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Name Cape Coast Stadium after Ben Koufie

The Chairman of Cape Coast Venomous Vipers Football Club, Mr Kweku Tandoh on Monday suggested the naming of the Cape Coast Sports Stadium under construction, after Mr Ben Koufie, former Chairman of the Ghana Football Association (GFA). He said his suggestion if implemented would go a long way in motivating many more talented footballers to give of their best towards the promotion and development of the game in the region and the country. Mr Tandoh who was interacting with the GNA Sports in Cape Coast, said Mr Koufie, who is also a FIFA/CAF Instructor and a Member of the CAF Technical Committee, has contributed immensely to the development of football in the country and Africa and should be accorded such an honour for his sacrifices. The Vipers’ Chairman noted that apart from football administration and coaching, the 76-year-old Mr Koufie started his career as a footballer and featured for Vipers and the national soccer team, the Black Stars. Among the football clubs he featured for apart from Vipers which he captained included Kumasi Ever Green, Cornerstones, Ashanti XI and Cape Coast XI. Mr Koufie trained as a coach in the former Czechoslovakia at the Nymburk Sports College in 1961. He continued with his training in the same year in West Germany at the Cologne Sport Hoch Schule as a football coach and obtained a First Class Diploma – DHFK, East Germany in 1964 with certificate for Gold Medal as Best Student (UKUNDE). He obtained the English Football Association Football Coaching Certificate in June 1970 at County Durham and attended a Senior Coaches Clinic at Lilleshal, England in the same year. After the Clinic, he was attached to Chelsea Football Club in July 1970 under Dave Sexton in London and attended other short courses conducted by FIFA periodically in Ghana. Mr Koufie was appointed Regional Coach of the Eastern Region in 1961 and then for the Western Region in 1963. In 1964 he was appointed the deputy national coach and won the Africa Cup with the Black Stars in Tunis in 1965 with Mr C.K. Gyamfi. Between 1964 and 1966 he coached Kumasi Asante Kotoko Football Club and was appointed the Team Manager of the Black Stars in 1967. Mr Koufie was appointed National Coach/Manager of the Black Stars from 1968-1973 and took the team to the finals of the Africa Cup of Nations in Addis Ababa Ethiopia in 1968 and in Sudan in 1970. At the club level, Mr Koufie with the support of Mr Aggrey Fynn won the Africa Club Championship with Kotoko in Zaire in 1971 and went ahead to coach Accra Great Olympics to the semi-finals of the Africa Club Championships in 1972. He also coached Africa Sports of Abidjan, Akosombo Textiles football team (Akotex) before becoming the Chairman of the Technical Committee of the GFA from 1979-1980 and Technical Advisor to the Zimbabwe Football Association from 1981-82 and introduced Botswana to international and continental competitions in 1992. In January 2000, Mr Koufie was awarded Silver Medal by CAF for the development of football in Africa and elected Chairman of the GFA from 2001 to 2004. He is credited with bringing into existence the Ghanaian Soccer Centre of Excellence at Prampram as the National Training Centre for Development and awarded national honours (Grand Medal) for distinguished service to Ghana in July 2006 by President J.A. Kufuor and selected for Ghana’s Hall of Fame for excellent performances as a player, coach, instructor and administrator. Source: GNA

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.