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‘We learn from each other’ – how Ghana’s Black Queens turned fortunes around





‘We learn from each other’ – how Ghana’s Black Queens turned fortunes around


The team were not in great shape before Nora Hauptle took over in January 2023. Now they dream of Wafcon glory


In the end Nora Hauptle could not hold back her tears. They were tears of joy. Even for a woman who has played and managed at the highest level, what she had just achieved with Ghana had to be filed under her greatest achievements.


The Black Queens, as Ghana’s women’s national team are nicknamed, had just lost 1-0 in Namibia but the result had very little significance because their 3-1 victory in the first leg four days before meant they had qualified for the 2024 Women’s Africa Cup of Nations (Wafcon) – their first major tournament in six years.

As Hauptle, the entire technical staff and players celebrated, waving back at the singing Ghana supporters in the stands and taking it all in, it epitomised their journey to achieve this remarkable feat. They’ve made it look so easy with a string of victories but it has been everything but.

A year ago this was a team unrecognisable from the one that qualified: fragile and without an identity. Now, they do not just play with swagger but have made a habit of winning games comfortably.

“I’m very happy to be part of the squad that qualified [for the Wafcon] and also very proud of the team,” the midfielder Ernestina Abambila, who plays for the Turkish top-flight side Hakkarigucu Spor Kulubu, tells Moving the Goalposts. “The last time the Black Queens qualified was in 2018, which was hosted by Ghana, so returning to the Wafcon feels great.”

Abambila’s sentiments are shared by most of the players. It does not seem to matter whether they start, come on or do not get any minutes at all; they’re usually just eager to contribute when given the opportunity. And there is now a competitiveness that means no one can take a call-up for granted.

Under Hauptle, the Black Queens train with gravitas and play with a twinkle. The Swiss coach, thanks to her impeccable person-management skills, has created a team culture that has every player on the same page. “She has time for every player,” says Abambila. “I have learned a lot of things on and off the pitch since I started working with her in the national team.”
When Hauptle took charge in January 2023 she initiated a rejuvenation of the squad, phasing out the old guard and developing a new core mainly made up of players promoted from the Under-20s. This has led to consistent results – the Black Queens have won 10 out of 11 matches under her, scoring 34 goals, conceding two and keeping nine clean sheets – and are able to control games, create a lot of chances and fight on when things aren’t going their way.

Coach Nora Hauptle is hoisted in the air as Ghana celebrate qualifying for the 2024 Women’s Africa Cup of Nations. Photograph: GFF Communications


The refreshing part is that Hauptle learns from her players as much as she teaches them. The 40-year-old is aware of the cultural gap between Europe, where she was born and raised, and Ghana and makes a big effort to assimilate.

“I teach them discipline, but they always tell me that they like that we are strict and demanding,” Hauptle tells Moving the Goalposts. “On the other side they have an approach which I learn a lot from too. The relaxed way, for example, when they dance and sing before a game, I can learn a lot from that. And they sometimes smile when they see that their coach is not in the rhythm.”

Women’s football in Ghana has been through a bad spell. It beggars belief that, despite being one of the pioneers of the women’s game in Africa, Ghana have yet to win a major tournament at senior level.

Between 1991 and 2006, Ghana always made the Wafcon quarter-finals at least, finishing runners-up on three occasions. However, the Black Queens have since exited the tournament at the group stage four times and failed to qualify twice.

Ghana, previously bettered only by Nigeria on the continent, have fallen behind countries such as Cameroon, Morocco, South Africa and the the Democratic Republic of the Congo and last qualified for the World Cup in 2007.

The country continues to produce exceptional female players, most of whom are now being noticed by elite clubs in Europe. The biggest bane of the women’s game has been a dearth of investment. Many players in the Ghana Women’s Premier League play for free despite the harsh economic conditions in the country, and the situation is no different for many players who represent the various women’s national teams. It is a far cry from the men’s game, where millions of dollars are pushed into the Black Stars.


The Black Queens have enjoyed an exceptional 2023 but expectations are now very high. They will be back in action in February for a two-leg final Olympic qualifier against Zambia before flying to Morocco in August aiming to win a first Wafcon title.

Hauptle believes there is no limit to what this talented group can achieve but they must be wary of complacency. Abambila agrees with her coach, saying: “Our first target is to qualify from the group stage [of the Wafcon]. 








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‘We learn from each other’ – how Ghana’s Black Queens turned fortunes around

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