We all have that relative or friend who is difficult to buy gifts for when a big occasion or birthday comes around. Crystal Palace forward Kwesi Appiah, who has been on loan in England’s fourth tier with Cambridge United this season, is just such an individual.

As a result, for Christmas last month, he was not expecting a single present. Then he received a phone call on Christmas Eve.

“It was someone from the Ghana FA,” Appiah recalled to FIFA.com. “I was on the way to training and I got a call from someone saying, ‘We’d like to invite you to come and play for the national team’. I got goosebumps thinking, ‘Is this really happening?’ I was delighted, extremely proud as well. It blew me away.

“People think I’m too hard to buy presents for, they just leave me to it. I wasn’t expecting anything. Everybody was asking me, ‘What do you want for Christmas?’ This was the present I needed the whole time.”

Appiah had been named in Ghana’s preliminary 31-man squad for the CAF Africa Cup of Nations. Ghanaian fans and the world’s media scanned the list. The final name read Kwesi Appiah (Cambridge United, England). 

Grant trimmed the squad to 26 for a training camp in Spain and, again, Appiah made the cut. A few days later, the final list was submitted to CAF for the finals, and announced on the GhanaFA website. Appiah was, once more, the final name on the list. But who is Kwesi Appiah?

Born to a Ghanaian father and an English mother in Camberwell, just south of the River Thames in London and around 30 minutes from Palace’s Selhurst Park, he grew up an Arsenal fan. He got his footballing break in English non-league, after a helping hand from an educator.

“One of the teachers recommended me to a club called Gravesend and Northfleet, now Ebbsfleet United,” Appiah said. “I went and did two years in the youth team and got into the first team.”

From there, he moved to Peterborough United in England’s third tier. After several loan spells, he departed for a successful season at Margate, where his impressive scoring record caught the eye of current club Palace, whom he joined in 2012, with the team one step below the English Premier League.

“How would I describe myself? I like to threaten in behind,” Appiah revealed. “I like to come and get the ball short and dribble, feed people in and be creative. Growing up my idols were the likes of Thierry Henry, Ian Wright and Dennis Bergkamp, so throughout my career I’ve taken little parts of their games and tried to add them to mine. Most importantly, I like to score goals, that’s what all strikers like to do.”

The 24-year-old has found himself out on loan at several different sides since his arrival at Selhurst Park, most recently at Cambridge, where he caught the eye of Avram Grant and his scouting network.

“One minute I’m driving up the motorway every day in my carpool with four other guys, trekking to training and back,” an audibly excited Appiah said. “Next thing I know I’m on planes, travelling to training camps, getting bombarded by Ghana fans everywhere we go. It’s something that I’m soaking up and dealing with as we go by. I’m not letting it affect me at all, I’m just trying to play my game when the time comes.”

It is a refreshing attitude for an international footballer and Appiah, while grateful for his experience at Cambridge, admits Ghana’s stars are a galaxy away from the English fourth tier.

“These players are extremely talented,” Appiah said. “They are quality players. To train with them and see what they do day in, day out it only breeds confidence in me, makes me want to be a better player and learn from what they do. I’m extremely grateful for the opportunity and I’ll take everything I can from it. Everyone has tried to make me feel welcome. As time goes by, everyone gets a bit more comfortable around each other.”

There is a fresh feel to Ghana’s squad for the tournament in Equatorial Guinea, with 'initiations' for new squad members aplenty. After a 2014 FIFA World Cup™ campaign to forget for the Black Stars, Kevin-Prince Boateng and Sulley Muntari were sent home by the Ghana FA and the side finished bottom of an admittedly difficult Group G, new coach Avram Grant has called up five players to their first Africa Cup of Nations, including Appiah. Muntari, Boateng and experienced midfielder Michael Essien did not make the final 23.

“There are new faces, but there are a lot who are familiar with each other,” Appiah said. “The atmosphere is brilliant, the chemistry within the team is fantastic. It helps us as a team to be as one on the pitch.

"[Grant] has got very clear ideas of how he wants the team to play, and the style with which he wants us to perform. All the players have taken to what he’s been saying, and trying their best to carry it out on the field. That’s the important thing, people buying into how he’s trying to make us play.”

Drawn in Group C, alongside continental heavyweights Algeria, South Africa and Senegal, Ghana’s No2 is cautiously optimistic of the Black Stars’ chances of emerging from their pool.

“From the outside looking in, you’d think that is the ‘group of death’,” Appiah remarked. “But we’re quietly confident of our chances of succeeding in this tournament and progressing to the latter stages. Obviously they’re extremely talented teams, we’ve just got to give it all we’ve got.”

Appiah’s new international coach Grant turns 60 just two days before the final in Bata, and a tournament-winning goal from the Crystal Palace forward would surely be the perfect gift.

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Readers Comment

  • Tanko 9 years ago

    Every Ghana fan wants you to succeed and that you will!. Good luck Kwesi

  • shine 9 years ago

    I hope this Appiah start Every game for Ghana due to his invissibility for the opponents in Ghana group He will surprises the teams.Maybe the opponents will be looking out for Asamoah Gyan to break him down,but Appiah will be up to Conqure as he is a newboy in Africa Football

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