For so many years, it seems as though getting a call
up to the Black Stars as a Ghana Premier League (GPL) player is a myth, a
miracle or perhaps the greatest achievement in one’s career.
A lot of the high performing GPL players rarely get
the opportunity to display their quality on the international stage. Handlers
of the senior national team always look to prioritize the foreign based
Ghanaian players over the locals when it comes to international tournaments.
In situations whereby two or three local players are
invited for a tournament, they barely or in fact never get a place in the
matchday squads until the competition is over. The impression created is that;
GPL players are not good enough to have playing time in comparison to the foreign
based players.
This has been the picture painted in the minds of many
football fanatics in Ghana which in effect doesn’t augur well for the
development of our league. Players perform exceptionally well in GPL with the
hope of securing a deal abroad in order to get a somewhat easier chance of
playing for the national team.
A lot of players have accepted the notion that as long
as they continue to play for any of the local clubs, they may never get the
opportunity to represent Ghana at any international tournament. Therefore, they
will rather put in even more effort to get a transfer outside the shores of
Africa and pen down a contract with a foreign club.
This immediate exodus of players every time does not
only affect the development of the players, it also affects the quality of our
local league. The clubs are unable to keep hold of their best players over two
seasons simply because of the lack of funding and assurance to get the players
in the Ghanaian national team.
The irony of all of these is that we see other African
players get call ups into their respective national teams whiles playing for a
GPL club. The question that comes to mind is; why can’t local Ghanaian players
enjoy same opportunities with our Black Stars? Why does getting a national team
call up always seem like a tall mountain to climb for GPL players?
Surely, something drastic must be done to filter the
minds of fans and players alike to believe that players are called to the Black
Stars based on performance and not connections or favouritism.
The recent media reports of Bechem United player
Augustine Okrah refusing to join Black Stars camp in Japan for the Kirin
tournament alludes to the notion that local players are probably not treated
rightly. Many people are wondering why a local Ghanaian player would reject a
Black Stars call up. An opportunity so many other players both home and abroad
are craving for.
It's about time coaches of our flagship national team
see the potential in the local players and actually give them the opportunity
to play and not turn them into regular spectators on matchdays. The fact is;
playing professional football outside Ghana does not necessarily make one a
better player than the rest here. The vice versa is also true.
It’s so difficult to understand why GPL players
invited to the Black Stars camp rarely get playing time in international
friendly matches. If the players are not given the chance to play any minutes
at all, why are they selected in the first place? Are they included just to
appease the cry of the local fans?
The Ghana Football Association’s prime advocacy of “Bring Back The Love” can only be achieved when every well performing Ghanaian player, whether home or abroad is given equal opportunity in our national team. There must be an end to the inferiority complex and for want of a better word ‘discrimination’ against local players.
By: Edward Kyei Frimpong
Eddybless200@yahoo.com
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