Former Black Stars Forward Kevin Prince Boateng Rocks With Lover

Source: NewsOne

She’s been accused of distracting him from his football career and from these pictures, it’s not difficult to see why.

Sports Illustrated model Melisa Satta showed off her enviable figure in Miami as she frolicked in the ocean with AC Milan boyfriend Kevin-Prince Boateng and he was happy to be the sole focus of her attention.

The couple heated things up in the sunshine as they passionately kissed while taking a dip, oblivious of other holidaymakers.

Gorgeous 26-year-old Melissa wore a bright striped bikini which struggled to contain her ample curves and showed off her pert bottom.

A star tattoo on each of her hips and a larger tattoo on her right shoulder were also visible.

Meanwhile, Kevin, 25, showcased his impressive collection of body art as he took to the beach in a pair of black shorts.

The playful couple appeared to be re-enacting scenes from the movie ‘Dirty Dancing’ at one stage as Kevin lifted Melissa out of the water. Continue reading “Former Black Stars Forward Kevin Prince Boateng Rocks With Lover”

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Ghana Black Stars Players Talk Too Much, Says Former Captain

Source: liquidsportsghana

Former Black Stars captain Stephen Appiah believes the current crop of national team players “talk too much.”

Appiah, who captained the Stars to their two previous appearances at the Fifa World Cup in 2006 and 2010, feels there is a tendency to lose focus when players speak on too many occasions ahead of crucial matches.

“The players talk too much,” he said in an interview with Asempa Sports adding that “during my time we were not talking too much.”

“Essien, Sulley and I were not talking too much.” They should keep quiet and let their feet do the talking.”

Ghana suffered a painful 1:0 loss to Zambia in 2014 World Cup qualifier last Saturday but Appiah is confident that the Stars can still secure qualification drawing on the team’s previous experience in 2005. Continue reading “Ghana Black Stars Players Talk Too Much, Says Former Captain”

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I’m not Distracted by Music – Asamoah Gyan

By Michael Oti Adjei

Asamoah Gyan has dismissed fears that his love of music will damage his chances of success in football.

Gyan says football remains his main priority

The Sunderland and Ghana striker is heavily involved on the local music scene in his country, featuring in a number of hit songs.

“Many European players play golf in their leisure time,” said Gyan. “I choose to record music.”

His latest duet with musician Castro – ‘Do the Dance’ – is climbing up the music charts.

An earlier offering from the duo, called ‘African Girls’, is the song of choice for many in Ghana.

Last Friday, Gyan appeared at a music show in Accra featuring Ghanaian and Nigerian artists.

Despite his relative success as a recording artist, two former Black Stars strikers are concerned that Gyan’s musical interest might affect his concentration on the job at hand.

Former Leeds United and Hamburg goal machine Anthony Yeboah is one of several people in Ghana worried by the impact of Gyan’s music on his football.

Yeboah has gone on record telling the 2010 BBC African Footballer of the Year to “put the music aside and concentrate on the football.”

And that call has been echoed by former Ghana international Felix Aboagye.

“It’s important for him to understand that if he wants to get to the top, he must stop the music and concentrate on the game,” Aboagye said.

“He may get confused at a point as to what he really wants to do. He should choose the game because music can distract him,” he added.

But Gyan has dismissed the fears, saying he is perfectly capable of playing football and moonlighting as a musician.

He said: “I love music but it doesn’t mean I’m not focused on the football.”

“I’m very, very focused because football made me who I am today.”

Gyan told BBC Sport that he will not allow his work ethic to slip because winning trophies with club and country remains his ultimate aim.

“I can’t play jokes with my job because if you joke with your job, your job will joke with you. I’m not a musician but I love music.

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Ghana Black Stars Light Up Wembley

ESPNSoccernet

Sir Alex Ferguson should try telling Ghana fans that international friendlies are a “waste of time”. A day after the Manchester United boss also labelled the fixtures “worthless”, 21,000 ecstatic Black Stars supporters celebrated Asamoah Gyan’s last-gasp Wembley equaliser as though it had erased all the heartache of last summer’s World Cup quarter-final exit in an instant.

Gyan’s leveller was a fitting reward for Ghana’s industrious players and their incredible followers who, teeming with technicolour and vociferous in volume, helped create the sort of carnival atmosphere not experienced in an international at Wembley since Euro ’96. “I have never seen anything like it in my life, they are the greatest fans, for me, in the world,” Black Stars coach Goran Stevanovic beamed after the game.

It felt closer to Accra than Acton, especially in the press box where partisan Ghanaian journalists sported Black Stars hats, scarves, headbands and tracksuits to make sure their English counterparts knew exactly where their allegiance lay. They belted out the national anthem and were deafening when the tireless Gyan finally got the goal that his persistence deserved. Time and again it had seemed Ghana’s fanatical faithful would leave empty handed. But, drawing on the spirit that made them the neutrals’ undisputed favourite in South Africa, they upset the odds again, as the Sunderland striker tiptoed inside Joleon Lescott and curled a left-foot effort past Joe Hart in stoppage time.

