Ghana national football team
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| Nickname(s) | The Black Stars | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Association | Ghana Football Association | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Confederation | CAF (Africa) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Head coach | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Captain | Stephen Appiah | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Most caps | Samuel Kuffour (59)[2] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Top scorer | Abédi Pelé (33) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Home stadium | Ohene Djan Sports Stadium | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| FIFA code | GHA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| FIFA ranking | 26 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Highest FIFA ranking | 14 (February, April, May 2008) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lowest FIFA ranking | 89 (June 2004) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Elo ranking | 37 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Highest Elo ranking | 14 (30 June 1966) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lowest Elo ranking | 97 (14 June 2004) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| First international | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(Accra, Gold Coast; 21 May 1950) |
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| Biggest win | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(Nairobi, Kenya; 12 December 1965)[3] |
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| Biggest defeat | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(São José do Rio Preto, Brazil; 27 March 1996)[4][5] |
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| World Cup | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Appearances | 1 (First in 2006) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Best result | Round 2, 2006 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| African Nations Cup | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Appearances | 16 (First in 1963) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Best result | Winners, 1963, 1965, 1978, 1982 |
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| Olympic medal record | |||
| Men's Football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Bronze | 1992 Barcelona[6] | Team | |
The Ghana national football team, popularly known as the Black Stars, is the national association football team of Ghana and is controlled by the Ghana Football Association. Before gaining independence from Great Britain in 1957, the country played as the Gold Coast.
Although the team did not qualify for the senior FIFA World Cup until 2006 they had actually qualified for five straight Olympic Games Football Tournaments when the tournament was still a full senior National Team competition. The team have won the African Cup of Nations four times[7] (in 1963, 1965, 1978, and 1982), making Ghana the second most successful team in the contest's history, behind Egypt.
Ghanaian teams has enjoyed considerable success at in FIFA's age-restricted tournaments. The Ghana U17 team, the Black Starlets, have won the FIFA Under-17 World Cup title twice and finished as runner-up twice. The Ghana U20 team, the Black Satellites, have also finished as runner-up at the FIFA Under-20 World Cup twice. The Ghana Olympic Team[6], the Black Meteors, became the first African Country to win a medal in Football at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
After going through 2005 unbeaten, Ghana won the FIFA World Rankings Most Improved team of the year award and they reached the second round of the 2006 Germany World Cup.
Contents |
[edit] History
The Ghana Amateur Football Association was founded in 1957, soon after the country's independence, and was affiliated to both CAF and FIFA the following year, Englishman George Ainsley being appointed coach of the national team.
In 1960, the Black Stars played Spanish giants Real Madrid, who were at the time Spanish, European and intercontinental champions, and drew 3-3.
Charles Kumi Gyamfi became coach in 1961, and Ghana won successive African Cup of Nations titles, in 1963 and 1965, and achieved their record win, 13-0 away to Kenya, shortly after the second of these. They also reached the final of the tournament in 1968 and 1970, losing 1-0 on each occasion, to DR Congo and Sudan respectively. Their domination of this tournament earned the country the nickname of "the Brazil of Africa" in the 1960s[8]. The team had no success in FIFA World Cup qualification during this era, and failed to qualify for three successive African Cup of Nations in the 1970s, but qualified for the Olympic Games Football Tournaments, reaching the quarter finals in 1964 and withdrawing on political grounds in 1976 and 1980.
Ghana again won the African Cup of Nations in 1978, retaining the Abdelaziz Abdallah Salem Trophy in perpetuity for having won it three times, and 1982, but a relatively barren period followed, with the full national team dominating the short lived West African Nations Cup from 1982-87, but making little progress in continent-wide competitions until the appointment of Burkhard Ziese as coach in 1991. The 1992 African Cup of Nations, after three failures to reach the final tournament, saw Ghana finish second, beaten on penalties in the final by Côte d'Ivoire.
