Monday, August 18, 2014

September 21: tentative date for league start



September 21, 2014 has been picked by the Ghana Football Association (GFA) as the tentative date for the start of the 2014/2015 First Capital Plus Premier League. The GFA’s Congress which ushers the football fraternity into the new season has also been fixed for August 28, 2014.

A circular from the GFA’s Communications desk said: “Tentatively, the GFA Congress has been scheduled for 28th August with the start of the First Capital Plus Premier League penciled for 21st September pending the approval of Congress”.

Clubs and football fans have been calling on the GFA to announce the date for the start of the Premier League after Ghana’s abysmal failure at last month FIFA World Cup in Brazil. However, the FA could not come out with the date because games in Zone 1B of the Division One League were yet to be cleared at that time. Secondly, the date for the start of the league could not be announced at the time Congress had not been held.

Now with date for Congress fixed and play-off matches in Zone 1B over with B. A. United recording two wins and a draw – therefore joining Great Olympics and Feyernood for the 2014/2015 season, clubs can now tell when to start and end their pre-season programme.

Local football fans can as well heave a sigh of relief knowing that, barring any last minute change, Premier League action will return in the third week of next month.

A poem for Soulama Abdoulaye

All that enters time’s space leaves at a time
Day, night comes; none takes other’s place
Evening precedes noon at its time and pace
After night surely comes day with no space

The smiling sun shines bright at day
The moon brightens the dark at night
So light and stars don’t dim anyhow
They have reasons and seasons

Thus times come when one has to bow
To bow in joy no matter the pain is gain
No gain comes without pain; so it has
Been for the true son of Burkina Faso

Soulama Abdoulaye; Soulama Abdoulaye
Truly committed; respected national goalie
One time best goalie in Ghana; certainly
One that Burkina-Ghana sees as reliable

Ghana-Burkina has good ties
Ties as friendly neighbours no doubt
Many things we doth share and like
Not least, our pure love for football

A sport in which we abound in talents  
No wonder we train and trade the talents 
For gain and never for loss at any hour
For sports, for competition and power

For pride and joy; for glory and honour
Soulama in all you excelled at Kotoko
2007/08 season you first burst onto the scene
Six seasons, seven years in serious service

Your good and bad days our eyes could see
In all you did Kotoko and football fine service
When you were unbeatable and unstoppable
When you were supreme and knew no fall

When you were strong like China’s great wall
All that we loved and shared; now we recall
Ties that bind usually are painful to severe
Here I come to you with a poem to serve
Soulama, Soulama, Soulama
You serve well Kotoko in all seasons
I know not how my poem will look
I trust thee that you will remain good    
 



PLB wants amendments in FA regulations



Information available to GhLocalfootball indicates that the Premier League Board (PLB) has presented a document to the Ghana Football Association (GFA) seeking amendments to portions of the FA’s regulations.

The league body met at the Holiday Inn, Accra to review the 2013/2014 season. The meeting discussed modalities for the upcoming U-17 League, registration of players for the 2014/2015 season as well as the roadmap for the implementation of the club licensing system.

The PLB members were also briefed by their Chairman, Welbeck Abra Appiah on his recent visit to Germany.  Speaking in a brief interview after their “off-site meeting”, the PLB Boss confirmed that, apart from submitting their proposal to the GFA on when the possible start of the 2014/2015 league, they further suggested that portions of the GFA’s regulations should be amended.

Abra Appiah declined to give details on the proposed date for the start of the 2014/2015 season. He also didn’t give any information on the specific regulations they would want amended. The PLB boss however hoped that, the Executive Committee of the FA would consider their recommendations when they meet.


Saturday, August 9, 2014

Kotoko Express under the spotlight…



Over the last decade, Kotoko have seen numerous changes its in administration. The administrative changes, whether right or wrong have had both positive and negative implications on the development of the club. But in the face of all these changes, one department of the club that has thrived and continues to thrive is Kotoko Express – the official mouthpiece of the club.

