Ghana coach Avram Grant not keen on friendly wins

Published on: 31 March 2015
Ghana coach Avram Grant not keen on friendly wins
Avram Grant

Avram Grant says friendly matches should not be all about results, says the Ghana coach.

The Israeli trainer has played down his side’s 2-1 to Senegal last Saturday in Le Havre- their second defeat to the Teranga Lions in three months.

“The key objective is two things. First, that the players will be as much as they came together because I don’t think you push a button and everything becoming well,” Grant said.

“I want to continue the good performance that we earned in African Cup. Just put it as a base in future so it is to be together, to practice and to come to the games.

“We always want to win but in friendly games it is also an opportunity to test players, to test other strategizes and to make what we have even stronger.”

Grant has named a weakened side to face Mali on Tuesday night in Paris with goalkeeper Fatau Dauda replacing Razak Brimah.

Richmond Boakye-Yiadom who came off the bench to score the consolation against Senegal gets to start.

In-form Leicester City man Jeffrey Schlupp has been handed a starting role.

Comments

  • Cookes
    says: 9 years ago
    Winning is an attitude! If you don't learn to overcome adversity in friendly matches, you will find it difficult to do so in competitive matches. It is a mental thing, a frame of mind that needs to be cultivated now! It is the reason why Brazil plays its friendly games to win, even though most of their friendlies are away from home.
  • PITO
    says: 9 years ago
    Ghana is lacking the touch of EXPERIENCED QUALITY players that can make a difference in a game. The young lads are playing well but what an adult can see when he sits, the young lads have dig hard to have any meaningful impact!
  • PITO
    says: 9 years ago
    we have a kindergarten goal keeper in the post by the name of Dauda, look at him fumbling with every single ball. hahahahahaaa
  • kimco
    says: 9 years ago
    i disagree we need experienced players. we need quity players not necessarily experienced. is it not these young lads dat have, twice in a long tym iirc, taken us to the afcon finals? something our experienced players never did? when do u want the boys to grow and experienced too if u keep shoving "experienced players" in dere. u'll only be found wanting in the future if u fail to build with these boys. they have more than proven themselves worthy.