JOHANNESBURG, May 25 - Ghana go to the World Cup in Germany finally shorn of
the anomaly of being one of Africa's top footballing superpowers but never
having qualified for the sport's top tournament.
Four-time winners of the African Nations Cup, and the producer of top
individuals such as Abedi Pele and Tony Yeboah, they had consistently failed in
their bid to win a place at the World Cup finals until engineering a stunning
come-from-behind success in their qualifying group last year.
Ghana's Black Stars now go to the World Cup seeking to match the success they
have achieved at past junior world championships.
There is still one major survivor in the senior side of the team that won the
under-17 world championship title in 1991, the central defender Samuel Osei
Kuffour who has gone on to a successful career with Bayern Munich in Germany and
is now at Italy's AS Roma.
Ghana's hopes at the World Cup, however, lie with the midfield acumen of
Stephan Appiah and Michael Essien and the precocious talent of Udinese
midfielder Sulley Muntari.
It was this trio who proved the catalyst as Ghana came back from a near
hopeless position to win their qualifying group ahead of favourites South
Africa, having catapulted themselves into top place with a key 2-0 win in
Johannesburg last June.
The turnaround in their fortunes came after the appointment of Serbian coach
Ratomir Dujkovic in December 2004.
UNBEATEN RUN
He was the last of four coaches Ghana employed in their qualifying campaign
and took the team through an unbeaten run last year as they clinched their first
World Cup finals place.
Dujkovic teetered on the brink of dismissal in January as Ghana crashed out
early at the Nations Cup finals, but had the mitigating circumstance of playing
at the tournament in Egypt without the injured Essien and Muntari and a half-fit
Appiah.
Essien, who became Africa's most expensive player when he moved from French
champions Olympique Lyon to their English counterparts Chelsea last August for
24.5 million pounds, scored several vital goals in the World Cup qualifiers.
Appiah, who plays his club football in Turkey for Fenerbahce, proved an
inspirational leader and a talisman performance from diminutive Matthew Amoah up
front was also a key ingredient in the qualifying success.
Amoah, who recently joined Borussia Dortmund in Germany, was restored to the
side after five years in the international wilderness and was also the author of
key goals.
Dujkovic remains short of established strikers though and that could prove to
be a real problem in their group matches against Italy, the Czech Republic and
the United States in Group E.