Audio By Carbonatix
Black Stars captain, Andre Dede Ayew has conceded that the senior national team are far from the finished article, as the country nears a tough run of games, in search of a World Cup berth.
Following CK Akonnor’s appointment and the Black Stars performances in his first run of games, many Ghanaians have expressed worry about the country’s chances of qualifying for the global showpiece event, and Dede Ayew seems to share similar sentiments.
Nonetheless, he has expressed gratitude for the support the Black Stars have recently received, in a period which have been difficult times for the national team.
“Two good games v two top teams, lots of encouraging stuff but still more work to do to be ready for WCQ in September. Thanks for the support, we keep going,” the 31-year-old winger said in a tweet after the friendly with Cote d’Ivoire.
The Black Stars were scheduled to play the first set of their World Cup Qualifiers after the just-ended domestic seasons across Europe. In May however, CAF postponed the games to September, October and November of this year, as well as March 2022, over concerns with the coronavirus.
In place of the postponed games, the GFA organized two international friendlies with Morocco and Cote d’Ivoire to serve as preparatory games for the senior national team. The Black Stars lost the first to Morocco and only managed a draw with The Elephants in Cape Coast.
Despite concerns from the general public and media ahead of the country’s World Cup qualifiers, Dede Ayew believes the results from the friendly games are not justifications for concern.
“I think this [against Ivory Coast] was a differnet game and it was a friendly coming up. We know what’s ahead of us, some of us have played a lot of qualification games and we know what’s ahead and we will be ready, we are not worried.
“We will have wanted to win the two games but we are not worried,” the captain said in an interview.
This year’s FIFA World Cup qualifiers will see countries battle for spots in three separate rounds. Round One will witness African countries ranked 27-54 play in home-and-away double-legged ties, with 14 of the 27 qualifying for round two.
The 14 qualified teams will join countries ranked between 1 and 26 in the second round. The 40 countries, will then compete in home-and-away round-robin matches, in 10 groups of four teams. Only 10 out of the 40 countries will qualify for the third round.
In round three, the 10 winners from the second round will play home-and-away fixtures over two legs, with five securing Africa’s slots for the World Cup.
Latest Stories
-
‘We survived on snow and sand’ – Victim recounts harrowing experience on frontlines of the Russia-Ukraine war
2 minutes -
‘I considered retiring’ – Kofi Kyereh opens up on rehabilitation struggles
6 minutes -
Gov’t and mining companies in talks over gold mobilisation and forex strategy
10 minutes -
Gender Ministry rallies support for Ghana’s bid to UNCRPD Expert Committee seat
10 minutes -
WPL 2025/26: Hasaacas Ladies receive donation from Betika Ghana after second-place finish
13 minutes -
Adamus CEO Angela List rejects illegal mining claims, says company has no link to galamsey
23 minutes -
From crisis to confidence: Ghana’s remarkable economic turnaround
24 minutes -
Youth employment drive gains traction as partnerships scale across Africa
25 minutes -
Election 2028: Asiedu Nketia closes gap on Bawumia – Global Info Analytics
29 minutes -
EU–Ghana relations enter new phase focused on stability and mutual interests
29 minutes -
‘I’m striving to play at the 2026 World Cup’ – Kofi Kyereh
30 minutes -
Global Info Analytics: Bawumia’s base solid, but swing voters favour NDC
36 minutes -
Global Info Analytics: 2024 Absentee voters tilt heavily toward NDC
49 minutes -
Ghana’s AI future will be decided by infrastructure, not ambition
50 minutes -
Amin Adam calls for IMF action on BoG recapitalisation, gold sales and monetary risks
56 minutes