Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Charles Kweku Bismark Taylor Asampong | ||
Date of birth | 14 July 1981 | ||
Place of birth | Sefwi Asanwinso, Ghana | ||
Height | 1.84 m (6 ft 1⁄2 in) | ||
Position(s) | Striker | ||
Team information | |||
Current team | Berekum Chelsea | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1998–2000 | Great Olympics | ||
2000–2003 | Accra Hearts of Oak | ||
2003–2004 | Asante Kotoko | ||
2004–2006 | Etoile du Sahel | ||
2006–2010 | Accra Hearts of Oak | ||
2010–2011 | Enugu Rangers | ||
2011–2014 | Berekum Chelsea | ||
International career | |||
1999–2004 | Ghana | 16 | (2) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Charles Kweku Bismark Taylor Asampong (born 14 July 1981 in Sefwi, Western Region) is a former Ghanaian professional footballer who played as a striker or an attacking midfielder. [1] [2] [3] He had his greatest playing days and is one of the few players to play for Accra Hearts of Oak S.C. and Asante Kotoko. As a kid, he was often called tailor, after his uncle who was a tailor as he used to help his uncle with work, hence, he adopted the name Charles Taylor after the former Liberian president. Nicknamed "Terror" due to his ability to terrorise opponents. He's arguably one of the greatest players to ever play the Ghana premier league and a key member of the famous "64 Battalion" squad of Accra Hearts of Oak S.C. that won the African Champions League in 2000 and consecutive Ghanaian league titles. [4] [5] [6] [7]
His playing career started off at Great Olympics, where he used to polish the shoes of their management, he had a bet with the then chairman Ade Coker that he could play better than the team players, he was asked to play and showed excellent dribbling skills, he later signed for the club.
Asamponk transferred to Accra Hearts of Oak in 2000 where he helped them win the Ghana premier national league in 2000, 2001 and 2002 seasons. Then coached by Sir Cecil Jones Attuquayefio and Ofei Ansah, Taylor formed a fantastic partnership with Ishmael Addo and Emmanuel Osei Kuffour affectionately called the deadly trio. [3] In addition to the national premier league in 2000, Hearts of oak won the FA cup and the African champions league for the first time. [3] In February 2001, they won the African Super Cup Championship where he scored the first goal against Al-Zamalek of Egypt at the Kumasi Sports Stadium. Charles Taylor alongside Charles Allotey, Amankwah Mireku, Joseph Ansah, Jacob Nettey, Stephen Tetteh, Ishmael Addo, Emmanuel Osei Kuffour, Sammy Adjei, Edmund Copson, and Emmanuel Adjogu were deemed as the best squad ever to be assembled by Accra Hearts of oak and also famously called "64 Battalion" a name after the most feared unit of the Ghana Army in the 1990s
He controversially transferred from Accra Hearts of Oak to arch-rivals Asante Kotoko in 2003 for the then domestic transfer record fee of GH₵ 40,000 (roughly US$42,000). Charles Taylor essentially boycotted training with Hearts of oak and did not play any games way into the season just to force the move. His first season with Kotoko was a success and he won the Ghana Premier league with Kotoko in 2003. However, this transfer caused a lot of bitter local sentiment towards Taylor, from which his popularity has never recovered. [8] Taylor joined Etoile du Sahel from Kotoko in 2004 for a fee of US$250,000 [9] After an unsuccessful spell in Tunisia he was loaned to Accra Hearts of Oak in October 2006. [10]
He was part of the Ghanaian 2004 Olympic football team that exited in the first round, having finished in third place in group B. He was a silver medalist with Ghana U-20 team at 2001 Africa youth championship in Ethiopia. He currently has forty one caps for the Ghana national football team, the Black Stars, scoring nineteen goals. Taylor represented the Black Stars at 2009 African Championship of Nations in Côte d'Ivoire, where they finished second, beaten by the famous Congo. [11]
In August 2015, he was ordained as a priest, after making known his intentions of becoming a pastor to propagate the word of God. [12] [13] [14]
Accra Hearts of Oak [15]
Asante Kotoko [15]
Ghana
Accra Hearts of Oak Sporting Club, commonly referred to as Hearts of Oak or just Hearts, is a professional sports club based in Accra, Ghana. Founded in 1911, the club is the oldest surviving football club in Ghana and its traditional colours are red, yellow and blue. Hearts of Oak competes in the Ghana Premier League, the premier division on the Ghanaian football pyramid. The Accra Sports Stadium is the club's home grounds.
