
Former Nsoatreman FC General Manager Eric Alagidede has issued a sobering reminder of Ghana football’s harsh realities, pointing to the fate of once-proud traditional clubs as a cautionary tale for Hearts of Oak and Asante Kotoko.Speaking to Sporty FM, Alagidede reeled off a list of clubs that once commanded respect and loyalty across the country but now find themselves languishing in the lower divisions.”BA United is playing in Division Two, Bofoakwa Tano in Division Two, Hasaacas in Division Two,” he said. “I have done a lot of work on traditional clubs.”His words carry weight. These are not obscure namesBofoakwa Tano and Hasaacas were once giants of Ghanaian football, clubs with passionate fanbases and rich histories. Today, they compete far from the spotlight of the Premier League.Alagidede’s warning to Hearts and Kotoko is simple: the same fate could await them if complacency sets in.”I am not going to be the prophet of doom, but if we are not careful, clubs like Hearts of Oak and Asante Kotoko may not be relevant in the next 20 to 30 years,” he cautioned.The two giants currently sit third and fourth in the league standings, with Hearts on 40 points and Kotoko two behind. But league positions, Alagidede argues, are no guarantee of long-term survival.Declining stadium attendance and shifting fan engagement patterns suggest deeper problems that require urgent attention.For a nation that reveres its football history, the image of Bofoakwa Tano and Hasaacas in Division Two is a stark reminder that no club is too big to fall.
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