolfsburg finished 10th with Ramovic only playing twice behind first-choice Claus Reitmaier.
Both games ended in defeat for Wolfsburg, with Ramovic conceding three goals in each of those matches.
The following season, his appearances count in the league moved up to five and he conceded five in those games, two of which were against Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund.
Reitmaier was first choice again.
Then, in his third and final season in the top tier league of German football and with Reitmaier gone, Ramovic was handed eight games and conceded 18, including five against VfB Stuttgart and four away at Bayer Leverkusen.
Wolfsburg finished in 10th position with new arrival Simon Jentzsch playing as first choice.
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That was to be the end of Ramovic's time in 'one of the best leagues', which had him total 15 appearances (29 goals conceded and three clean sheets) in three years.
The rest of his career was then spent in the lower leagues of Germany, Norway, Turkey, Ukraine, Denmark and Serbia, where he also worked as an assistant coach.
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