Ghana coach Cecil Jones Attuquayefio has named a 22-man entirely home-based squad for the World Cup qualifier against arch-rivals Nigeria in Accra on Sunday.
Most of the players invited to camp in Swedru, outside the capital, are members of the of the Attuquayefio-led Hearts of Oak squad who won the African Champions League last December.
Attuquayefio called up five from Asante Kotoko, two each from Liberty Professionals and Obuasi Goldfields and one from Ebusua Dwarfs.
It was against Nigeria ten years ago that Ghana last played with a majority of home-based players in Kumasi and won 1-0 before drawing the return 1-1 in Lagos under German coach Burkhard Zeise.
Nigeria, by contrast, have named 18 foreign-based players for Sunday's match and most Ghanaians are expecting the Super Eagles to win by a wide margin. But the bold move by Attuquayefio has not come as a surprise, though, as most of the Ghanaian players overseas have been criticised for their attitude and lack of commitment.
Football's governing body Fifa are to look into a report by Ethiopian referee Hailemalek Tessema that Bayern Munich defender Samuel Osei Kuffour was restrained by Sudanese security from assaulting him.
Kuffour has also come under fire from the local press, after two journalists travelling with the squad to Sudan quoted the defender calling Ghanaian newsmen drop-outs and he could afford to pay their wages.
Dortmund striker Otto Addo is also on a collision course with Attuquayefio, who criticised the behaviour of the player after he was substituted against Liberia. Addo was subsequently dropped from the Sudan match.
Home-based players have not been spared either in terms of their camp code of conduct, but with the majority from Hearts, Attuquayefio would seem to have control over them.
But it would have been more difficult for him to do the same to the foreign-based, most of whom earn a salary much more than his $5,000 a month, which makes him the highest-paid local coach in the history of Ghanaian football.
Ghana have lost three matches in a row since Attuquayefio took over the Black Stars in January, including a 3-1 humiliation at the hands of Liberia in Accra and a 1-0 loss in Sudan last time out.
Some Ghanaians, however, are divided over the exclusion of the European-based players, saying that a few with a good record in camp should have been invited, while the local boys would not be the solution to revive the team's fading World Cup hopes.
The players include, Sammy Agyei, James Nanor, Jacob Nettey, Dan Quaye, Lawrence Adjah Tetteh, Stephen Tetteh, Amankwa Mireku, Edward Agyemang-Duah, Ishmael Addo, Charles Taylor, Emmanuel Osei-Kufuor, Joe Ansah. All from Hearts of Oak.
The rest are Forster Batsios, Baffuor Gyan ( Liberty Professionals) Abdul Razak (Dwarfs) Godwin Ablordey, Lawrence Adjei, Isaac Owusu (Kotoko) Nana Arhin -Duah, Constant Mantey ( G'fields) Nana Frimpong (King Faisal) Osei Kwame ( Bofoakwa).
The players are expected to report at the GFA Secretariat at 4 p.m today, Saturday to be conveyed to their Swedru Camp.