Today In Sports History: 16 supporters die in stamped at Kumasi Sports Stadium

Today In Sports History: 16 supporters die in stamped at Kumasi Sports Stadium

On this day 3 May 1978 (Exactly 42 years ago today) 16 soccer fans died after nine – man Accra Hearts of Oak beat Asante Kotoko 2 :1 in a League match played at the Kumasi Sports Stadium.

Hearts broke the deadlock in the 15th minute through a goal from Bismark Odoi, but Victor Sereboe levelled the score for the Porcupine Warriors 10 minutes after the break.

Goals Scored

Kotoko
Victor Siriboe (55)

Hearts
Bismark Odoi (15)
Douglas Tagoe (88)

Hearts played the last 35 minutes of the match with nine men. After Kotoko’s equaliser, Hearts vehemently protested and in the confusion, referee Bah Alhassan was booted down.

After ten minutes hold – up, referee Bah sacked both Seth Ampadu and captain Robert Hammond for challenging his decisions.

The nine-man Hearts of Oak team shook Kumasi by netting the winning goal through the foot of Douglas Tagoe with two minutes to end proceedings.

16 soccer fans died and several others were injured in a stampede after the match.

This was the first major disaster between Hearts and Kotoko.

Elsewhere;

On this day 3 May 2012 (Exactly 8 years ago today) Maxwell Konadu was appointed as assistant coach of the Black Stars by the Ghana Football Association.

The appointment of the Asante Kotoko coach was confirmed by the GFA following the announcement of some changes in the backroom staff of the various national teams.

Konadu assisted Kwesi Appiah, with Nasam Yakubu taking over as the goalkeepers’ trainer.

Black Stars
Head coach: James Akwasi Appiah
Assistant coach: Maxwell Konadu
Goalkeepers trainer: Nasam Yakubu
Team Doctor: Dr. Adam Baba
Physiotherapist: Col. Ofosu Anim
Masseur: Samuel Ankomah
Welfare Officer – Sarbahn Quaye
Equipment Officer – Ismail Hamidu

On this day 3 May 2015 (Exactly 5 years ago today ) Chelsea secured the Premier League title by beating Crystal Palace at an ecstatic Stamford Bridge.

Jose Mourinho’s side needed three points to complete the triumph that had become an inevitability at that period of the season as they moved out of sight of their rivals to reclaim the crown from Manchester City, who were 13 points adrift despite their win at Tottenham.

Victory was secured by Eden Hazard’s goal on the stroke of half-time, the Belgian heading past Julian Speroni after the Palace goalkeeper had saved the PFA Player of the Year’s penalty.

That gave Mourinho his third Premier League title as Chelsea manager, and the first of his second spell in charge. It was the club’s fifth top-flight title .

By: George ‘Alan Green’ Mahamah

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