He believes applying the club licensing regulation could be simpler and much effective if clubs are given timelines to achieve certain requirements of the regulation, as compared to the current system where it is fully imposed on clubs to meet regulation without any kind of support from the GFA, and without also considering the variation in the financial capacity of the clubs.
The Ideal Mode
“The club licensing system is not tailor made to suit our peculiar system. It was not planned progressively. When new initiatives are introduced it must be gradually implemented, else it will not be achieved uniformly.
“There should be a first set of requirements which must be accomplished by clubs for a specific number of years, for instance, within two years .After that another set of regulation with another timelines are given and encouraged to meet. I believe applying the regulation will be effective by this approach and understood by all.”
Unfairness
Issues of club licensing have been a bane for some clubs in the country since its introduction as requirement to be applied by the GFA before guaranteeing and certifying a particular venue to be used by a premier league club.
Ironically, it has been met with incessant comments where club administrators believe the CLB are particularly unfair considering how some stadia sanction while others are rejected.
“There is no fairness with the committee that does that because recently I went to a venue which was not accepted example Wamanafo Park and I see other venues which have been accepted it is marveling, like Nania’s where there is no dressing room.
“Why do you approve that of Nania and leave Wamanafo? The best is to approve both and give them timelines to improve, but not to sanction one and reject one, these are some of the things I will insist on,” Mr Amponsah posited. Read Full Story
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