Disharmony among the squad, which eventually lead to parliamentary and executive intervention to settle issues between two of the team, Abedi Pele and Anthony Yeboah, may have played some part in the failure of the team to build on the successes of the national underage teams. Ghana slipped to 89th place in the FIFA World Rankings, but a new generation of players who went to the 2001 FIFA World Youth Championship final became the core of the team at the 2002 African Cup of Nations and the 2004 Olympic Games[6], and were undefeated for a year in 2005 and reached the finals of the 2006 FIFA World Cup, the first time the team had reached the global stage of the tournament. Ghana started with a 2-0 defeat to eventual champions Italy, but wins over the Czech Republic (2-0) and USA (2-1) saw them through to the second round, where they were beaten 3-0 by Brazil.
[edit] Team honours
- African Cup of Nations runners-up: 3
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- 1982, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1987
- All-African Games: 2 Bronze medals
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- 1978, 2003
[edit] World Cup record
- 1962 - Did Not Qualify
- 1966 - Withdrew from Qualification
- 1970 to 1978 - Did Not Qualify
- 1982 - Withdrew from Qualification
- 1986 to 2002 - Did Not Qualify
- 2006 - Second Round
[edit] African Nations Cup record
Ghana started with a 2-0 defeat to Italy. However, they bounced back with a shock 2-0 victory over the Czech Republic
followed by a 2-1 victory over the USA team
to finish second in Group E and continue through to the next round along with eventual Champions Italy. Ghana's unlikely run ended when they met defending World Champions Brazil in the Second Round. Influential player Michael Essien was suspended from the match for his two yellow card's earlier in the Tournament. Despite all of this, Ghana dictated the style and pace of this match, surprising many with several near-goals[9]. In the end, Brazil won 3-0, although there was some controversy over the first two goals scored by Ronaldo and Adriano as they were both offside[10]. Slovakian referee Ľuboš Micheľ also sent off Asamoah Gyan in the 82' for falling in the Brazilian penalty area. Zé Roberto scored the third for Brazil off a breakaway soon after[11].
Ghana were the only African side to advance to Round 2 of 2006 FIFA World Cup (Côte d'Ivoire, Togo, Angola, and Tunisia were all eliminated in group play), and the sixth nation in a row from Africa to progress beyond the group stages of the World Cup. Ghana was the youngest team in the FIFA World Cup 2006 with an average age of 23 yrs and 352 days.
Because of Ghana's performances in the tournament, there has been praise for their continuous efforts to push forward and their fearless attitude. Greece Coach Otto Rehhagel told FIFA.com, the teams you used to regard as a little behind tactically, the Africans for example, have caught up. They're physically even better off than we are, as they have tremendous natural athleticism, and they've come on enormously in the areas which were non-existent before, discipline and tactics for example. Every team which faced Ghana or Cote d'Ivoire knew they'd been in a game. FIFA.com says Black stars ascend to glory. BBC says: Ghana going forward[12].
Of the 32 countries that participated in the 2006 FIFA World Cup, Ghana was ranked the 13th Best Nation by FIFA.