Set-up by former Chairman, Sylvester Asare Owusu in 2003; the initially eight-page newspaper paper (presently 16 pages) has overcome many challenges to become undoubtedly, Ghana’s best club newspaper and one of the leading sports paper in the country if not the leader. Under every Kotoko administration, Kotoko Express has been supportive in diverse ways.

Between June and August 2010, Kotoko Express faced difficulties. It went off the newsstands for three months because of its debt not only to its printers but also to its editorial and auxiliary staff. This debt accrued from 2009 due to the club’s over-reliance on funds generated by the newspaper.

With the sound management practices of former Executive Chairman, Dr. K. K. Sarpong and the Chairman of the Kotoko Communications Board, Ambassador Kabral Blay-Amihere, Kotoko Express returned to the newsstands, cleared its huge debts in succeeding months and went full colour in January 2012, while re-paying its dues to management in latter part of 2012 and up to the middle of 2013.

The newspaper also purchased a vehicle for the first time to enhance its operations in Accra and across the country. Business was good for the newspaper then. Therefore, between December 2012 and June 2013 – a period of six months, Kotoko Express contributed a total of GHȼ62,000 (620 million old cedis) to the club. Going by available figures, it's logical that, given the quantum of money Kotoko Express has given to Kotoko in recent times, it will take time for the accounts of the newspaper to be “replenished” before it can dole out such amounts again. 

There are examples to support the above argument. In fact, there is adequate documentation to even show how the money given to the club in the period stated was utilized. Michael Helegbe (GHȼ 10,000), Right to Dream debt (GHȼ 20,000), Tema Youth debt (GHȼ 3,000) and other amounts paid to players: Kofi Agyare (GHȼ 300), Amos Frimpong (GHȼ 400), Kofi Nti Boakye (GHȼ 1,000), Ransford Osei (GHȼ 1,500) and Kwabena Adusei (GHȼ 1,500); and Dieter Schmidt’s debt (GHȼ 24,000) are all but examples of Kotoko Express contributions to Kotoko since 2012.

Thus the allegation by a Kumasi radio station on Thursday that, Kotoko Express contributes nothing to Kotoko is only spiteful and ill-motivated. The fact that Kotoko Express hasn’t made contributions to the club since July 2013 is not in contest but to put that out without finding out why, betrays a blatant, malicious intent to vilify Kotoko Express and needlessly pitch fans of the club against the newspaper.

It is also akin to soiling the integrity of the newspaper and its staff while at the same time, deceiving and misinforming Kotoko fans, most of who are wide awake. No discerning Kotoko fan will therefore fall for any unintelligent and irresponsible statement on radio concerning the financial contributions Kotoko Express make to the club. Any media house that wants to genuinely know the truth must be ready to debate facts, not hearsays.

Facts must be separated from emotive feelings. Regardless of whatever business strategy Kotoko Express adopts to improve its income, it has been proven through painstaking research that, the paper’s sales soar when interest in Kotoko events by supporters of the club go up. There are adverts which give the paper money but it has also been scientifically established that, when there are endless news worthy developments in Kotoko, constant exclusives and high supporters’ enthusiasm in and around the club, Kotoko Express’ sales increase significantly.

These are incontrovertible facts, not something spewed out of conjecture. Kotoko Express’ sales have been painfully low lately. The reasons are not difficult to find. Although Kotoko won the league, which started in September 2013 and ended in June 2014, attendance at Kotoko’s matches was poor. The point is fans who patronize Kotoko Express are practically no different from those who attend the team’s matches in Kumasi and also across the country.

Why does the team play in front of a near-empty Baba Yara Sports Stadium for example even when there have been continuous victories? The truth is enthusiasm in and around Kotoko has dropped lately. Kotoko Express' figures show that the drop started after the loss to Algeria’s JSM Bejaia to the exit of Dr. Sarpong and it continued after the Africa loss to Barrack Young Controllers (BYC) of Liberia.

