Football is often called the beautiful game, but for many Ghanaian players who carried their nation’s pride onto the biggest stages, it has also revealed its ugliest face.
They dazzled with their skill, lifted clubs and countries with unforgettable goals, yet were reduced to targets of hate because of the colour of their skin.
The journey of these men is not just about football, but about dignity, defiance, and the unshakable will to keep playing in the face of cruelty.
Their stories, from Germany to Italy, from Anfield to Asia, capture a painful truth: racism has haunted the careers of Ghana’s brightest stars. But in every instance, these players refused to be silent victims.
Liverpool fan who racially abused Semenyo banned from all UK stadiums
Antoine Semenyo – Answering hate with goals
At Anfield on August 15, 2025, Bournemouth forward Antoine Semenyo lived through a night that should have been remembered only for football.
Instead, in the first half against Liverpool, he heard racist abuse from the stands.
The referee stopped play as security ejected the perpetrator, later arrested under hate crime laws.
Semenyo, visibly shaken, might have shrunk under the weight of the moment.
Instead, he delivered his most memorable performance, scoring twice to briefly drag his side level in a hostile stadium.
Christopher Antwi-Adjei – Booed for his skin
Just days later, on August 17, 2025, Schalke’s Christopher Antwi-Adjei walked into a German Cup tie against Lokomotive Leipzig expecting ninety minutes of football.
Instead, he was met with jeers and racial abuse from sections of the home crowd.
The referee halted the game, stadium announcements were made, yet the chorus of boos continued every time the winger touched the ball.
Antwi-Adjei finished the match with dignity, but the scars were left behind for both player and sport.
Sulley Muntari – Walking off in protest
Long before Semenyo and Antwi-Adjei, another Ghanaian made headlines for refusing to suffer in silence.
In April 2017, Pescara midfielder Sulley Muntari was showered with monkey chants from Cagliari supporters.
He turned to the referee for protection, only to be booked. Muntari’s response was bold, he walked off the pitch, alone but unbowed.
The image of him leaving the field symbolised years of ignored abuse in Italian football.
Days later, his yellow card was rescinded, a quiet acknowledgement that he had been right all along.
Kevin-Prince Boateng – A walk-off that shook the world
Kevin-Prince Boateng’s stand came in 2013, when AC Milan played a friendly against lower-tier Pro Patria.
After enduring vile chants, he stopped the game himself, booting the ball into the stands, tearing off his shirt, and leading his teammates off. The match never resumed.
That act of defiance reverberated worldwide. For once, racism had not been tolerated as background noise; it had stopped football in its tracks.
Ghana’s all-time top scorer, Asamoah Gyan, had carved out a respected career in Asia.
Yet in 2014, during an AFC Champions League semi-final against Al-Hilal, he accused Romanian midfielder Mihai Pintilii of hurling a racist insult at him after being sent off.
Gyan, visibly angered, vowed to lodge a complaint.
Though less publicised than European scandals, the case forced Asian football to confront issues many preferred to ignore, proving racism is not confined to one continent.
John Mensah – Broken by abuse in France
Known as the “Rock of Gibraltar” for his commanding presence at the back, John Mensah endured his own torment in Ligue 1.
While playing for Lyon against Le Havre in 2009, racist abuse rained down on him from the terraces.
Police eventually arrested a young offender, but Mensah later admitted the pain gnawed at him so deeply he longed to go back home to Ghana.
Tony Yeboah – A trailblazer in Germany
In the early 1990s, Tony Yeboah became one of the Bundesliga’s most lethal strikers and the first Black captain of Eintracht Frankfurt.
Yet his rise came amid monkey chants, slurs, and banners from extremist fans who resented a Black man leading their club.
FKA/EB
Meanwhile, watch the trailer to GhanaWeb’s upcoming documentary on teenage girls and how fish is stealing their futures below: