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Can Africa Ever Go Beyond Quarter-finals In World Cups?

Wed, 7 Jul 2010 Source: Stephen Atta Owusu

It was the hope of every African that the ongoing World Cup in South Africa could

see Africa going beyond the quarter final stage. All hopes were shattered when Ghana

lost against Uruguay in a very bizarre circumstance. The loss emphasised the long

time belief that no African team will ever go beyond the quarter finals.

Cameroon was a great team in 1990. They played in the World Cup in that year with

old Roger Milla the main source of attention. He crowned any goal he scored with a

wriggle of the waist near the corner flag. Hopes were high in Africa during

Cameroon's quater-final encounter with England. David Platt put the English ahead in

the 25th minute. Cameroon hit back to equalise through Kunde in the 61st minute with

a penalty goal and actually took the lead four minutes later when Ekeke scored.

Cameroon were 25 minutes from a semi-final place but a penalty in the 83rd minute

pushed the game into extra time which England won by another Gary Lineker penalty -

3-2 and the Africans were out. Cameroon missed pushing itself further into the

history books by a mere 7 minutes!

The next team to almost make it to the semi-final was Senegal in South Korea 2004

World Cup. Senegal displayed a very attractive football which kindled the hope of

Africa. Anyone who watched their skills and bravery knew they were going to have

their feet firmly in the semi-finals. They were, however, beaten by Turkey in a

match they could have won and the African hope to enter the semi-final zone was once

again dashed.

This year 2010 was to be a year of hope, perseverance and success for the African

teams. The event had never been so close to our own doorsteps. Surprisingly all the

African countries, including the host country South Africa, were eliminated in the

group stage. Only our twinkle twinkle Black Stars carried the African honours beyond

the group stage. We pulled a fast one over the US in extra time to squeeze our way,

deservedly, into the quarter finals. All Africa turned its hope and moral support to

Ghana. We were the team to take Africa further. Indeed, Ghana's support was immense

among all the African countries and included important personalities like Nelson

Mandela and Jacob Zuma.

The day came when the Black Stars had to break the jinx of African teams' inability

to move beyond the quarter-final stage. The Black Stars met Uruguay in the quarter

finals. Hopes were very high when Muntari registered the first goal. Uruguay got the

equaliser on resumption of play through a free kick that was well taken but really

not beyond Kingson's capabilities of stopping if he had positioned himself correctly

behind the wall and did not think the ball was going to his right.

It was in the last minute of extra time when the Uruguay keeper missed Adiyiah's

shot in what Ghanaian sports journalists popularly call "goalmouth scramble" and was

heading into the roof of the net when a desperate Suarez, in a very desperate move,

used his hands to stop the ball. A penalty was duly awarded and Suarez sent off. The

whole world was in no doubt that history was in the making for Ghana and Africa.

Quite unlike Asamoah Gyan, he shot the penalty hard and nearly removed the crossbar

as it hit the woodwork. The cameras showed Suarez jubilating on the sidelines and

the Uruguayan keeper thanking his gods and the crossbar for the deliverance. The

penalty shootout was an anti-climax for Ghana. The game was already lost to us even

before we started the penalty shoot out (PSO in Fifa's parlance). The Black Stars

killed the African dream by losing on penalties to Uruguay and crushing 23 million

hearts in the motherland. Some of us have still not yet recovered from that loss.

What is worthy of discussion was why the Portuguese referee did not whistle for a

goal when the ball was prevented from entering the goal by the hands of Suarez who

is a player and not a goalkeeper. FIFA must change the rules regarding a player

deliberately touching the ball in the goal area. FIFA must consider this seriously

as they did in 1938. Before the rules were changed, seven corner kicks were equal to

one goal. There was nothing like "throw-in" when the ball went off the field. The

ball was put down and kicked. Even when a goalkeeper caught a ball and a player was

able to push him into the goal, it was considered a goal.

I hope Ghanaians would forgive Asamoah Gyan for wasting the penalty. However, Sule

Muntari must be banned from the Black Stars. He arroganty refused to join the team

to honour Mandela's invitation. Instead he chattered a private jet worth 50,000

euros, and left with his family to Ghana. Antwa yie.

Written by Stephen Atta Owusu

Author:Dark Faces At Crossroads

Email:stephen.owusu@email.com

Source: Stephen Atta Owusu