John Attu Mensah

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Attu Mensah
Personal information
Full name John Attu Mensah
Place of birth Ghana
Position(s) Winger
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Ebusua Dwarfs
Great Olympics
Cambridge United
Norwich City
National team
1950s–1960s Ghana
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

John Attu Mensah was a Ghanaian professional footballer who played as a winger for the Ghana national team.[1][2] He is the father of Ghanaian international John Mensah.[2]

Club career[]

Mensah played for Cape Coast Ebusua Dwarfs in the 1960s,[3] he later played for Accra Great Olympics in the late 1960s.[4][5][6] On 28 July 1969, during an club international match against Great Olympics and Palmeiras during the training tour in Ghana, Attu played the full match and made the assist to Saul Mettle's goal, the equalizer which gave Olympics a draw at the Accra Sports Stadium.[7]

After playing in clubs in Ghana, he moved to England to play for Cambridge United.[2] He was reportedly the first black person to have featured for the Cambridge-based side. He later featured for Norwich City before retiring in the late 1970s.[2]

International career[]

At the international level, he played for the Ghana senior team in the 1950s to 1960s winning over 20 International caps for Ghana.[2] He played alongside players like Aggrey Fynn, Dogo Moro, Baba Yara, C.K. Gyamfi (captain) and Edward Acquah.[2]

Personal life[]

John Attu Mensah is the father of former Ghanaian international defender and captain John Mensah.[2] Mensah died in June 2021 in the United Kingdom after a short illness.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ The Legon Observer. Legon Society on National Affairs. 1969.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "GFA commiserates with family of late John Mensah". www.ghanafa.org. Ghana Football Association. 21 June 2021. Retrieved 2021-09-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ Bediako, Ken (1967-08-05). Tsedze, Oscar (ed.). Daily Graphic: Issue 5240, August 5 1967. Daily Graphic. Accra, Ghana: Graphic Communications Group.
  4. ^ Ofori, Nelson (1969-07-21). Agyeman, Eddie (ed.). Oly Win; Daily Graphic: Issue 5,848 July 21 1969. Daily Graphic. Accra, Ghana: Graphic Communications Group.
  5. ^ Vordzogbe, Jean (1970-07-20). Aidoo, George (ed.). Kotoko trash Rangers 6-1; Daily Graphic: Issue 6157, July 20 1970. Daily Graphic. Accra, Ghana: Graphic Communications Group.
  6. ^ Gyan-Budu, Kojo (2008). Soccer History: The Missing Link. Otubua Publications.
  7. ^ Ken, Bediako (1969-07-28). Ofori, Henry (ed.). Olympics draw with Palmeiras. Daily Graphic. Accra: Graphic Communications Group.


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