This significant drop in Kotoko enthusiasm has made it difficult but Kotoko Express to make meaningful financial contributions to the present management. Discussions are ongoing to find out how best even the smallest contributions can be made. How this information was leaked to a media house and subsequently handled anyhow to misinform supporters and pitch them against the news paper vindicates the conviction that, Kotoko has management challenges. But we will be not daunted.

We have to stand by Kotoko and continue working to make things better. As media outfit, Kotoko Express doesn’t have to abandon the Board, management; the players and the technical team when things are bad. We will be no better than anti-Kotoko fans when we show such an attitude.

Let’s all seek and protect Kotoko’s interest. Let’s not be deceived by over-zealous radio presenters who are fed on half-truths and rush to broadcast without fulfilling the modest ethical demands of double-checking facts and ensuring balance to properly inform and educate the general public.

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Kotoko management structures revisited


Board of Directors of Kumasi Asante Kotoko

The headline for my piece today was informed by a text message I received from a Kotoko friend who eventually informed me that, the club and Soulama Abdoulaye have mutually parted ways. Although the experienced Burkinabe goalie had one more year left on his contract, he and Kotoko agreed to severe their existing contract.

You may be wondering how someone outside the club ended up informing a journalist of the club about such an important development. It is embarrassing but that is the truth. I had wind of Soulama’s possible move from Kotoko more than three weeks ago in my interaction with the goalie at the club’s secretariat. He was desirous of leaving Kumasi especially when he claimed that, there were signals that, Kotoko wasn’t willing to keep him in the new season.

I told my editors but Kotoko Express and Asantekotokosc.com didn’t publish the story. The paper needed management’s position first. Management opened up on the matter. Theirs was that, the technical team was well placed to speak on the goalie’s future. The appropriate thing to do was to speak to the head of the technical team, Coach Mas-ud Didi Dramani who interestingly was resolving his own contract issues with the Board of Directors of the club.

Was it going to be prudent to ask the coach questions about whether or not Soulama would be part of his team for the 2014/2015 season, when he himself was yet to be retained by the club?
The answer to myself was no. I engaged management again about a week ago on the issue. Their story was that based on a mutual agreement, Kotoko and Soulama would part ways.

An official release on the mutual agreement was to be released but that release didn’t reach Kotoko Express and Asantekotokosc.com offices. I rather received a text message from a friend on why he thinks Kotoko must organize a farewell match for Soulama after he had read the press release on Facebook, learning that, the goalie and Kotoko have mutually parted ways. This friend thus directed me to visit another friend’s Facebook wall when I told him; I haven’t seen that press release.

I will revisit the farewell match issue later. Today, I want to talk about how we seem to have taken the proper management of Kotoko lightly such that, a press release is issued, Kotoko Express which is owned by the club doesn’t get it; when questions are asked, neither the club’s management nor the goalkeeper – the two parties who signed and kept copies of the press release have any idea how the press release went public without the official mouthpiece of the club having a copy first.

I must state unequivocally that, the current management of Opoku Nti and George Kennedy; Didi Dramani and at times the Board Chairman, Paul Adu-Gyamfi open up to Kotoko Express and Asantekotokosc.com willingly and professionally. But the issue is not just about them speaking to the paper. It is in fact about the availability of proper management structures. It is sad that up till now management structures have not been put in place at Kotoko not just to aid the work of the club’s media outfit but indeed to ensure that Kotoko survives outside the shores of Ghana. 

It hurts. You have to be inside the club to understand the pain. Talking about Kotoko information management, I am not so naïve as a journalist to not fully appreciate that, even with the presence of solid management structures, information about the club will leak anyway.

As the Editor- in-Chief of the Crusading Guide, Abdul Malik Kweku Baako puts it; journalists have ways of intercepting documents even from the seat of government. No one can successfully regulate the various methods people outside institutions like Kotoko secure information but it is necessary that, we put in place proper management structures at Kotoko to make the administration of the club more professional.

Kotoko Express has often been accused of not contributing anything to the club; that’s false. It is has been said that the paper at times contradicts what managers of the club say on radio. What those accusers don’t know is that, Kotoko Express never fabricates stories although it is conceivable that the paper can err as it is being administered by humans.  

