In Nungua, a coastal town just outside Accra, Harrison Afful grew up watching the Black Stars on television in a group of friends — somebody on a table, somebody on a chair, everyone shouting at the same screen. He never imagined he would one day wear that shirt. They kept rejecting him for being too small.
Feyenoord's parent club said no. He was too small. Stabæk said no. Helsingborgs said no. Mamelodi Sundowns said no. The junior national teams kept cutting him. His own country's youth setup turned him away — repeatedly — not because he lacked ability, but because he lacked inches.
He went to Tunisia instead. And there, 4,000 kilometres from Nungua, Harrison Afful became a continental champion. He scored the only goal across two legs of the 2011 CAF Champions League Final. He won four Tunisian league titles. He played in three continental finals. Then he crossed another ocean and became one of the most reliable right-backs in Major League Soccer history.
Three continents. Eighty-four caps for Ghana. A career that lasted nearly two decades. All built by a man every system said was too small to make it.

What They Said About Him 🗣️
He's one of the most underrated right backs in the league. At minimum, I think he should have been called into one MLS All-Star Game. He does things every game that, as a coach, surprise you. He consistently does it all the time.
He does things that you wouldn't think a normal right back could do. He does it and we're like, 'Whoa.' I play with him in the national team and it's the same. He comes into training and does unbelievable things. I just don't know how he does it
"I didn't even dream of playing for Ghana because anytime I was called for the U-20s they would always kick me out because of my size. But I never gave up because I know I have the qualities, the abilities, I have the talents and then I have the brains. It is a God-gifted thing to me
Player Profile 📋💪🦵
Date of Birth: 24 July 1986
Place of Birth: Tema, Ghana (raised in Nungua)
Nationality: Ghanaian
Height: 1.68 m
Preferred Foot: Right
Position: Right-Back / Full-Back
What Made Afful Special ⚽🔍
The Attacking Full-Back Before It Was Fashionable
Afful was playing as an attacking right-back long before the position became a tactical obsession. His biggest strength, by his own admission, was going forward. He made overlapping runs with the timing of a winger, delivered crosses into the box with precision, and had the engine to get back into position before the opposition could exploit the space he left. He was a threat going both ways — and that double-sided quality was rare at his level.
Relentless Motor
At 1.68m, Afful was never going to win a heading duel or bully a winger with physicality. What he had instead was an extraordinary work rate and stamina that allowed him to cover the full length of the right flank, match after match, season after season. Coaches in Ghana, Tunisia, and America all said the same thing: he just kept going. He did not have off days. He did not coast.
Composure in Big Moments
His greatest single moment — a curling left-footed finish in the 2011 CAF Champions League Final against Wydad Casablanca — was not the goal of a nervous player. It was composed, clinical, and decisive. The kind of finish that only comes from someone who has trained to be ready when everything is on the line. That one goal won Espérance the continental title.
Leadership Without Volume
Afful was never the loudest voice in the dressing room. His leadership was physical — he set the standard with his workload and professionalism. He captained Ghana in international friendlies. He was the player who built the Ghanaian pipeline into Columbus Crew, opening the door for Mensah, Abu, Abubakar, and Opoku to follow. He led by being impossible to replace.
Career 🏆
Club Career
Feyenoord Academy Ghana (2005–2009) → Asante Kotoko (loan, 2007–2009) → Espérance Sportive de Tunis (2009–2015) → Columbus Crew SC (2015–2022) → Charlotte FC (2022–2023) → Michigan Stars FC (2023–2024)
Club Honours
Ghana Premier League — 2007–08 (Asante Kotoko) · Ghana Premier League Player of the Year 2007–08
Tunisian Ligue 1 — 2009–10, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2013–14 (Espérance de Tunis)
CAF Champions League — 2011 (scored the only goal across both legs of the final)
Crew SC Career: 200+ appearances · 35 club career goals across approximately 527 total appearances
International
Ghana (Senior) · Caps: 84 | Goals: 0
2008 AFCON — 3rd Place (Ghana, host nation)
2010 AFCON — Runner-Up
2013 AFCON — 4th Place
2014 FIFA World Cup — Group Stage (assist vs Germany)
2015 AFCON — Runner-Up
2017 AFCON — represented Ghana
Retired from football: 2024
Final Words 🎯✨
Harrison Afful once said he was thinking about writing a book. Not for himself — for his children. Because he did not get the opportunity to read about someone like him growing up, and he wanted them to know what was possible.
That desire to document, to pass on, to share — it says everything about the man. A player who was told no by every system that was supposed to say yes. Rejected for his size by academies in the Netherlands, Scandinavia, and South Africa. Cut from Ghana's youth teams despite performing. Overlooked until he could not be overlooked anymore.
He scored the winning goal in a CAF Champions League Final. He became the cornerstone of one of Tunisia's greatest eras. He crossed an ocean at 29 — an age when many players are winding down — and became one of the most consistent performers in MLS. He wore the Black Stars shirt 84 times. He captained his country.
Some players are made by the systems that support them. Harrison Afful was made despite the systems that rejected him.
The boy from Nungua who used to watch Ghana on television with his friends — somebody on a table, somebody on a chair — ended up playing at the World Cup, representing his country on the biggest stage the game offers. Not because anyone handed it to him. Because he never stopped believing the talent was there, even when nobody else did.