Stevanovic’s side displayed plenty of attacking intent and the African visitors were certainly given plenty to cheer about by a side determined to prove why they made last summer’s quarter-finals while England laboured to a disappointing second-round exit. Gyan and Dominic Adiyiah were bursting with energy and their movement, coupled with Sulley Muntari’s guile, served to fluster Phil Jagielka, Gary Cahill and later Lescott.

Hart was called into action to deny Adiyiah twice in the first-half. The Ghana striker first sped onto a through-ball from Muntari that bamboozled both Jagielka and Cahill, but the Manchester City goalkeeper rushed out of his goal and diverted the ball to safety. Hart was again required minutes later, producing a sensational diving save to prevent Adiyiah’s back-post shot from creeping in.

But Ghana were to head into the interval behind. Almost 15 years after Alan Shearer first really demonstrated his international pedigree by lighting up the European Championships at Wembley, his heir apparent and fellow Geordie No. 9 Andy Carroll snatched the first goal of what Three Lions fans hope can be an equally impressive England career. Carroll’s first-half strike – a low, left-foot effort following Stewart Downing’s slightly miscontrolled lay-off – demonstrated the sort of anticipation and finishing prowess that convinced Liverpool to part with a club-record £35 million in January.

The journalists who had been sharpening their claws to launch another stinging attack on Fabio Capello were probably a touch disappointed to see Carroll score, a player who would probably not have started had Wayne Rooney not been sent home to rest by the England coach. Speaking in the post-match conference, Capello praised the Liverpool striker. “I remember Carroll before he suffered his injury – he ran a lot, always fought,” he said. “He scored a goal [tonight], he needs more time and games to improve, but he is important.”

The Italian was also armed ready with a response to the pre-match vitriol directed at him by the press in both England and Ghana on the back of his decision to send five players home. He said: “I’m really happy because I saw a fantastic game, not a friendly game. I read that you wrote a lot about this, [but] I think it was an exciting game and it has been an important game for the fans to see some players who have never played here. It was a really good, fast game. It’s not easy to see a friendly game like this.”

Having been derided for his decision to field what critics claimed was tantamount to a B-team, it at least became apparent that the Italian could count on the backing of the England supporters’ band. And as their trumpets and drums blared out the A-Team theme tune off the pitch, the players did their best to prove their worth on it.

Carroll was not alone in catching the eye. Ashley Young followed up his superb showing against Wales with another classy display, taking on the role of England’s playmaker-in-chief with aplomb. Young’s delicately chipped through-ball led to Carroll’s goal, while 20 minutes earlier the Aston Villa winger thought he had added a memorable 25-yarder to his scrapbook only to see the scrambling Ghana goalkeeper Richard Kingson produce a stunning acrobatic save.

Jack Wilshere had one of his quieter games in England colours but still looked the part when collecting the ball from deep. Bringing a calming influence to Capello’s midfield, the Arsenal starlet’s ability to move play seamlessly from defence to attack through either pass or dribble will see him continue to be play an integral role when the Euro 2012 qualifying campaign resumes in June. The presence of the industrious Wilshere and James Milner seemed to also bring the best out of captain for the day Gareth Barry, who enjoyed one of his better games in England colours, culminating in an audacious overhead kick attempt in the final ten minutes.

The 1-1 draw should ensure Capello escapes his now customary media roasting in Wednesday’s newspapers, though this time it will be because the passion and persistence of Ghana’s Black Stars once again steals the headlines.

MAN OF THE MATCH: Asamoah Gyan. As he did for three weeks in South Africa, Gyan worked his socks off for 90 minutes at Wembley and his superbly-taken equaliser was the least he deserved. His name received by far the loudest cheer when read out before the match and the hard-working Sunderland striker remains a national hero after his exploits last summer.

ENGLAND VERDICT: There isn’t too much for Capello to complain about as the players he brought in did their jobs admirably, though it was Young and Wilshere – both of whom started against Wales – who looked most at home. Barry played well, but the more defensively tenacious Scott Parker will probably be preferred against Switzerland in June and Carroll must show a prolific streak between now and the end of the season if he is to usurp Darren Bent.

GHANA VERDICT: Defensively naive but offensively adventurous, the Black Stars looked significantly better when Lee Addy – who was led a merry dance by Downing in the first half – was replaced at the interval. The introduction of Andre Ayew gave Ghana more attacking impetus in the second half but Stavanovic will leave delighted with the result, which was also achieved without inspirational captain Michael Essien.

