Ghana Black Stars Coach Stevanovic Insists He Makes His Owns Decisions

Ghana coach Goran Stevanovic has asked Ghanaians to trust in his ability to make the right calls for the Black Stars and insists he is the man solely in charge of player call-ups to the national team.

The Serbian’s decision to leave the in-form Andre Ayew out of the side for the two games against Sudan and Nigeria and the seeming inconsistencies in the criteria for player call-ups was the main subject of an inquisition at his pre-game press conference before the international friendly against Nigeria.

Suggestions that other non-football factors have influenced his recent call ups, a section heavily pursued by sections of the media seems to have riled the Serbian who was facing the Ghanaian media for he first time since the controversial calls.

And he used the occasion to insist that for every game he makes the call on which players to call up based on the opponent.

He claimed the Olympique Marseille midfielder was not fully fit at the time he was finalizing his squad for the two games and and said e was not sure if he will recover in good time. “I think I made a good decision,” he added.

Asked about the continued absence of AC Milan midfielder Kevin-Prince Boateng from the side, Stevanovic insisted the door was not shut in the face of any player.

“Door is open for everybody. I don’t forget. Rule for all is discipline. The players believe me and I believe in the team too.”

As the inquisition centred heavily on the decisions he has made as Ghana boss at the expense of the Nigeria game, the Serbian lost his cool briefly, suggesting it was not right to be focussing on absent players after qualification for the Nations Cup.

“I don’t know why after a great game against Sudan to qualify for the Nations Cup we need to walkabout negative things. I take decisions and I stand by the decisions,” he adds.

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Serbian Goran Stevanovic Will Be The New Coach For Ghana Black Stars

Serbian Goran Stevanovic
Nyarko Benso

The new coach for the Ghana Black Stars will be Serbian Goran Stevanovic. The Ghana Football Association (GFA) will make the official announcement by next week.

The Serbian is expected in Accra by next week to discuss his terms of the contract and salary.

On Wednesday, the GFA had announced that the new coach will be known within two weeks.

GFA board members met with sports ministry officials on Wednesday to discuss their plans of naming a new coach of the Black Stars.

The GFA, according to sources, told ministry officials that Stevanovic was the best coach they have agreed on after interviewing three coaches.

Other contestants were Portuguese Humberto Coelho and Ghanaian Herbert Addo.

A GFA official announcement is expected by next week.

The Black Stars have an international assignment next month and it is certain that the new coach will be named in time.

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Ghana: Award List Dominated by Football Players

Black Stars of Ghana
Ghana Black Stars

Two members of the Black Stars are in the running for the Personality of the Year 2010 award, the highest honour by the Sports Writers Association of Ghana (SWAG).

Ghana’s Asamoah Gyan and Richard Kingson face competition from national bantamweight boxing champion, Joseph Agbeko for the award to be decided later in May. The public will contribute to deciding the overall winner via a mobile text poll.

Just like recent times, football again dominates the 2010 nominations.

Both Gyan and Kingson are again nominated for the Footballer of the Year prize with Andre Ayew as the third nominee.

Ex-Ghana coach Milovan Rajevac and coach of the local Black Stars side Herbert Addo have been put up for the Coach of the Year award.

President of the Ghana Football Association Kwesi Nyantakyi would be honoured with the Chairman of the Year prize.

A successful run of results in 2010 has seen the Black Stars selected for the Team of the Year while ex-Ghana captain Stephen Appiah would be presented with the Dedication and Valour award.

Kevin-Prince Boateng and headline sponsor of the Black Stars, Gold Fields Ghana would be presented with Special Awards.

The sports media group today announced the nominees for the various sporting disciplines in the country during the year under review.

According to SWAG, the performance of the sportsmen both at the national and international levels served the criteria for settling on the nominees.

Award Nominees

Personality of the Year – Asamoah Gyan, Richard Kingson, Joseph Agbeko

Footballer of the Year – Andre Ayew, Asamoah Gyan, Richard Kingson.

Coach of the Year – Milovan Rajevac, Herbert Addo

Chairman of the Year – Kwesi Nyantakyi

Team of the Year – Black Stars

Dedication and Valour – Stephen Appiah

Special Awards – Kevin Prince Boateng, Gold Fields Ghana Limited

Source: Ghanafa.org

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Ghana Is Not Moved by Nigeria, Coach

Ghana Black Satellites (bottom) and Nigerian Flying Eagles (top)
Ghana Black Satellites (bottom) and Nigerian Flying Eagles (top)
Seth Appiah

THE coach of the Ghana Black Satellites, Orlando Wellington has told Goal.com he is aware of the pressure that comes with it to lead the defending champion to the upcoming African U-20 Championship in Libya.