Samuel Osei Kuffour is a Ghanaian former professional footballer who played as a centre-back.
Asante Kotoko Sporting Club, simply known as Asante Kotoko, is a professional football club founded on 31 August 1935 and based in Kumasi in the Ashanti Region of Ghana. Nicknamed the Porcupine Warriors, they compete in the Ghana Premier League and play their home matches at the Baba Yara Stadium in Amakom, Kumasi.
Peter Ofori-Quaye is a Ghanaian former footballer who played as a striker. Ofori-Quaye spent most of his career in the Greek division and amassed 33 goals in his 10 seasons in the league.
Emmanuel Osei Kuffour also known as The General, is a Ghanaian former professional footballer who played as a midfielder.
Ishmael Addo is a Ghanaian former professional footballer who played as a striker. He is best known for his accomplishments during his career at Ghanaian side Hearts of Oak, but has also spent several years in France, Israel, Greece, Cyprus and India. A diminutive striker with an exceptional turn of pace, Addo's ability to score goals and demoralise the opposition has led to him earning the nickname "baby-faced assassin". Holding the record of overall top scorer in the history of the Ghanaian League, he is considered to be one of the most talented strikers ever to grace the competition. At some point during his career, Addo was named in FIFA's top 100 prospects.
Bernard Dong Bortey is a Ghanaian retired footballer who played as an attacking winger.
Lawrence Nii Adjah Tetteh is a Ghanaian footballer.
Real Republikans was a Ghanaian association football club based in the capital, Accra, along with Hearts of Oak, and was among the most successful Ghanaian clubs in the country’s first decade of independence. It holds Ghana's record for the most consecutive FA Cup wins, four. The club formed the core of the national team, the Black Stars, in its early years.
The Ghana Super Cup is a football competition involving a match played between the champion of the Ghana Premier League and the winner of the Ghanaian FA Cup in Ghana. The first Ghana Super Cup competition took place in the 1996–1997 season, after which there was a thirteen-year hiatus between the 1998 and 2010 seasons. Kumasi Asante Kotoko and Accra Hearts of Oak are the two most successful clubs in the competition's history.
Lord Oblitey Commey is a Ghanaian administrator, entrepreneur and politician. He is a member of the New Patriotic Party and the current Director of Operations at the Jubilee House, the official residence and office of the President of Ghana. He has served as an executive member of Accra Hearts of Oak Sporting Club and is a former youth organizer for the New Patriotic Party.
Emmanuel Nettey is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder.
Mathew Anim Cudjoe is a Ghanaian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Bnei Sakhnin and the Ghana national under-20 football team.
Mohammed Alhassan is a Ghanaian footballer who plays as a defender for Hearts of Oak and Ghana.
Samuel Paa Kwesi Fabin is a Ghanaian professional football manager. He is the current coach of the Ghana national U-23 team. He is a former coach Ghana Premier League teams; coaching stars like Asante Kotoko, Accra Hearts of Oak and Aduana Stars He previously coached the Ghana national U-17 team leading them to 2nd place in the 2017 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations.
Salifu Ibrahim is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as a attacking midfielder for Kosovo Superleague club Drita. He previously played for Techiman Eleven Wonders and Hearts of Oak.
Michael Osei was a Ghanaian football coach and player who was most recently the head coach of Bibiani Gold Stars. A midfielder, was well known for playing for Asante Kotoko, Vorwärts Steyr in Austria and Mainz 05 in Germany. He also had spells with other clubs in Venezuela, Turkey and lower tier sides in Germany.
Frederick Ansah Botchway is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Zimbabwean club Dynamos City.
Robert Addo Sowah is a Ghanaian professional footballer who last played as a defender for Ghanaian Premier league side Accra Hearts of Oak.
The President's Cup is an annual one-off game, featuring two selected clubs at the end of the season. The cup is called the GHALCA President's Cup because it is organized by Ghana League Clubs Association (GHALCA) and played in honour of the sitting President of Ghana. The game was also known as the Republic Day Celebrations Cup and is usually played in July of each year to mark Ghana's Republic Day celebrations which falls on the 1 July.