VUVU-FAILURE: The sound of musical instruments and vuvuzelas could be heard as soon as fans stepped out of Wembley station but as the stadium drew closer, a PA announcement asserted that they would not be allowed inside the ground. Fortunately, wily supporters were able to smuggle in whistles and trumpets anyway, ensuring that the FA’s attempts to ban anything conducive to fun was in vain.

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Gyan Powers Ghana Black Stars to Draw With England at Wembley

BBC

Asamoah Gyan’s injury-time equaliser deprived England of victory in a highly entertaining friendly against Ghana at Wembley.

Andy Carroll’s first international goal just before the interval looked to have settled the game in favour of Fabio Capello’s revamped England side before Gyan gave Ghana a draw they fully deserved.

Ghana’s vast and colourful support inside Wembley celebrated wildly as Gyan bamboozled England substitute Joleon Lescott, not for the first time, inside the area before clipping a composed finish beyond Joe Hart.

Liverpool’s £35m striker Carroll still looked short of match fitness after a lengthy recent injury absence – but gave a glimpse of his rich potential when he rounded off a fine move with a powerful finish just before half-time.

Ghana, however, were a threat throughout and Gyan’s goal was fitting reward for his tireless display and the Black Stars’ ambitious attacking approach.

Dominic Adiyiah forced Hart into two fine saves in the first half, while Ashley Young should have scored for England when he drove a close-range effort against the bar from Stewart Downing’s cross.

Despite fears that Capello’s decision to make seven changes from the team that beat Wales in Saturday’s Euro 2012 qualifier would take the edge of this friendly, Wembley played host to a vibrant occasion that was given a game to match the atmosphere.

Capello will be disappointed that victory was cast aside so late, but England’s coach can still take away plenty from the game, particularly Carroll opening his England goal account and accomplished performances from Young and Downing as he worked with a 4-3-3 formation once more.

And it was also a memorable night for Wolves winger Matt Jarvis and Danny Welbeck, on loan at Sunderland from Manchester United, as they made their England debuts in the second half.

Capello made the expected changes prior to kick-off, but the alterations did not affect the rhythm of a thrilling first half as both sides showed commendable attacking intent.

Ghana, urged forward by a huge following banked at one end of Wembley, were a constant threat and Adiyiah signalled their positive approach early on when he raced clear only to be thwarted by the advancing Hart.

England’s response was swift, with Downing shooting well over from an angle and Young forcing an athletic save from Ghana keeper Richard Kingson with a rising effort from 20 yards.

Sunderland’s Gyan was the darling of the Ghana fans, but his ambition got the better of him when he tested Hart from in excess of 40 yards – a shot that carried plenty of power but was straight at the England keeper.

Young’s enterprising start should have been rewarded with a goal after 24 minutes. He arrived perfectly on the end of a cross from Villa team-mate Downing but turned his shot against the bar with Kingson beaten.

Hart was England’s saviour again when Adiyiah sent in a shot from Sulley Muntari’s free-kick, sticking out a hand to make a fine reflex save to ensure Capello’s side remained on terms.

Ghana were unhappy when England full-back Leighton Baines launched himself into a 50-50 challenge with Isaac Vorsah that left the Ghana player rolling in agony, but Turkish referee Cuneyt Cakir kept his yellow card in his pocket.

As an end-to-end half somehow looked to be ending goalless, Carroll rounded off a slick passage of play to give England the lead. Young picked out Downing with precise pass and Carroll slammed a left-foot finish low past Kingson.

Capello made one change at half-time, sending on Lescott for Glen Johnson – and it was Ghana who made the early running after the break.

Ghana’s following almost got the goal they craved as the Black Stars threatened twice within second, England captain Gareth Barry deflecting John Pantsil’s shot over the top and Jonathan Mensah heading the resulting corner just wide. Carroll had given England an hour before he was replaced by Jermain Defoe and Capello later introduced two more debutants when Jarvis came on for Jack Wilshere and Welbeck replaced Young.

Welbeck was not afforded a warm reception by Ghana’s followers after pledging his loyalty to England despite qualifying for the Africans.

They forgot their anger at Welbeck when the goal they had been waiting for arrived as the fourth official signalled the start of three minutes of added time. Gyan’s sleight of foot was all too much for Lescott and the striker rounded off a fine night’s work with a goal that was greeted ecstatically by Ghana’s fans.

England v Ghana line-ups

England: Hart, Johnson, Cahill, Jagielka, Baines, Milner, Barry, Wilshere, Downing, Carroll, Young.
Subs: Green, Lescott, Parker, Jarvis, Welbeck, Defoe, Crouch, Bent, Carson.

Ghana: Kingson, Pantsil, Vorsah, John Mensah, Lee Addy, Adiyah, Annan, Agyemang-Badu, Kwadwo Asamoah, Muntari, Gyan.
Subs: Adjei, Opare, Inkoom, Derek Boateng, Tagoe, Ayew, David Addy, Jonathan Mensah, Kumordzi, Clottey, Sowah. Referee: Cuneyt Cakir (Turkey)

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Ghana Gyan, Mensah and Muntari Excited by Black Stars-England Friendly

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Mensah, Gyan and Muntari of Ghana Black Stars

Ghana midfielder Sulley Muntari says he and team-mates John Mensah and Asamoah Gyan are excited by the friendly against England at Wembley on 29 March.

The Sunderland trio are in the Black Stars squad for the encounter, which will be played before a sell-out crowd including 20,000 Ghana supporters.

“We want to play, it’s at Wembley, against one of the best nations in the world,” Muntari told BBC Newcastle.

“No one wants to miss big games and important games like this one.”

Muntari added: “We’ve been looking forward to this game for a long time, and even the people in Ghana are looking forward to us playing England, we’re just looking forward to the day.

“We want to win, but we want to play good football and entertain the fans.

“England always have a strong team, they always play good football, we don’t care who plays and we just want to make our country proud.”

Sunderland handed Muntari a return to the Premier League after a a two-and-a-half year absence when they agreed a loan deal with European champions Inter Milan in January.

The 26-year-old won the FA Cup with Portsmouth prior to his £12.7m move to the Italian giants, and was a Scudetto and Champions League winner at the Giuseppe Meazza prior to his move to the Stadium of Light.

“It was easy to settle in, because there are fantastic people here, the guys are great always,” Muntari added.

“The manager has been good to me, the Premier League is not new to me, I love English football and I am pleased to be here.”

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Africa’s World Cup Representation in Danger

The Black Stars of Ghana were the only African team to get to the knock-out stages in 2010

Football’s world governing body Fifa is meeting to decide how many places each continent receives at the next World Cup in 2014.

Six African nations took part in the 2010 tournament, because South Africa were the hosts.

The continent will almost certainly be cut back to five representatives for the next finals in Brazil.

There is a chance the figure could drop further, with other regions pressing hard for more places.

Africa’s performance in 2010, where of the continent’s contenders only Ghana made it out of the knock-out stages, will count against it.

Political pressures and lobbying in the expected tussle between incumbent Fifa president Sepp Blatter and his likely challenger Mohamed Bin Hammam will also have an impact.

Bin Hammam has been pushing for an increased representation from his Asian Confederation – which had four places plus a play-off against Oceania for South Africa.

Concacaf, the North and Central American and Caribbean region, is also pressing especially hard for more places than the current three plus a play-off spot.

South America is likely to get an extra berth because Brazil are the hosts.

Fifa is set to announce the decision at a news conference on Thursday, following a two-day meeting in Zurich.

Fifa is also going to announce Canada as the hosts of the 2015 Women’s World Cup – they are the only contenders after Zimbabwe pulled out of the running.

In addition, Ghana will find out whether it will host the U17 World Cup in 2013 and the U17 women’s competition in 2014 while Tunisia has bid for the U17 World Cup in 2015 and the U20 event in 2015.

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Asamoah Gyan on Manchester United Wish List

Sunderland striker Asamoah Gyan has played his way onto Sir Alex Ferguson’s wish-list after a string of impressive performances on Wearside according to Tuttochampions.it.

The 25 year old Ghana international has scored nine goals and provided four assists in 23 Premier League games as Sunderland has surged up the table. He has become an instant hit with the fans due to his flamboyant style which is a result of his undiluted love of the game.

He was linked with Man United back in 2007 whilst playing for Italian side Udinese but injury hampered his season and he never had a chance to advertise his potential. An eccentric personality and keen rapper under the pseudonym “Baby Jet” he would be a welcome addition to the changing room.

He possesses impressive pace and a wonderful shot – he thrives off one-on-one situations and is lethal when cutting across the face of goal. Bruce would be extremely reluctant to let the club record signing leave in the summer with the Red Devil’s also expressing an interest in Gyan’s teammates Gordon and Henderson.

The loss of Darren Bent in January and the fact that Gyan has only been at the Stadium of Liht six months since signing for £13 million would probably mean no less than £20 million would be enough to test Sunderland’s reserve. TheBlack Cats are not inclined to sell and any deal with Sunderland would probably see Danny Wellbeck – on loan at Sunderland from Man United – make his deal permanent.

Whether Ferguson intends to spend so much on a striker seems doubtful as they have plenty of options up front. Gordon or Henderson would seem the most likely deal but if Gyan’s form remains as it is it may come to pass that United are tempted to make a move given that Owen ‘s days are numbered and Wellbeck would be used as a bartering chip. Real Madrid are also rumoured to be keeping an eye on the BBC African Player of the Year.

(GHP)

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