The Star Malaysia

I won’t take penalties

Gyan to take late mother’s advice into the tournament

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Asamoah Gyan won’t take a penalty in regular play for Ghana at the African Nations Cup after his mother asked him not to just two weeks before she died.

The Ghana captain said he would take his late mother’s advice into the tournament in South Africa after costly recent misses for his team that he conceded on Wednesday had left him “psychologi­cally down” and forced him to take a break from internatio­nal football.

Gyan’s mother died in November after a car accident in Ghana.

“I lost my mum recently and the one thing she said two weeks before she died, she emphasised, was these penalty kicks,” Gyan said on Ghana’s arrival for the African Nations Cup. “I have to respect her decision for me not taking penalties for the team.”

Gyan’s crucial misses included in the dying minutes of extra time in the World Cup quarter-finals against Uruguay in South Africa in 2010 that denied the Black Stars history as the first African team to make the semifinals.

He also missed in the semi-finals of last year’s African Nations Cup and Ghana went on to lose to eventual champions Zambia.

Gyan was philosophi­cal after a pocket of chanting Ghana supporters welcomed him and his team to South Africa, and offered extra cheers for the captain.

“Things happen in life. Many players miss penalties,” Gyan said.

But the striker also said he was affected by his failures from penalties and they forced him to take a break from internatio­nals following the last African Nations Cup.

“That is why I took time off. Because I was psychologi­cally down,” he said. “I had to step back to psych myself and then come back to the team.”

Gyan leads another Ghana team expected to challenge strongly for the title. The team want so badly to end a 30-year period of failure at the championsh­ip.

Coach Kwesi Appiah is expected to deliver a success, finally, despite not having Europe-based stars Kevin-PrinceBoat­eng, Sulley Muntari and Michael Essien available. Appiah also dropped the Ayew brothers, Andre and Ayew, from his final 23 but said he had the players he could “rely on.”

“That doesn’t mean that the others are no good,” Appiah said, “but it’s important that we concentrat­e on those who are representi­ng the nation.”

Although Gyan wouldn’t be Ghana’s No. 1 penalty-taker any more, he did commit to taking one if his team needed it in another shootout. “When I have no option but to take it, why not?” Gyan said. “A penalty shootout. That will be fine.” — AP

 ??  ?? Painful indeed: Asamoah Gyan’s crucial penalty misses included in the dying minutes of extra time in the World Cup quarter-finals against Uruguay in South Africa in 2010. — AP
Painful indeed: Asamoah Gyan’s crucial penalty misses included in the dying minutes of extra time in the World Cup quarter-finals against Uruguay in South Africa in 2010. — AP

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