
Ghana Football Club Urges Parents to Back Girls in Sports
A Ghanaian football club leader is calling on parents to support their daughters' athletic dreams as women's soccer gains global momentum. The message comes as FIFA now offers financial rewards to female World Cup players, opening new career paths.
Girls who love football are finding more reasons than ever to chase their dreams, and one Ghanaian sports leader wants parents to join the team.
Jerod Doetse Kabu-Aklie, CEO of Cabfix Ladies Football Club in Ada, Ghana, is urging families to embrace sports as a real pathway to success for their daughters. He says the landscape for women's football has transformed dramatically in recent years.
The numbers back him up. FIFA now provides direct financial incentives to female players whose national teams qualify for the Women's World Cup, a game-changing shift that recognizes women athletes as professionals deserving compensation.
Aklie, who also coaches Greater Accra's under-15 and under-17 girls' teams, has witnessed attitudes shifting firsthand. Girls who play football once faced harsh stigma and unfair assumptions about their character. Those outdated views are finally fading.
"If you identify talent in your daughter, help nurture it," Aklie told the Ghana News Agency. "Your support, emotionally and financially, will empower her to pursue it with passion and confidence."

He points out that many countries worldwide are now investing seriously in women's sports, creating income opportunities and career development that didn't exist a generation ago. What was once dismissed as a hobby can now become a livelihood.
The Ripple Effect
The impact reaches beyond individual players. Aklie notes that nurturing athletic talent can transform entire families and communities, creating opportunities that ripple outward for years.
Scouts actively search for talented female players, and girls who showcase their abilities often find breakthrough moments. Many students have already secured higher education through sports scholarships, though Aklie emphasizes that academics still matter deeply.
"Education complements talent," he explained. "It helps refine and strengthen it."
For girls dreaming of playing football, Aklie's message is clear: take the sport seriously and commit fully. The opportunities exist for those willing to work for them.
Parents hold the key to unlocking those opportunities, and the future of women's sports looks brighter with every family that chooses to believe in their daughter's potential.
Based on reporting by Google News - Ghana Development
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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