This article needs attention from an expert in footballor Ghana. Please add a reason or a talk parameter to this template to explain the issue with the article.(May 2023) |
Founded | 1999 |
---|---|
Founder | Tom Vernon |
Type | Football academy |
Registration no. | 1108821 |
Location | |
Owner | Mansour Group |
Employees | c. 300 |
Right to Dream is a youth association football academy system based in Ghana. It started in 1999 as a residential school and training center in Accra. It is owned by the Mansour Group.
It is now a multi-club multi-academy group with branches in Egypt as well as the Mansour Group's professional teams, FC Nordsjælland in Denmark, FC Masar in Egypt and San Diego FC in the United States.
Right to Dream Academy was founded in 1999 by Tom Vernon, who had been Manchester United's head scout in Africa. [1] [2] [3] [4] It started on a small scale and, unlike most youth academies, independent of a professional team, training a small number of boys who were initially housed in Vernon's home. [5] [6] Some scouts and other staff were volunteers. [6]
In 2004, the organization began partnering with US boarding high schools to offer athletic scholarships. [6] In 2010, the organization opened a new facility south of Akosombo in the Eastern Region of Ghana. [7] [8] As of 2021, it is an all-scholarship boarding school for promising footballers drawn from all over West Africa.[ citation needed ]
Bleacher Report ranked it 15th in their 2013 ranking of youth academies. [9] A girls’ youth system programme was introduced in 2013, the first in Africa. [10] [11] [12] [13] In 2014, Right to Dream Academy launched the first Right to Dream school programme in Takoradi. [14] [15] In 2015, Right to Dream bought FC Nordsjaelland. [3]
As of 2015, partners included Tullow Oil Ghana, [16] [17] Mantrac Ghana, [18] [19] Ashoka, [20] and Laureus Sport For Good Foundation. [21]
In 2021, the Mansour Group invested $120 million in a takeover and announced it was forming a new entity, ManSports. [3]
In 2022, Right to Dream bought Egyptian pro football club FC masar. the Mansour Group also financed an expansion team in Major League Soccer that will begin play in 2025 and be based in San Diego, California. The team, named San Diego FC, will construct a Right to Dream academy near El Cajon, California. [22]
Since 1999 the academy has graduated 282 students, according to their website as of 2023. [23]
Since 2007, Right to Dream has produced over 157 graduates playing professional football Globally. 67 Right to Dream graduates have also received call ups into National teams, from the Black Starlets(U17) to the Black Stars. [24] [25] As of May 2023, Right to Dream had over 56 graduates studying at high schools and universities across the US and UK. [26]
67 RTD graduates (both male and female) have represented their country at senior international level.
7 of these players played at the Men's FIFA World Cup in 2022.
RTD Ghana and FCN have produced 146 professional players in total (and counting).
In 2022, 5 FCN male graduates and 8 female graduates signed pro contracts.
Right to Dream squads travel to Europe regularly to compete in tournaments. [27] [28]
Right to Dream U15s won the 26th edition of the Marveld Tournament in the Netherlands [29] The U15 team of Right to Dream Academy won the 2015 TopC-RKMSV tournament in the Netherlands. [30] [31] The academy participated in the 2013 and 2014 editions of the Gothia Cup, placing third in 2013 and winning in 2014. [32] In 2015, Right to Dream returned to the Gothia Cup and successfully defended their title, making the academy the first team to win the Gothia Tipselit Trophy in two successive years. [33]
The academy has won the African championship and thus retained the right to represent Africa each year since the 2008 edition. [34] [ better source needed ] Right to Dream has achieved five top-eight finishes in the World Finals of the Manchester United Premier Cup, playing the best football teams from Manchester United, Juventus, Paris Saint Germain and Real Madrid. [35] [36] It placed a best of 3rd in 2009, [37] and in 2014, the academy placed 4th. [38] In 2015, Right to Dream won the Manchester United Premier Cup world finals for the first time in their history. [39] [40]
In 2010, Right To Dream were named Peace Ambassadors and invited to participate in a tournament during that year's Nobel Peace Prize Weekend. [41]
In 2015, Right to Dream U18 and U15 were unbeaten for a combined total of 42 matches on their European Tours. [42] [43]
In 2016, Right to Dream U17 finished in 6th place at the 7th edition of the ABN AMRO Future Cup in Amsterdam. [44]
In 2022, Right to Dream U18 won the Gothia Cup.
Scholarships are granted to Africans, both boys and girls, to study at the purpose-built Academy, located on the banks of the Volta River. [45] Every two years, 15–20 students are selected out of 30,000 trialists and assessed both on their athletic ability and their academic performance to study and train at the Academy on 100% scholarships. [46] [47] Right to Dream's International School is an accredited centre for the Cambridge International Examination. [48] The academy also offers a combination of local and international curriculums.[ citation needed ]
The first Right to Dream School opened in Takoradi in September 2015. [14] The programme is a partnership between Right to Dream and a leading private school in each identified location. [15]
Right to Dream is a not-for-dividend business in Egypt and Denmark, a charity in Ghana and is currently a 501(c)(3) organisation in the United States, which places students from Right to Dream Academy into US boarding schools and universities on athletic scholarships. [49]
The Ghana national football team represents Ghana in men's international football. The team is named the Black Stars after the Black Star of Africa in the flag of Ghana. It is governed by the Ghana Football Association, the governing body for football in Ghana. Prior to 1957, it played as the Gold Coast.
