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Saddick Adams writes: The untold story of how Ghana’s jerseys got missing hours before Italy clash

By Saddick Adams
Opinion Saddick Adams writes: The untold story of how Ghanas jerseys got missing hours before Italy clash
JUL 7, 2022 LISTEN

Ghana’s Olympic Team, the Black Meteors used to be highly rated. They were the first African team to win a medal (bronze) at the Olympics Football in Barcelona 1992. Ghana missed Sydney in 2000 but returned to in Athens 2004.

That Meteors team of 2004, coached by Portuguese Mariano Barreto, was one of the most exciting sides of those years. Led by Yusif Chibsah, Ghana topped a group made up of Zambia, Algeria, and South Africa to qualify for the Athens Olympics.

After an intensive pre-tournament camping in Lisbon where Asamoah Gyan had scored against FC Porto and Sporting Lisbon in 2-1 and 3-1 victories for the Meteors. The stakes were high for the opening game vs Italy which was also a repeat of 1996 when Ghana won 3-2 in Atalanta. There were some controversies before the team’s opening game. Isaac Boakye, who was one of the key men upfront, was ruled out of the tournament with an injury in their final preparatory game. The biggest story was Sulley Muntari being thrown out of camp for alleged indiscipline.

But there was more to come. Ghana departed Lisbon and arrived in the Greek City of Volos two days before the tournament. VOLOS was where group B members Italy, Paraguay, and Japan would be based. Hours before the opening game vs Italy, Ghana’s Team Manager Owoahene Acheampong had to attend the mandatory pre-match conference where each team would present their team squad, outline match day event, and color of jerseys, etc.

Ghana’s jerseys were nowhere to be found. Owoahene nonetheless attended the pre-match meeting. During interrogation, Owoahene, with no jersey to show, surprisingly convinced the officials that Ghana will wear an all-yellow kit but he had forgotten them at the hotel.

There was NO jersey at the hotel. Back at the Team Hotel, officials were still arguing about who was responsible for the missing jerseys. Coach Mariano Barreto descended to the lobby and was caught up in the search and blame game meeting. Then an idea occurred to him…

Coach Barreto was then sponsored by Nike and when they found out that he had led a team to Athens, Nike presented some training jerseys to him in a box. The jersey was yellow. He counted them and they were 18. Perfect, but they came without shorts and no names nor numbered. Players were resting in their rooms waiting for kickoff the next morning. The leader of the delegation was the experienced Fred Pappoe. He went combing the streets of Volos to find a sports shop to buy yellow shorts and number the kits. There were No such shops in Volos unless Athens.

Volos to Athens some 3 and half hour journey. Fred Pappoe then hired a cab from Volos to Athens on top speed. Upon arrival in Athens, the only shop where he could get the shorts and print the numbers had closed. The match was 1 pm the next day. The leader of the delegation then decided to sleep in the shabby hotel just opposite the sports shop and waited for the next morning. He was the first customer at the shop. The yellow shorts had numbers already so they printed the numbers on the kits and back to Volos by 11: 00 am.

All along, the players didn’t know what was going on behind the scenes. They wore their jerseys in the dressing room & straight to the pitch. They didn’t even notice the shorts had a different texture and numbering to the top. They were just ready to play. Look closely.

But what had happened? GFA Secretary Kofi Nsiah had picked the jerseys produced by local manufacturer Mingle and packaged them to the airport. It was the same night that GFA Chairman Nyaho Tamakloe was traveling to Greece via London to the Tournament.

There was a mix-up. Kofi Nsiah labeled the cargo with Nyaho’s name hoping Nyaho will carry them along to the team. Nyaho Tamakloe claimed he was completely unaware he had the cargo in his name so when his flight landed in London, he proceeded to Athens with only his luggage. Ghana went into the game in the Nike Yellow tops donated to the coach and shorts purchased in Athens. It ended as one of the most exciting games of the tournament. Ended 2-2. Stephen Appiah scored the goal of the tournament.

Before the second game vs Paraguay, the Mingle-produced Ghana jerseys had been traced and brought to Volos. The match ended 2-1 with Ghana needing a draw vs Japan to qualify. Unfortunately, Japan shocked Ghana beating the Meteors by 1-0.

Ghana’s Olympic 2004 journey ended but the story did not end there. It is a story that has never been publicly told for 18 years. The behind-the-scenes of international football. Athens 2004 was eventful and unforgettable for many tales and this is obviously one of them. Great off-the-pitch sacrifices. Devoid of the challenges, they found a solution and that is what smart leaders do.

You may have seen this photo for 18 years on the internet but this is the story behind the makeshift jersey in this picture here.

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