The truth is plain: Jordan Ayew is in the Black Stars because of his father, not because of his qualities.
Abédi Pelé built a legacy with his feet. Jordan has ridden it with his surname. For more than ten years, he has occupied a spot that should belong to players earning it on current form, not on family history.
Look at what he actually brings to the Black Stars:
- Refuses to shoot when in good positions, killing attacks.
- Plays safe, backward passes when Ghana needs penetration.
- Disappears in big games, then hides behind “tactical role” explanations.
- Goal and assist numbers for Ghana that don’t justify a guaranteed place.
His club record makes it worse. Multiple Premier League relegations follow him — Leicester, Aston Villa, and Crystal Palace. When the pressure is highest and goals matter most, Jordan’s teams go down. That’s not coincidence; that’s a pattern. Yet somehow, for Ghana, he is still treated as untouchable.
Any other Ghanaian player with that record would be dropped. But Jordan stays because the Ayew name still carries weight in the FA and in dressing rooms unwilling to make hard calls.
Coaches hide behind jargon about “link‑up play” and “defensive work rate.” Supporters and technical minds watching with clear eyes see a forward who slows the team down. They see hungry wingers and strikers left at home while Jordan keeps jogging around the right channel, offering little.
This is not about disrespecting Abédi. It’s about protecting the Black Stars from nepotism. Ghana cannot build a winning team on legacy selections. Right‑thinking Ghanaians know it. The longer Jordan starts on his father’s name instead of his own merit, the longer the Black Stars remain stuck.


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