| 2006 FIFA World Cup Matches | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Category | Team A | Result | Team B | Date | Venue | Scorers |
| Round of 16 | 3-0 | 27 June | Signal Iduna Park, Dortmund | Brazil: Ronaldo 5, Adriano 45+, Ze Roberto 84) [1] First Half; Second Half |
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| Group E | 2-1 | 22 June | Frankenstadion, Nuremberg | Ghana Dramani 22, Appiah 47+; USA: Clint Dempsey 43)[2] Pre-Match; 1st Half; 2nd half |
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| Group E | 2-0 | 17 June | RheinEnergieStadion, Cologne | Ghana: Asamoah 2, Muntari 82) [3] |
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| Group E | 2-0 | 12 June | AWD-Arena, Hannover | Italy: Pirlo, 40 Iaquinta 83)[4] |
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[edit] Recent results
[edit] Current squad
Head coach:
Milovan Rajevac Appointed on 12 August 2008
| Most Recent Squad | ||
|---|---|---|
| Date announced | 28 August 2008 [21] | |
| Game(s) | ||
| Venue(s) | Sekondi Stadium, Sekondi, Ghana | |
| Competition | 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification | |
| Dropped | Ayew, Barusso, Quincy | |
| Debutant(s) | Daniel Yeboah, Quansah | |
| Injured | *Sarpei, Asamoah, Essien | |
| Called Up | Inkoom, Boye | |
| Notes | Mario Balotelli Excused | |
- Goalkeepers
| Name | DOB | Club | Caps (goals) | Debut |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Richard Kingson | June 13, 1978 | 61 (1) | v Brazil, 27 March 1996 |
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| William Amamoo | April 4, 1982 | 1 (0) | v Australia, 23 May 2008 |
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| George Owu | July 7, 1982 | 7 (0) | v Somalia, 19 November 2003 |
- Defenders
| Name | DOB | Club | Caps (goals) | Debut |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hans Sarpei | June 28, 1976 | 23 (0) | v Zimbabwe, 7 November 2000 | |
| Eric Addo | November 12, 1978 | 30 (0) | v Tunisia, 9 February 1998 | |
| Harrison Afful | June 24, 1986 | 9 (0) | v Ivory Coast, 9 February 2008 | |
| Francis Dickoh | December 13, 1982 | 11 (0) | v Saudi Arabia 14 November 2005 | |
| John Mensah (vc) | November 29, 1982 | 59 (0) | v Algeria 5 December 2001 | |
| John Pantsil | June 15, 1981 | 47 (0) | v Algeria, 5 December 2001 | |
| Issah Ahmed | May 24, 1982 | 13 (0) | v Burkina Faso 5 June 2005 | |
| John Boye | April 23, 1987 | 2 (0) | v Gabon 22 June 2008 |
- Midfielders
| Name | DOB | Club | Caps (goals) | Debut |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stephen Appiah (c) | December 24, 1980 | 55 (13) | v Benin, 24 December 1996 | |
| Michael Essien | December 3, 1982 | 43 (8) | v Egypt 4 January 2002 | |
| Laryea Kingston | November 7, 1980 | 30 (6) | v Congo DR, 27 March 2005 | |
| Sulley Ali Muntari | August 27, 1984 | 44 (13) | v Slovenia, 17 May 2002 | |
| Anthony Annan | July 21, 1986 | 18 (0) | v Austria 24 March 2007 | |
| Ahmed Barusso | December 26, 1984 | on loan from |
7 (1) | v Rwanda, 6 July 2003 |
| Prince Buaben | April 23, 1988 | 1 (0) | v Australia 23 May 2008 | |
| Haminu Dramani | April 1, 1986 | on loan from |
29 (3) | v Saudi Arabia 14 November 2005 |
| Moussa Narry | April 19, 1986 | 3 (0) | v Togo, 18 November 2007 | |
| André Ayew | December 17, 1989 | on loan from |
10 (0) | v Senegal, 21 August 2007 |
- Strikers
| Name | DOB | Club | Caps (goals) | Debut |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peter Ofori-Quaye | March 21, 1980 | 32 (17) | v ? | |
| Asamoah Gyan | November 22, 1985 | 27 (13) | v Somalia, 19 November 2003 | |
| Junior Agogo | August 1, 1979 | 23 (11) | v Japan 4 October 2006 | |
| Emmanuel Badu Agyeman | February 12, 1990 | 2 (0) | v Australia 23 May 2008 | |
| Chris Dickson | December 28, 1984 | 1 (0) | v Tanzania, 20 August 2008 | |
| Eric Bekoe | December 10, 1986 | 5 (0) | v Mexico, 26 March 2008 | |
| Quincy Owusu-Abeyie | April 15, 1986 | on loan from |
10 (1) | v Guinea, 20 January 2008 |
| Prince Tagoe | November 9, 1986 | 9 (2) | v Togo 11 January 2006 |
[edit] Recent callups
The following players have also been called up to the Ghana squad recently: