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CONAS GH

2 years ago

OTTO ADDO?S ARRIVAL AS HEAD COACH OF THE BLACK STARS MAY BE A BLESSING IN DISGUISE

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2 years ago



Otto Addo’s arrival as head coach of the Black Stars may be a blessing in disguise

 

 

 

 

Otto Addo's appearance as lead trainer of the Black Stars might be a blessing in disguise for Germany-conceived Ghanaian footballers who have been nursing hopes to play in the senior public group.

 

As he builds his side for the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar, it appears the Borussia Dortmund ability coach might be discreetly incorporating his German-style into the Black Stars as the specialized group appears to be inclining in the direction of players who carry out their specialty in Germany.

 

Since he was selected as assistant to previous Black Stars coach, Milovan Rajevac, there has been a deluge of players playing their exchange the Bundesliga or German second-level rivalry, remembering those brought into the world for Germany to Ghanaian parents who have as of late switched nationalities to represent Ghana.

 

Brought up in Germany where he played for Hannover 96, Borussia Dortmund, Mainz 05, and Hamburg SV, Coach Addo's first choice when he directed Ghana to the 2022 World Cup was to start from home'', which implied he needed to rapidly take a gander at players qualified to play for Ghana from Germany.

 

Strong inclination

 

As a scout for the public group some years prior, the Germany-conceived coach showed an inclination for players rising up out of the German system which has seen a developing number of Germany-based players in the group as of late, including the period when Charles Akonnor was lead trainer of the public group. During this time players such as Daniel Kofi Kyereh (Freiburg SV), Christopher Antwi Agyei (VfL Bochum), Kwesi Okyere Wriedt (Holstein Keil) and Braydon Manu (SV Darmstadt) have been essential for the public group with a developing impact off German football.

 

Early this month, the Ghana Football Association (GFA) declared that six players - - Tariq Lamptey, Inaki Williams, Mohammed Salisu, Stephan Ambrosius, Patrick Pfeifer, and Ransford Yeboah - - have made themselves accessible for selection for the public group subsequent to being pursued by the FA and Coach Addo.

 

Of the new players, defensive midfielder Stephan Ambrosius, defender Patric Pfeffer and forward Ransford Yeboah were brought into the world in Germany, with two of them switching faithfulness as of late having previously represented the German under-21 side.

 

Before very long, Ghana could move honorary pathway for some unfamiliar based stars such as Callum Hudson-Odoi and Eddie Nketiah, both of whom previously represented England's under2-1 side however are accepted to be currently switching ethnicity. However, there could be a stronger German effect in the group as other qualified players and the GFA go through the processes for ethnicity switch.

 

Proficient system

 

For Ghana football legend, Tony Baffoe, the German effect in the public group goes past Coach Addo however takes its roots in the country's faith in the productivity of the German football system.

 

"We must also recall that Germany is one of the countries with huge Ghanaian populations just like England and the United States, so it shouldn't be surprising that we're having players from that country because Germany has perhaps the best football systems on the planet so the products are normally top class," said Baffoe, who first played for Ghana in 1991.

 

The previous Fortuna Dusseldorf star, who was brought up in Germany, told the Graphic Sports last Thursday uninvolved of the send off of the life account for Ghana legend, Mohammed Ahmed Polo, that some of Ghana's amazing coaches such as Charles Kumi Gyamfi, Fred Osam-Duodu, Sam Arday, among others, were undeniably prepared in Germany so they have always had faith in the German system which has also ensured that the public group at various times been coaches by Germans.

 

"Take a gander at the nature of players who have emerged from the German system, players such as Sammy Kuffour, Tony Yeboah, Abedi Pele, C.K. Akonnor, Ibrahim Tanko, Otto Addo, and, surprisingly, some Ghanaians who played for the German public teams like David Odonkor and Gerald Asamoah. It's is about the quality and not necessarily what they are used to," made sense of 57-year-old Baffoe, who was up to this point the Deputy General Secretary of the African Football.

 

 

 

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