On January 28, 2001, Ghana’s Black Stars faced one of their most humiliating nights on home soil.
At the Accra Sports Stadium, in a 2002 FIFA World Cup qualifier, Liberia stunned Ghana with a 3–1 upset victory, thanks to goals from Frank Seator, Oliver Makor, and Musa Shannon.
Ghana’s only goal came via Emmanuel Duah, but it was too little too late.
The lineup that night read like a who’s who of Ghanaian football: Charles Akonnor (Captain), Stephen Appiah, Otto Addo, Emmanuel Duah, Sam Kuffuor, Richard Kingston, Jacob Nettey, Charles Amoah, Mark Edusei, Stephen Baidoo, and Sam Johnson.
Yet, the balance was off. Defensive hesitation, midfield turnovers, and questionable tactical decisions handed Liberia the initiative.
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Liberia struck first through Seator from a free kick header in the opening minutes.
Ghana responded in the second half with Duah equalising, but the visitors regained control when referee Mohammed Guezzaz awarded a contentious penalty in the 85th minute, converted by Makor.
Two minutes later, substitute Musa Shannon sealed the result for Liberia.
The fallout was immediate, with several senior players announcing their retirements from national duty, disillusioned by the collapse on home soil.
The match acted as a turning point for Ghana’s football leadership.
Ben Koffie, then GFA chairman, initiated the resetting of the senior national team.
He brought in Cecil Jones Attuquayefio as interim coach, who controversially selected almost an entire Accra Hearts of Oak squad for the next fixture, sidelining many of the former stalwarts.
According to reports, only a handful of those players: Emmanuel Duah, Sammy Kuffuor, Stephen Appiah, Richard Kingston, Charles Amoah, Princeton Owusu-Ansah, and Augustine Arhinful, would return for future national assignments.
By the time of the return leg, Ghana’s squad looked very different.
Under coach Ossam Duodo, Ghana deployed younger names like Issah Mohammed, Isaac Boakye, Hamza Mohammed, Godwin Ablordey, and Charles Taylor, who eked out a 2–1 win in Monrovia.
But it wasn’t enough; Nigeria had already collected the points needed to top the group.
That night in Accra remains one of Ghana’s most shocking defeats.
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