There can be no perfect management structure but surely Kotoko needs a formidable, properly defined management set-up and personnel tasked with specific roles to achieve the best especially outside Ghana. The current arrangement really is not the best. The Board of Directors must act to change the state of affairs because it doesn’t befit the status of Kotoko.

Friday, July 11, 2014

This "eminent football administrators retreat" is irrelevant!



Youth and Sports Minister, Mahama Ayariga.
Since June 12, the attention of the world has been fixed on the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil. For those of us in Ghana; our interest was mainly in the Black Stars who embarrassed the nation in the South American country. Indiscipline reigned in the Black Stars camp as there was brouhaha over appearance fee, culminating in the sacking,
no – the reassigning of former Youth and Sports Minister, Elvis Afriyie Ankrah along with his deputy, Joseph Yamin.

The Ghana Football Association (GFA) held a press conference on the Black Stars’ shame in Brazil but not everything was satisfactorily explained as the media disagreed with the FA, lambasting them for their mishandling of issues in the team’s camp with many calling for the dissolution of the Black Stars management committee. I supported and still support that call.

New Youth and Sports Minister, Mahama Ayariga announced the setting up of a three-man committee to ascertain what went wrong in Brazil while giving appropriate recommendations to forestall a recurrence of that national disgrace. The committee is yet to start work. Interestingly, as the football fraternity went to sleep on Thursday, July 10, 2014, a circular emerged talking about: “The Group of Eminent Football Administrators’ Retreat to Review the State of the Game of Football in Ghana and Advice (sic) on a National Strategy”.

This has set tongues wagging in the media to the extent that, a critical scrutiny of the press release on the event even revealed that, the name of the hotel where the programme will held today was wrong. Let’s forgive whoever wrote the press release for that error but that, in insincerity, confirms the hastiness and by extension, irrelevance of this impulsive event.

That, the 60 people who have been invited to the retreat are not “eminent football administrators” isn’t an issue I would like to interrogate but quick view on that list is that, we don’t need all of them to brainstorm on the state of Ghana football offer advice. Again, I won’t question the intentions of the retreat organisers but they have clearly got it wrong.

Assuming that, the state of Ghana football is bad, I think, a retreat of this nature won’t change anything. The GFA have been legitimately vested with the powers to manage Ghana football. The retreat organisers should know this and stop wasting everybody’s time. What they have to do is to liaise with the FA to learn of the true state of affairs; encourage and support them.

The path taken by the retreat organisers even mocks the Youth and Sports Ministry. It exposes their ignorance but are the people at the Ministry novices? I should have been optimistic about this event because pessimism saps my energy to reason constructively but very typical of some of our leaders, they have given me reasons to pessimistic. That is sad. Why is it that, we keep wasting time and money on unhelpful things?

Our football is not all about the Black Stars and their continuous failure in international competitions. It is about the structures at the FA, it is about infrastructure, it is about organisation, it is about money, it is about the personnel and their knowledge and the level of professionalism they exhibit. That is what the retreat organisers must know.

Juvenile football is coma. It exist only on the FA’s mind and it is only mentioned in the FA’s long, winding speeches given at Congresses. Women’s football is struggling to find feet. There is hardly any attraction or interest in the Women’s league. Our domestic men’s league competitions aren’t well organised despite the GFA/PLB’s efforts to make it better.

Clubs are badly managed. They lack professionalism. Clubs don’t have money to recruit, keep and pay their players well. They play on bad pitches. They have poor or inadequate facilities to ensure growth or development. They are unable to compete well with their peers on the continent and beyond. That is the small picture I can paint of the state of Ghana football.

Retreat organisers, give us a break! Waste not our time and scarce resources on the so-called eminent football administrators’ retreat. We don’t need this retreat. Mr. Minister, please liaise with the GFA to learn of the true state of Ghana football. After that, let’s know what plans you have to help the FA change anything bad you find.