Clifford Aboagye was once Ghana’s golden boy. A name that rolled effortlessly off the tongues of local fans and foreign scouts alike.
A silky playmaker who, with every deft touch and eye-of-the-needle pass, looked destined for greatness.
Today, he prepares for a new footballing chapter in Cyprus, not as a marquee signing, but as a forgotten gem hoping to shine again.
It all started brightly.
At the 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup in Turkey, he was a revelation. Amidst a galaxy of future stars, Paul Pogba, Gerard Deulofeu, Angel Correa, and Saúl Ñíguez, he stood out.
Wearing the colours of Ghana’s Black Satellites, he orchestrated attacks, scored crucial goals, and danced past defenders with ease.
Ghana finished third, and he took home the Bronze Ball, awarded to the tournament’s third-best player, behind only France’s Pogba and Uruguay’s Nicolás López.
Two years later, in 2015, he returned to the U-20 World Cup in New Zealand, this time as captain.
A rare feat. He led by example, scoring again and creating chances as he became the first Ghanaian player to feature in two editions of the global tournament since the country’s historic 2009 triumph.
By then, fans saw a future Black Stars midfield built around him.
But that future never arrived.
Despite dazzling on the youth stage and commanding transfer fees as high as €2.5 million during his time in Mexico, he never earned a senior cap for Ghana. Not one.
Many hoped his move to Italian side Udinese in 2013 would be the gateway to top-tier European football.
But instead, he was quietly shipped off to Granada B in Spain, a club affiliated with Udinese, where his first-team dreams stalled.
A year later, he crossed the Atlantic to Mexico, where his career became a carousel of clubs: Atlas, Querétaro, Club Tijuana, Puebla.
At his peak, he fetched significant fees and wore the No. 10 shirt with pride. But consistency eluded him.
By 2022, the decline was visible. He became a free agent, not once, but twice. His market value plummeted from €3 million in 2020 to just €300,000 by 2024. A brief spell in Libya with Al-Murooj barely registered on the radar. For someone whose youth career lit up global stages, the fall was steep and silent.
Now, at 30, he has signed with Anorthosis Famagusta in Cyprus, not as the superstar he once promised to be, but as a man in search of redemption.
For Ghana, his absence from the senior team remains a “what if.” For him, the dream is still alive, even if the path has changed.
As the 2025/26 season approaches, perhaps Cyprus will finally offer the stage for this once-boy wonder to rewrite his story, even if just a little.
FKA/EB
Meanwhile, watch as football fans question FIFA’s move to scrap penalty rebound rule