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Missing AFCON 2025 Was The First Warning Shot. Will The Black Stars Rise, Or Will History Repeat Itself? – Ras Mubarak queries

The night of 30th March 2026 will be remembered in Ghana not for celebration, but for the sharp crack of a guillotine. Hours after the Black Stars fell 2-1 to Germany in Stuttgart, their fourth straight friendly defeat, following a humiliating 5-1 thrashing by Austria, the Ghana Football Association dropped the bomb: Otto Addo was out.

No long press conference. No detailed autopsy. Just a terse statement thanking the man who had just guided Ghana to the 2026 World Cup, then wishing him well.

It was the kind of swift, emotional decision that has defined Ghanaian football for decades. Passionate fans demanded blood after those heavy losses. The FA delivered it.

But as the dust settles and the tournament in North America looms just 71 days away, one question hangs heavier than the humid Harmattan air: was this the move that saves the Black Stars… or the one that sinks them?

Let’s be honest, this squad has always been a paradox. From the golden generation of the 2000s to the current crop of Premier League stars, the Black Stars possess the raw materials to trouble any team on their day. They topped their 2026 World Cup qualifying group with authority. Addo became the first coach to qualify Ghana twice. The talent pipeline is still flowing.

Yet the same old ghosts haunt them. Defensive fragility. Tactical rigidity in big moments. A habit of collapsing against organised, high-pressing European sides in pre-tournament friendlies. Missing the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations, the first time in 20 years, was the warning shot.

The recent friendlies were the execution. The team looked disjointed, unsure, almost apologetic on the pitch. For a nation that lives and breathes football, that stings deeper than any scoreline.

The Ghana Football Association finds itself once again in the eye of the storm it helped create. Otto Addo’s record (22 games, 8 wins, 5 draws, 9 losses) was never perfect, but it delivered the one thing that matters most: a ticket to the World Cup.

The timing of his dismissal, right on the cusp of the tournament, raises eyebrows. Was this about results, or about appeasing the loudest voices in the stands and on social media?

Ghanaian football has a well-worn script: poor run of games, public outcry, coach sacked, new saviour hired, repeat. The FA has pulled this lever so often that instability has become the only constant.

Players arrive for camps wondering who will be in charge next month. Technical staff inherit half-baked squads and rushed tactics. And every time, the same administrators who appointed, supported (or failed to support) the coach walk away unscathed.

This is not just about one sacking. It is about a pattern that has turned potential into perpetual “what ifs.”

The 2026 World Cup is no longer a distant dream, it is 11 June away. Ghana still has friendlies lined up against Mexico and Wales in May. A new coach (rumours already swirl around names like Walid Regragui) will have mere weeks to:
(I) Drill defensive organisation that has leaked like a sieve.

(II) Forge chemistry among a squad of global stars who rarely play together.

(III) Finalize a 26-man roster under immense pressure.

(IV) Inject belief into a team that has just been told its leader wasn’t good enough.
This is not preparation. This is crisis management wearing a national jersey.

Sacking Addo is done. Regret changes nothing. The only question that matters is what comes next. Here is the roadmap Ghana must follow if the Black Stars are to write a new chapter instead of another tragic verse:

1. Appoint with urgency and vision, not panic. The next coach cannot be a short-term firefighter. He must be a proven tournament performer who can hit the ground running. Give him real authority over squad selection and tactics. No more committee interference.

2. Turn the remaining friendlies into laboratories. Use Mexico and Wales matches to test systems, not to chase results. Experiment boldly. Build the starting XI that will face the group stage in June.

3. Demand FA accountability – publicly and structurally. Fans and media must keep the heat on the administrators. Why were defensive weaknesses allowed to fester? Why were preparation camps and logistics not world-class? The FA should release a transparent post-mortem and commit to long-term reforms: youth academy overhaul, domestic league investment, and player welfare protocols that actually work.

4. Unite the family. Bring back senior players as leaders. Create a technical advisory panel that includes past legends. Ghanaian football thrives when it feels like a national mission, not a boardroom power play.

5. Embrace the pressure. The Black Stars have always performed when the world doubts them. This is not the time for fear; it is the time for the famous Ghanaian never-say-die spirit that once made the world stand up and take notice.

The sacking of Otto Addo was understandable in the heat of the moment. Whether it was wise will be judged not by headlines today, but by how Ghana performs when the World Cup whistle blows in June.

The talent is there. The passion has never left. The only missing piece is stability, strategy, and the courage to break the cycle.

The nation, and the entire Black Stars family are watching. The clock is ticking. This is not just another coaching change, it is a moment of truth for Ghanaian football.

Will the Black Stars rise, or will history repeat itself? The answer starts now.

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Debibi United Seal Historic Promotion to Ghana Premier League

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Published: May 13 2026
Published at: 6:39PM
By Saibu Terry

Debibi United Football Club have secured promotion to the 2026/27 Ghana Premier League after an impressive 3-1 victory over Tamale City FC in the Access Bank Division One playoff final.

