The renowned coach changes his last name, is ashamed of Serbian background: Shan Milosevic

Renowned coach Nestor El Maestro prevents him from having a nickname similar to Balkan criminal Slobodan Milosevic. He has changed his last name only because he is ashamed to be of origin from Serbia. He was born in 1983 in Belgrade, while his first name was Nestor Jevtic. He already lives [...]
He has changed his last name only because he is ashamed to be of origin from Serbia.
He was born in 1983 in Belgrade, while his first name was Nestor Jevtic.
He already lives in England and has changed his last name at the age of 16 after the “ic” is the same as that of Milosevic.
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I'd like to take that thing off. After so many years in England, I felt British, but I was also ashamed to be from Serbia, since at that time the whole world viewed him as a aggressor. Tiran Slobodan Milosevic, whose last name ends as mine (with ec) has been sentenced for war crimes”, has said Nestor in an interview for “Gardian”.
For the first time, he changed his last name when he became John Smith, later called it Nestor, but he added El Maestro to it because it sounded like “col” and is now known by that name.
I'm now El Maestro, longer than I was, the Jevtic, and I'm used to living with this surname”, the 35-year-old coach said.
He was an assistant to Schalke 04, Hannover 96, Hamburg, Austria Wien. In 2017, Nestor began his first coaching the Slovak team, Sporting Trnava.
It is currently CSKA Sofia coach in Bulgaria, and is only 35-year-old. /Periscopi/












