Audio By Carbonatix
Daniel Opare’s career feels like a tale suspended between promise and misfortune, a footballer whose brilliance first lit up Ghana’s 2007 U-17 World Cup campaign, only to spend the years that followed wrestling with injuries, near-misses and cruel timing.
From the lung-bursting runs that once convinced Real Madrid he was a star in waiting to the setbacks that repeatedly closed doors just as they opened, Opare’s story is one of talent that thrilled a nation but never quite found the stage it deserved.
If I asked you what your favourite memory of Daniel Opare is, you would probably go back to the 2007 U-17 World Cup in Korea. And you wouldn't be alone.
Opare was unstoppable in that tournament. Electric even. The kind of full-back who looked like he could run for days. Real Madrid Castilla signed him straight after the tournament, and he even came close to making a senior-team debut under Juande Ramos. He was set to fill in for an injured Sergio Ramos, until injury hit him too. And the chance never came.
In a way, that moment set the tone for his career, highs followed almost immediately by lows, a story of near-misses and “what ifs.”
He missed AFCON 2008 after picking up an injury in the Black Stars’ pre-tournament camp in Dubai.
He eventually returned to the national set-up with the U20s, but by then Samuel Inkoom had taken the right-back spot and excelled at the U20 AFCON in Rwanda, which Ghana won. Opare became second choice as the team went on to lift the World Cup in Egypt.
His move to Standard Liège in 2010 produced some of his best club football. By 2013, after being an unused substitute at AFCON 2012, he was primed to become Ghana’s first-choice right-back for AFCON 2013, only for another injury two months before the tournament to rule him out. Harrison Afful stepped in, and Opare’s window closed again.
The next three years took him to Augsburg, Lens and Beşiktaş, where injuries limited him to just 17 appearances between 2015 and 2017.
Through all that, the national team provided brief relief. He was selected for the 2014 World Cup and started the opening game against the USA. But Ghana lost, Afful came in for the match against Germany, performed brilliantly, and Opare slipped out of the squad once more.
Then came what could have been his true peak, the 2017/18 Bundesliga season.
Augsburg had taken a chance on him during a second spell at the club, offering him a one-year contract. He repaid that faith by playing the best football of his career. By January, Augsburg offered him an extension. At the same time, Schalke, a big club at the time, were circling and Opare, legally free to talk, explored the interest.
What followed was dramatic.
Augsburg released a strongly worded statement accusing him of violating the club’s values and “repeatedly lying.” They terminated his contract and asked him to leave immediately. His agent fired back, calling the club petty and unprofessional. While the war of words raged, Opare’s career took the hit. The Schalke move collapsed, and he spent the rest of the season banished from the first team.
He later returned to Belgium with Royal Antwerp and then Zulte Waregem, but by then Ghana had largely moved on.
Opare’s career was defined by moments that never quite clicked, many entirely beyond his control. He can retire proud of what he achieved, but anyone who watched him at his best knows the truth, he could have been so much more.
And I am sure even he would admit it.
We can sit and dissect the choices and turning points, should he have gone to Real Madrid, should he have accepted Augsburg’s offer, and it is fair to ask those questions. But perhaps, for Opare, this was the journey written for him. To arrive at this point alive, healthy, and with a career to look back on is still glory to God.
He made us dream with that electrifying pace and those lung-bursting runs up and down the right flank.
Enjoy your retirement, Daniel. If for nothing at all, I will never forget that second-half performance against Germany’s U17.
And neither will Toni Kroos.
Latest Stories
-
GPL 2025/2026: Medeama thrash Young Apostles to widen gap at the top
13 minutes -
GPL 2025/26: Stoppage-time goal earns Aduana FC victory over Karela
23 minutes -
BoG issues AML/CFT/CPF agency banking guidelines for banks, others
2 hours -
Fire tender involved in accident while responding to blaze at Buipe
2 hours -
Report to FIC all sales, purchases of foreign currencies with threshold of GH¢20,000 – BoG to forex bureaus
3 hours -
T-bills auction: Investor interest soars; government exceeds target by 20% but interest rates rise
3 hours -
One Nation Reggae Festival: Heritage, music and the reframing of Sierra Leone’s cultural tourism
3 hours -
Police arrest 7 members of notorious highway robbers
3 hours -
Cost concerns, internal tensions disrupt School Feeding Programme in North East Region
3 hours -
Abutia Installs Mankrado Togbe Keh Kwesi VIII and Mama Kehbia III
3 hours -
Ashanti Regional Minister inspects runway expansion at Prempeh I International Airport
4 hours -
Mahama Administration’s first year positive, says Prof Patrick Asuming
4 hours -
SSNIT increases monthly pensions by 10%
4 hours -
Major roads in Ho West being constructed under the Big Push Project
4 hours -
Franklin Cudjoe commends Mahama administration’s early economic management
4 hours