“It’s not going to be easy but we’re ready for it. We have been there before and we know how it feels to get to the top and we’re ready to repeat history,” he said.

Ghana is in Group B described as the ‘Group of Death’ that comprise Nigeria, Cameroun, and Gambia while host Libya has been paired in Group A alongside Mali, Egypt and Lesotho.

Wellington noted he is aware of the capabilities of his opponents but the challenge spurs his side on to go for laurels.

“We’re in a tough group but with deter-mi-nation we can scale over them. I have confidence in my boys and they are ready for the task,” he assured.

The semi-finalists will represent the continent at the FIFA U-20 World Cup slated for Colombia later in the year.

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Kevin Prince Boateng: The story of a genius in the making

Kevin Prince Boateng, Ghana-Uruguay in South Africa
If imitation is the measure of success then I am a genius, a paraphrased quote from Oscar Wilde credits mavericks and loners whose behaviour sparks imitations from copycats. Now the famed bohemian’s assertions might have been self serving but could also be a viable benchmark for unparalleled human achievement.
Kevin Prince Boateng’s quest to switch nationality and seek solace playing for a country other than the nation of his birth might not represent a remarkable sporting feat but could in the long run inspire similar defections from nationals residing in countries as second or third generation citizens.
The Boateng saga is a slice of modernism believe it or not. The millions of Ghanaians who left our shores are remitting the country with more than just foreign money.
The yet to be celebrated genius may have shown the way to our lawyers, doctors, engineers and all gifted professionals who have opted to commit their skills and abilities to the development of the western world in lieu of serving the continent that they hailed from.
As Kevin Prince Boateng gains more favour in Ghana for being the victim of biased or unfair treatment of foreigners by Europeans, his status grows in dimension and scope thrusting him into the class of social icons like Rosa Parks who defied the status quo for the sake of social justice.
The irony is that, iconoclastic behaviour initially tends to incur the wrath of on-lookers who are ill- equipped to discern the merits in non-conformist behaviour.
Placing Kevin’s decision in its proper context, one sees an act of virtue based on insight lost on some of the continent’s brightest products. Mario Balotelli another sensational footballer of Ghanaian origin still awaits a call up to the Azzuris, the national squad of Italy. In spite of the many indicators that, he is better off committing his international career to Ghana, he is still nurturing the hope that he can make history as the first black player to break into the Italian squad.
Boateng’s decision to play for Ghana is likely to discourage that kind of blind allegiance to a developed world that continues to ignore the efforts and merits of immigrants.
For showing the way, I dare call Mr Boateng a genius in keeping with Oscar Wilde’s definition of the term and bid all Ghanaians and Africans in fact to welcome a noble son from the continent who saw the light under the most unusual of circumstances. Kevin Prince Boateng, you are welcome home!!!!!
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Ghana Hit by World Cup bonus row

By Michael Oti Adjei
BBC Sport, Accra

Ghana’s achievement in reaching the World Cup quarter-finals has been soured by a row over bonuses.

None of the players has received the $63,000 promised to each member of the Black Stars because of a procedural dispute with the Bank of Ghana.

The Black Stars danced their way to the quarter-finals in South Africa
The Black Stars danced their way to the quarter-finals in South Africa

The central bank is insisting on paying the players by depositing money in their individual accounts.

But the players are up in arms because they want to be paid directly in cash as has happened in the past.

“The Bank states it serves customers in accordance with the Bank’s operational guidelines and that it is against prudent operational practice to make payments to individuals in excess of $10,000 (ten thousand dollars) in over-the-counter transactions,” the Bank of Ghana said in a statement.

The statement went on: “Accordingly, the Bank has informed the Ministry of Youth and Sports that the Bank would pay the foreign exchange amounts in question either to the bank accounts of the Black Stars players, or by cheques drawn on the Bank’s external account.

“This is in line with international best practice and with various security considerations.

“The Bank has therefore requested the Ministry to furnish it with a list of the names of the players and the respective amounts to each player to enable it to make the payments.

“The Bank is still expecting a response from the Ministry.”

The central bank was forced to issue the statement after accusations last week that it was responsible for the delay in the payment of the players bonuses.

The bonus row overshadowed Ghana’s last African Cup of Nations qualifier against Sudan.

A deadline of 15 October set by deputy Sports Minister Nii Nortey Duah passed without a single penny being paid out to anyone.

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