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.
Daniel Quaye is a Ghanaian former professional footballer who played as a defender.
Mohammed Rabiu Al-Hassan, simply known as Mohammed Rabiu, is a Ghanaian former professional footballer who played as a defensive midfielder. He has earned over 30 caps for the Ghana national team.
Kwaw Paintsil Ansah is a Ghanaian film-maker, whose work as writer, director or producer includes Love Brewed in the African Pot in 1980 and Heritage Africa in 1989. His first feature, Love Brewed in the African Pot, earned immediate popular and critical acclaim throughout English-speaking Africa. Despite all the awards and the success, it would be nearly 10 years before Ansah could complete his next major film project, the ambitious Heritage Africa (1989). Yet again, the film was widely acclaimed and awarded. Since then, Ansah has produced other films, including Harvest at 17 (1994), Crossroads of People, Crossroads of Trade (1994) and The Golden Stool, the Soul of the Asantes (2000). Ansah is a crusader for African filmmaking and dramatic art, working ceaselessly for improved funding and distribution of African films within Africa. He has been chairman of FEPACI and a leader in the direction of FESPACO. In 1998, Ansah was awarded the Acrag Prize, the Living Legend Award for Contribution to the Arts of Ghana.
Accra Academy is a boys' high school located at Bubuashie near Kaneshie in the Greater Accra Region, Ghana. It admits both boarding and day students. Founded as a private school in 1931, it gained the status of a Government-Assisted School in 1950. It is the oldest existing high school to have been founded in the Gold Coast without prior involvement of a religious society, the government or a chiefdom.
Christian Atsu Twasam was a Ghanaian professional footballer who primarily played as a winger, although he was deployed as an attacking midfielder or left back.
Abdul Majeed Waris is a Ghanaian professional footballer who most recently played as a striker for Cypriot club Anorthosis.
David Accam is a Ghanaian former professional footballer who played as a winger. He won 11 caps for the Ghana national team.
Ebenezer Kofi Assifuah-Inkoom is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as a forward for Malaysia Super League club Kedah Darul Aman.
John Antwi Duku is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays for Dreams F.C. as a striker. At the international level, he has featured twice for Ghana national football team.
Kwesi Nyantakyi is a Ghanaian banker, lawyer and former football administrator. He was the president of the Ghana Football Association (GFA) from 30 December 2005 until 7 June 2018. Nyantakyi officially resigned a day later. However, four hours to the release of his resignation letter FIFA had issued a statement announcing his ban from all football related activities for a period of 90 days pending investigations. Circumstances surrounding his resignation include a video released by investigative journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas in which Nyantakyi was found taking a bribe and purporting to have the ability to "take over the whole country". In an interview with Super Sports South Africa a few days after the video of the investigation was slated to go public, Nyantakyi denied any wrongdoing regarding match fixing. On 30 October 2018 FIFA officially issued a statement that officially bans Kwesi Nantakyi from football related activities for life. In October 2020, the ban was reduced to 15 years after a reconsideration by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Christian Tsui Hesse, popularly known as Chris Hesse is a Ghanaian cinematographer, filmmaker, film administrator, photographer and Presbyterian minister who is known for his cinematography in several award-winning films such as the critically acclaimed Love Brewed in the African Pot (1980) and Heritage Africa (1989). He was the personal cinematographer of Ghana's first President, Dr Kwame Nkrumah. Chris Hesse helped to document the visual history of the political leadership and development of the country. He also worked for the United Nations, serving as a photographer, documenting the Congo crisis in 1960.
Samuel Kwame Owusu is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as a right winger for Serbian club OFK Beograd and the Ghana national team.
Thomas Agyepong is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as a winger for Estonian club Paide Linnameeskond. He has previously played on loan for Dutch clubs Twente and NAC Breda, Scottish club Hibernian and Belgian clubs Waasland-Beveren and Lommel. He has also made six full international appearances for Ghana national team.
Yaw Yeboah is a Ghanaian professional footballer who last played as a winger for Major League Soccer club Columbus Crew.
Edem Adzaho is a trainer, author, public speaker and Ghanaian human resource consultant. She was voted 17th on the 2015 Most Influential Young Ghanaian list.
Enoch Adu is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as midfielder for Trollhättan in the Swedish Ettan-Norra league.
Rashid Seidu is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper. In 2015, he earned a national call-up and was a member of the Ghana U23 for the 2015 All-Africa Games.
Abdul Aziz Issah is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as a forward for Spanish club Barcelona Atlètic on loan from Ghana Premier League side Dreams FC.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)