The highly anticipated clash, staged at the Accra Sports Stadium on Wednesday, May 13, saw Kwadwo Antwi emerge as the star performer with a sensational first-half hat-trick.

Antwi opened the scoring in the 33rd minute before adding two more goals in quick succession in the 38th and 43rd minutes to hand Debibi United a commanding lead before halftime.

Tamale City managed to pull one back, but Debibi United comfortably held on to confirm their place in Ghana’s top-flight league next season.

The playoff encounter featured the winners of the two Zone One groups in the Division One League, with both clubs battling for the final available promotion slot.

Debibi United now join Port City FC and FC AshantiGold 04 among the promoted sides for the upcoming Ghana Premier League season.

Port City FC secured qualification from Zone Three, while AshantiGold 04 advanced from Zone Two.

Meanwhile, with only two matches remaining in the current Ghana Premier League campaign, Hohoe United and Eleven Wonders have officially been relegated to the Division One League.

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CropLife Ghana Holds the 2nd Annual General Meeting for CEOs, MDs.

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Date: Wednesday 13th May 2025

CropLife Ghana held its 2nd Annual General Meeting (AGM) for CEOs and MDs of its members on Friday, 8th May 2026 at the African Regent Hotel, Accra under the theme: “Promoting Sustainable Crop Solutions for Food Security in Ghana.”

The meeting brought together Chief Executive Officers, Managing Directors and Country Representatives of members companies with the Director for the Chemical Control Management Centre (CCMC) of the Environmental Protection Authority as the special guest to deliberate on Enhancing Regulatory Compliance for a safe and effective Crop Protection Industry in Ghana.

In a press statement signed by Executive Director of CropLife Ghana, Kadiri Rashad expresses sincere appreciation to all members and stakeholders whose presence, participation, and valuable contributions made the AGM a great success, stating that the association highly values the commitment demonstrated by members towards strengthening the industry and advancing sustainable agricultural practices in Ghana.

Mr. Kadiri Rashad assures members that all matters, concerns, observations, and recommendations raised during the meeting are important and are being carefully considered as part of efforts to improve industry coordination, stakeholder engagement, and regulatory compliance within the sector.

A key focus of the AGM was the collective commitment to collaborate closely with the Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) and other relevant stakeholders to sanitize the agro-input market and promote quality standards across the industry.

CropLife Ghana emphasized the need for stronger collaboration and coordinated action to address the circulation of counterfeit, unregistered, and substandard agro-input products, which continue to pose risks to farmers, consumers, the environment, and the agricultural sector.

The association reaffirmed its commitment to supporting efforts aimed at ensuring that farmers across Ghana have access to safe, approved, effective, and high-quality crop protection products. CropLife Ghana further highlighted the importance of responsible stewardship, awareness creation, education, and strict adherence to regulatory standards as critical measures in promoting professionalism and integrity within the agro-input value chain.

As an industry association committed to sustainable agriculture, CropLife Ghana remains dedicated to promoting the safe and responsible use of pesticides, environmental protection, farmer safety, and sustainable crop solutions that contribute to national food security and agricultural development.

The AGM concluded with a renewed commitment by members to continue working together with regulators and stakeholders to build a safer, more transparent, and sustainable agro-input market in Ghana.

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NRFA Supports Dakpemah Ladies and Nasara Ladies Ahead of GFA Women’s Championship Playoffs

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Published:May 13th 2026
Published at: 6:57am
By Saibu Terry


The Chairman of the Northern Regional Football Association (NRFA), Alhaji Abu-Hassan Rhyzo, on Tuesday, May 12, 2026, donated financial and logistical support to Dakpemah Ladies and Nasara Ladies ahead of the upcoming GFA Regional Women’s Championship playoffs in Tamale.

‎On behalf of the NRFA, Alhaji Rhyzo presented GHC1,000, four boxes of Awake Mineral Water, and two boxes of Yazz sanitary pads to each club as part of efforts to support the teams’ preparations for the competition.

‎In addition, the NRFA Chairman pledged a winning bonus of GHC500 for each victory recorded by the clubs during their five playoff matches.

‎Nasara Ladies and Dakpemah Ladies are the two teams representing the Northern Region in the championship, which serves as qualification for the Malta Guinness Women’s Premier League next season.

‎The Northern Zone playoffs are scheduled to commence on Friday, May 15, 2026, at the Aliu Mahama Sports Stadium in Tamale, where participating clubs will battle for promotion to the top flight of women’s football in Ghana.

‎Dakpemah Ladies will open their campaign against Upper West champions Chewia Ladies, while Nasara Ladies will take on tournament favorites Supreme Ladies from Kumasi as they seek to secure qualification after four unsuccessful attempts in previous years.

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