Black Starlets eye redemption in tough group
After nearly a decade off the continental map, Ghana’s Black Starlets storm back into the CAF U-17 Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco with a clear mandate to restore a fading dynasty and punch a ticket back to the FIFA U-17 World Cup stage they once ruled.
For a side that defined youth football excellence in the 1990s, this is no routine return; it is a high-stakes mission to reclaim identity, credibility and a place among the elite.
With Ghana’s Black Princesses sealing an eighth consecutive FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup qualification last Saturday, the burden now falls squarely on Coach Prosper Narteh Ogum and his talented youngsters to deliver a response of their own by restoring Ghana’s lost dominance at the youth level and securing a return to the global stage.
First, they must navigate one of the toughest groups in the competition while carrying the weight of expectation from Ghanaians to compete for honours and secure a return to the FIFA U-17 World Cup.
Drawn in a daunting Group D, Ghana’s campaign begins with a tricky opener against Algeria on May 14 — a side known for its tactical discipline and physical organisation, capable of frustrating even the most technically gifted teams.
Three days later, the Starlets face defending champions Senegal, arguably the benchmark of modern African youth football, blending athleticism, tactical intelligence and tournament experience.
It is the kind of fixture that could define Ghana’s campaign and test whether this new generation can match elite continental standards.
The group stage concludes with another high-stakes encounter on May 20 against South Africa, the 2015 runners-up.
Restoring pride
Once the benchmark of global youth football — with FIFA U-17 World Cup triumphs in 1991 and 1995 and four straight final appearances between 1991 and 1997 — Ghana’s absence from the continental elite has exposed a systemic breakdown in talent production and progression.
Ogum has been handed the task of fixing it immediately in the expanded tournament that offers 10 qualification slots for the FIFA U-17 World Cup in Qatar. This tournament presents Ghana with a rare opportunity to re-enter the global conversation.
The team’s final tune-up offered a mixed signal, wrapping up preparations with a narrow 1-0 defeat to Mali yesterday in Mohammadia, undone by a 65th-minute own goal in a fiercely contested encounter.
The result stung, but the performance offered glimpses of promise for Ogum, who was handed a necessary reality check.
“This was exactly the level of test we needed ahead of the AFCON,” he said, framing the contest as a critical stress test. “Mali brought intensity, discipline and high-level competition, and I’m encouraged by how the boys responded.”
The current Starlets team boast talents and promise to draw inspiration from their illustrious predecessors, a golden generation that featured names such as Nii Odartey Lamptey, Samuel Kuffour and Michael Essien, who once transitioned seamlessly from youth dominance to global relevance.
Coach Ogum is not short on talent. Defensively, twins Essau and Jacob Kpoeti are tasked with providing structure and resilience. In midfield, Issac Barfo, Augustine Appiah and Michael Awuli bring energy and balance, while the attacking burden falls on Mark Aboagye, Abdul Latif Wunzalgu, Joseph Narbi and Gavi Robinho Yao provide a frontline built on pace, creativity and unpredictability.
The expectation is high, and the message from the Ghana Football Association is equally clear. The FA boss, Kurt Simeon-Okraku, has framed the tournament as a defining moment for Ghana’s youth football revival, urging the players to reconnect with a proud history and write a new chapter.
“Ghana has a rich tradition in youth football — now it is your time to build on that legacy,” he told the team.
Across the field, the competition is loaded. Hosts and defending champions Morocco headline Group A, Côte d’Ivoire and Cameroun anchor Group B, while Mali — fresh from their win over Ghana — are among the strongest contenders in Group C.
