Over 4,000 people have signed our petition, and we have less than 10% to go before reaching our target.
Once we achieve it, we will announce our next lawful and peaceful course of action. The level of public support for accountability and reform in Ghana football is clear, and our next move will demonstrate the determination of thousands of football supporters across the country.
Mr. Kurt Okraku and the Executive Council Members should understand that many Ghanaians are calling for transparency, accountability, and meaningful change. The momentum is growing, and the next phase of this campaign will come as a significant surprise.
Our movement remains committed to peaceful, lawful, and democratic action.
Ghana Football does not any political colours we will rescue our football โฝโฝโฝ
Saw this somewhere and Iโm reposting because I support the message.
Football is one of the very few activities that unites us a people. We shouldnโt ruin it for the interest of a select few.
If you agree, save the poster and repost with #KurtOkrakuOut
๐จ๐ฃ Egypt's Coach Hossam Hassan couldn't control himself after full-time:
"I will say what's on my mind regardless of the consequence, this was clearly a rigged match and the whole world saw it"
"And I want to say one more thing, if they want them [Argentina] to win so bad, why call everyone to come and participate?"
Idiots blaming Ronaldo for Portugal bad performances. Clearly it's the Spanish Southgate making them dull and boring. Bruno looks like an imposter and so do the PSG lads
๐ง๐ต๐ฎ๐ป๐ธ ๐๐ผ๐, ๐๐ผ๐ป ๐๐ฎ๐ฟ๐น๐ผ๐. ๐๐ป๐ฑ ๐ด๐ผ๐ผ๐ฑ๐ฏ๐๐ฒ.
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By the time ๐ฌ๐ญ Ghana appointed Carlos Queiroz, the Black Stars already had deep structural problems. No coach was going to overhaul this team in a few months.
The mistake many fans made was expecting Queiroz to become something he has never been.
His football has always been about organisation, discipline and tournament survival. Not attacking flair. Never.
So when Ghana defended better but struggled to create chances, it shouldn't have been a shock.
Jerome Opoku captured it perfectly after the Colombia defeat, telling me:
"We can defend, defend, defend but if we don't get that one goal to relieve pressure off the defense, then we can't succeed."
Exactly.
Ghana conceded just three goals in four World Cup matches, but scored only two despite having forwards like Antoine Semenyo, Jordan Ayew, Brandon Thomas-Asante, Kamaldeen Sulemana and Fatawu Issahaku.
That, my people, is no accident. It is the the trade-off for having the 73-year-old.
This isn't about blaming the forwards. Semenyo came into the tournament after arguably the best goalscoring season of his career. Brandon Thomas-Asante had earned a much bigger conversation about his role. Jordan Ayew often looked isolated. The issue wasn't simply personnel; it was the system.
And that system was exactly what Queiroz has built everywhere he has coached.
For me, he was the right man for a very specific job: stabilise Ghana, restore defensive credibility and guide us through the World Cup with respectability.
Mission accomplished.
But that's also why I don't think he should lead the next phase.
World Cup football and a qualifying campaign are different assignments.
The next Black Stars coach must build on the defensive foundation Queiroz has laidโbut also unleash one of Ghana's most exciting attacking generations in years.
Thank you, Carlos.
You did the job you were hired to do.
Now it's time for someone else to take this team forward. I'll be surprised if the GFA allowed him to take us into the future.
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๐ @mypolytank