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Sunday, June 8, 2025

Four clubs, one crown, and 90 minutes to make history

GhanaWeb Feature by Frank Kamal

The sun will set on the 2024/25 Ghana Premier League this Sunday, June 8, 2025, but no one knows yet whose name will be carved into history.

Four clubs, three points apart, one trophy, and just ninety minutes (or maybe a little more than that) to decide it all.

The streets of Abrankese are already buzzing, not with vendors or ‘trotro’ horns, but with whispers of, can Nations FC really do it? Can a team with no league history hold their nerve and clinch their first-ever title?

They are top of the table, but barely, and they haven’t even finished their last game.

Against Basake Holy Stars, they walked off the pitch in protest. The GFA hasn’t ruled yet but will they be awarded the win? Forced to replay?

Docked points? Everything is uncertain, except the pressure. And now, they must face Heart of Lions in a final-day clash that feels less like football and more like fate.

Heart of Lions knows this story too well; just one year ago, they were in tears, not of joy, but of survival.

They stayed up on the final day, narrowly avoiding relegation.

This season, however, they could become champions. From scraping by to chasing gold, this is a rise no scriptwriter could invent.

And they’ll be stepping into Abrankese with nothing to lose but a dream in their eyes.

Meanwhile, in Bibiani, tension hangs over Dun’s Park like thick harmattan dust.

The Gold Stars faithful are wide-eyed. Last season, they were 11th, respectable but forgettable.

This season, they are tied at the top, and now they welcome Accra Lions, a club no one expected to see here for the wrong reason; because just last year, Accra Lions finished second.

This year? Relegated. It’s the story of a fallen giant, another reminder of how unforgiving this league can be. But Gold Stars won’t show mercy. Not with history knocking; not with glory in reach.

If they win, and Nations FC stumble, Bibiani could erupt. For the first time ever, they could lift the GPL title.

Then comes Asante Kotoko. The Porcupine Warriors have gone three years without winning the league. For them, that’s an eternity.

For their fans, it’s a drought too long.

They are two points from the top. The math isn’t simple, but the mission is clear: beat Vision FC, hope for dropped points ahead, and see what fate decides.

But Kotoko’s ambition doesn’t stop there. They are already in the FA Cup final. The scent of a double lingers.

The possibility of a comeback season, with silverware in both hands is alive, though faint.

And across the capital, heartbreak lingers in red, yellow, and blue. Hearts of Oak should have been title contenders this year. Instead, they’ve endured a season of chaos.

In 2024, they only survived relegation on the final day.

In 2025, with high hopes and optimism around manager Aboubakar Ouattara, many thought they were back. But the season never clicked. Inconsistency, disjointed football, and a furious fanbase unsettled the club.

Now, Ouattara’s job is hanging by a thread and he might not survive the weekend. A final-day win against Samartex may soothe wounds but won’t stop the questions.

Down below, the relegation story has already closed, and it wrote some shocking twists.

Accra Lions, who finished second in 2024, are going down. No one saw it coming.

Legon Cities, who saved themselves in the dying moments of 2024 never even came close this time.

Their relegation was confirmed with three games to spare.

And Nsoatreman, the most tragic of all, withdrew from the league after a fan’s death. Football took a backseat to grief. They, too, will not return next season.

But for all the stories of despair, there are tales of hope rising from the lower leagues.

All three promoted sides – Vision FC, Basake Holy Stars, and Young Apostles – will stay up. They’ve fought, clawed, and earned the right to dream again next year.

Watch as Techiman Eleven Wonders crowned 2025 Division One League Champions

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