Godfried Aduobe Explained

Godfried Aduobe
Birth Date:29 October 1975
Birth Place:Accra, Ghana
Height:1.78m
Position:Midfielder
Youthyears1:1985–1993
Youthclubs1:Powerlines Accra
Youthyears2:1993
Youthclubs2:Torino Calcio
Years1:1993–1994
Clubs1:BSC Old Boys
Caps1:13
Goals1:2
Years2:1994–1996
Clubs2:Young Boys Bern
Caps2:39
Goals2:6
Years3:1996–1998
Clubs3:Greuther Fürth
Caps3:35
Goals3:4
Years4:1998–2002
Clubs4:SSV Reutlingen
Caps4:129
Goals4:7
Years5:2002–2005
Clubs5:Hansa Rostock
Caps5:45
Goals5:1
Years6:2005–2011
Clubs6:Karlsruher SC
Caps6:162
Goals6:2
Nationalyears1:2003
Nationalteam1:Ghana
Nationalcaps1:2
Nationalgoals1:0
Pcupdate:2 June 2011
Ntupdate:25 October 2006

Godfried Aduobe (born 29 October 1975) is a former Ghanaian football midfielder.[1]

Playing career

Aduobe started to play football in his hometown of Accra in Ghana. He moved to Europe by joining the Italian youth club Torino Calcio in 1993, before signing for the Swiss club BSC Old Boys the same year and going on to make 13 appearances for them in the second division.[2] In 1994, he joined another Swiss club, BSC Young Boys, where he spent the next two seasons and made a total of 39 appearances in the Super League.[3]

In 1996, he moved to Germany and went on to spend the remaining 15 years of his playing career in the country. He first played for Greuther Fürth in the third division and helped the club clinch promotion to the 2. Bundesliga for the 1997–98 season. In 1998, he moved back to the third tier of German football by joining SSV Reutlingen. He was a regular at the club over the next four seasons. In his first two seasons with SSV Reutlingen, he made a total of 63 appearances in the third division. He helped the club get promoted to the 2. Bundesliga at the end of his second season there, which allowed him to return to playing in the second division in 2000–01. In his third and fourth seasons with SSV Reutlingen, he only missed two of the club's 68 matches in the 2. Bundesliga.[4]

In 2002, Aduobe joined Bundesliga side Hansa Rostock, where he spent his first season as a regular and made a total of 29 appearances in the top flight.[5] However, he lost his place in the starting line-up after that and was only able to add 16 Bundesliga appearances to his tally over the following season and a half, before moving back to the 2. Bundesliga by joining Karlsruher SC midway through the 2004–05 season in January 2005.

Aduobe went on to spend the remaining six and a half seasons of his playing career with the club. Until the end of the 2004–05 season in the 2. Bundesliga, he scored two goals in 13 appearances and helped Karlsruher SC avoid relegation. Their fortunes improved in the following two seasons, with Aduobe becoming one of the key players and appearing in 30 of the club's 34 league matches, all in the starting line-up, in each of the two seasons. After barely missing promotion to the Bundesliga by finishing in 6th place in 2005–06, Karlsruher SC won the 2. Bundesliga in 2006–07 and secured itself a spot in the top flight for 2007–08. During the club's two seasons in the Bundesliga, Aduobe appeared in 46 out of 68 matches.

Following their relegation back to the 2. Bundesliga in 2009, he spent a further two seasons with Karlsruher SC. Although he began struggling with injuries in 2010, he was still able to appear in 43 of the club's 68 league matches during the two seasons, and make the final appearance of his career on 15 May 2011 in a 3–2 win at home to Union Berlin that allowed Karlsruher SC to avoid relegation to the third division in their final 2. Bundesliga match of the 2010–11 season.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Aduobe, Godfried . kicker.de . German . 9 January 2010.
  2. Web site: Godfried Aduobe . 28 August 2021 . kleeblatt-chronik.de . German.
  3. Web site: Godfried Aduobe » Vereinsspiele » Super League . 27 August 2021 . Weltfussball.de . German.
  4. Web site: Godfried Aduobe » Vereinsspiele » 2. Bundesliga . 27 August 2021 . Weltfussball.de . German.
  5. Web site: Godfried Aduobe » Vereinsspiele » Bundesliga . 27 August 2021 . Weltfussball.de . German.
  6. Web site: Karriereende: Danke, Godfried!. Karlsruher SC. German. 16 May 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304124605/http://www.ksc.de/profis/saison/show/article/karriereende-danke-godfried/. 4 March 2016.