I have always been a supporter of the Black Stars; not the kind of support that rises and falls with results, but the stubborn kind that refuses to walk away, even when everything suggests you should.
It is the kind of love that shows up on a Tuesday night when the team is two goals down, when the pundits have already written the obituary, when friends have switched the channel and moved on ; yet you remain there, chest tight, hands clasped, whispering softly: “Come on, boys.”
That is my love for the Ghana Black Stars. And it has never wavered. Not once.
The heartbreaks we may never heal from
The deepest wound came on July 2, 2010. At Soccer City in Johannesburg, with Ghana carrying the hopes of an entire continent as Africa’s last remaining team, Luis Suárez used his hands to claw a certain winner off the goal line. Asamoah Gyan stepped up to take the penalty that would send Africa into its first-ever World Cup semifinal and struck the crossbar. We lost on penalties. Some of us cried. All of us hurt.

But that was not the only heartbreak.
At AFCON in 2015 we reached finals and fell short. In 2021, we crashed out in the group stage, beaten by debutants Comoros, a result that felt humiliating. And then at Qatar 2022, we got our rematch with Uruguay, the chance for revenge 12 years in the making and lost 2–0, finishing bottom of the group.
The dark days: Otto Addo, Chris Hughton, and the fading belief
During the tenures of Chris Hughton and Otto Addo, the Black Stars went through a spell of inconsistency that tested even the most loyal supporters. Back-to-back defeats. Uninspiring performances. A team that looked like it had lost its identity and direction.
Many people gave up. I watched them do it. Jerseys were packed away. Social media timelines filled with frustration and mockery.
I understood them. But I did not join them.
After Ghana suffered back-to-back defeats to Austria and Germany in March 2026, even the optimists began to lose hope. Otto Addo was dismissed, a move I believed was long overdue. The team was in disarray just weeks before a World Cup.

But I kept my hopes up. Because this is what real love looks like. It does not disappear when things get hard. It stays. It waits.
Enter Carlos Queiroz: the shift
Then came the Portuguese. The Ghana Football Association appointed Carlos Queiroz as head coach of the senior national team, just 59 days to the World.
The cynics scoffed. A last-minute appointment, they said. A stopgap.
But those who knew his pedigree, understood something different.
From the first moment he spoke, you could feel a shift, structure, intent, discipline, belief.
Ghana opened their 2026 World Cup campaign with a narrow 1–0 win over Panama, a match that looked destined to end goalless until late drama decided it. Three points. On the board.

Then came England.
A match that could have broken weaker teams; But this Ghana side stayed in it. Fought for it. Earned a hard-fought draw and a priceless point.
“I am so proud of the way our players fought and how much they stand behind the game plan,” Queiroz told the BBC after the match. He dedicated the result to the fans and the players. “It is a gift for our fans… a gift for some of the players we lost.”
The result leaves both Ghana and England level on four points at the top of Group L ahead of their final group matches. Top of the group. The Black Stars, my Black Stars, sitting at the top of their World Cup group alongside England.
The love is coming back
Something is happening in Ghana right now that warms my heart in a way I cannot fully explain.
Jerseys are returning from wardrobes. People who once swore they were done with the Black Stars are watching again. Investing again. Singing again.
The casual fans are back. The bandwagon is filling up again. And honestly? Good. There is room. But here is what I need you to know and I say this with love, not pride: I was always here.

When it was embarrassing to admit you supported the Black Stars, I was here. When group chats went silent after defeats, I was here. When we exited AFCON early and left Qatar without glory, I was here.
I did not need a good result to justify my love.
And yes, Carlos Queiroz has made things better. He has given us something to believe in again. And I love that — maybe even more than before but I was already in love.
The love coming back now is beautiful. It shows something is working again. But for those of us who never took the jersey off, this does not feel like a restart.
It feels like recognition.
For the Stars, always
Ahead of the England game, Carlos Queiroz spoke about sacrifice and mental toughness:
“To suffer and play. We must be ready to make sacrifices. A win in this World Cup is very expensive. But the boys are ready to pay that price.”

I read that and smiled; because that is exactly what it has felt like for us too paying the price for years in heartbreak, ridicule, and stubborn loyalty through the darkest seasons.
And yet, we never stopped.
So as Ghana pushes forward as the nation watches, hopes, and believes again ; know this:
Some of us never stopped believing in the first place.

The love is coming back. But mine never left.
Go Black Stars!
Written by a proud, unapologetic, never-wavering Black Stars fanatic.








