Sellas Tetteh Explained

Sellas Tetteh
Fullname:Sellas Tetteh Teivi
Birth Date:12 December 1956
Birth Place:Adabraka, Ghana
Youthclubs1:Great Mao Mao
Clubs1:Golden Pods
Clubs2:Hearts of Oak
Clubs3:Zebi
Clubs4:ACB
Clubs5:Julius Berger
Clubs6:Bendel United
Years7:1994–1995
Clubs7:Iwuanyanwu
Manageryears1:1995–1996
Managerclubs1:Kotobabi Powerlines
Manageryears2:1996–2001
Managerclubs2:Liberty Professionals
Manageryears3:2001–2002
Managerclubs3:Ghana U17 (Assistant)
Manageryears4:2002–2003
Managerclubs4:Ghana U17
Manageryears5:2003–2004
Managerclubs5:Ghana U23
Manageryears6:2004–2008
Managerclubs6:Ghana (Assistant)
Manageryears7:2008
Managerclubs7:Ghana
Manageryears8:2008–2010
Managerclubs8:Ghana U20
Manageryears9:2009–2010
Managerclubs9:Liberty Professionals
Manageryears10:2010–2011
Managerclubs10:Rwanda
Manageryears11:2013–2016
Managerclubs11:Ghana U20
Manageryears12:2015–2017
Managerclubs12:Sierra Leone
Manageryears13:2019–2020
Managerclubs13:Sierra Leone
Manageryears14:2021
Managerclubs14:Liberty Professionals (interim)
Medaltemplates: (as manager)

Sellas Tetteh Teivi (born 12 December 1956) is a Ghanaian professional football coach and former player.

Early and personal life

Sellas Tetteh Teivi was born on 12 December 1956 in Adabraka. His father was Mensah Teivi, a mechanic, and his mother was Elizabeth Dablah; he was the eldest of eight children.[1]

He was married to Evelyn Idun Teivi until her death on 26 January 2017,[2] with whom he has two children – a daughter called Precious Awefa Teivi and a son called Prince Kelvin Sowah Teivi.[1]

Tetteh is a practising Christian.[1] He acknowledged God's role in Ghana's historic victory at the FIFA U-20 World Cup, saying prophetic insights from Nigerian Prophet T.B. Joshua helped him guide the team to success.[3]

Playing career

Tetteh played professional club football in Ghana for Great Mao Mao, Golden Pods, Hearts of Oak, Zebi; in Nigeria for ACB, Julius Berger, Bendel United and Iwuanyanwu; and in Bangladesh.[1]

Coaching career

Tetteh began his coaching career in 1995 with Kotobabi Powerlines, before joining Liberty Professionals a year later.[1] Tetteh became Assistant Manager of the Ghana under-17 team in 2001 – taking full control a year later – before moving to the Ghana under-23 team in 2003. He later became an Assistant to the full national team.[1] He was appointed caretaker manager of the Ghana national team in June 2008,[4] a position he held until August 2008.[5]

Tetteh was the head coach for the Ghana under-20 team at the 2009 African Youth Championship, leading them to win the championship, the first time since 1999 when they won, with that qualifying them to the World Cup.[6] [7] Tetteh guided the Ghana under-20 team to the 2009 FIFA U-20 World Cup, becoming the first African team to win the competition.[8] As a consequence, Tetteh won the CAF Coach of the Year Award and the Sports Writers Association of Ghana Coach of the Year Award.[9] [10] He was also honoured by veteran coach Cecil Jones Attuquayefio, who 'knighted' Tetteh.[11]

Tetteh was appointed manager of the Rwandan national side in February 2010, leaving his dual position as manager of the Ghana under-20 national team and Ghanaian club side Liberty Professionals.[12] On 6 September 2011, Tetteh resigned as Rwanda's manager.[13]

Tetteh was put in charge of the Ghana U20 team again in December 2012 ahead of the 2013 African Youth Championship in Algeria.[14] He led the team to a 2nd place losing to Egypt in the finals after a penalty shootout.[15] Tetteh was again in charge of Ghana U20 at the 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup.[16] He led the team to a third-place finish at the end of the competition.[17]

On 14 August 2015, Tetteh was given a temporary contract for three months, to become caretaker of the Sierra Leone national team.[18] In March 2016 he left his position as Ghana under-20 manager in order to continue as Sierra Leone caretaker manager.[19] He was replaced as Sierra Leone manager by John Keister in May 2017.[20] In August 2019, Tetteh took the Sierra Leone head coach position.[21] In November 2019, national team captain Kei Kamara retired from international duty, blaming Tetteh in part.[22] Tetteh defended himself.[23] He quit as Sierra Leone manager in March 2020.[24]

In April 2021, Tetteh returned to Liberty Professionals along with Andy Sinason as co-interim coaches during the second round of the 2020–21 season.[25] [26] His appointment came after the club sacked their head coach David Ocloo due the club's poor performance in the first round which had caused them lavishing at the bottom of the league and in the relegation zone.[27] [28] [29]

Honours

Manager

Ghana U20

Individual

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sellas Tetteh's Hard Road To Fame. 2 May 2010. 29 October 2009. Vance Azu. Graphic Ghana.
  2. Web site: Former Black Stars coach Sellas Tetteh loses wife. Sarpong. Jeffrey. 26 January 2017. Ghana News. 27 March 2017.
  3. Web site: T. B. Joshua Engineered Our Victory – Sellas Tetteh. 2 May 2010. 20 October 2009. Peace FM. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100618230642/http://sports.peacefmonline.com/news/200910/29529.php. 18 June 2010.
  4. Web site: Ghana considers potential coaches. 2 May 2010. 28 July 2008. Ibrahim Sannie. BBC Sport.
  5. Web site: Serbian coach for Black Stars. 2 May 2010. 12 August 2008. BBC Sport.
  6. Web site: Ghana U20 coach Sellas Tetteh upbeat about Satellites' chances at AYC. 24 January 2021. Modern Ghana. en.
  7. Web site: FINISHED: Ghana U-20 World Cup Coach Inches Close For Rwanda Job Goal.com. 24 January 2021. www.goal.com.
  8. Web site: Ghana thrilled by historic title. 2 May 2010. 17 October 2009. Matthew Kenyon. BBC Sport.
  9. Web site: Mugabe. Bonnie. 12 September 2010. Tetteh wins Sports Writers Award. 21 December 2021. The New Times Rwanda.
  10. Web site: 17 February 2010. CAF nominees revealed. BBC Sport. 2 May 2010.
  11. Web site: Sellas Tetteh Knighted. 2 May 2010. 26 October 2009. Kofi Owusu Aduonum. All Africa.
  12. Web site: 18 February 2010. Ghana's Sellas Tetteh agrees a deal to coach Rwanda. 2 May 2010. BBC Sport.
  13. Web site: Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) . https://web.archive.org/web/20110930154801/http://www.fifa.com/worldfootball/news/newsid=1505946.html. dead. 30 September 2011. FIFA.com. www.fifa.com. en-GB. 17 May 2018.
  14. Web site: Association. Ghana Football. 17 December 2012. Sellas Tetteh makes Satellites return. 24 January 2021. www.ghanafa.org. en.
  15. Web site: Bawuah. Juliet. 3 April 2013. Silver winning Black Satellites are expected back in Ghana on Wednesday Goal.com. 24 January 2021. www.goal.com.
  16. Web site: U-20 World Cup: Ghana, Mali, Egypt and Nigeria set for finals. 20 June 2013. BBC Sport.
  17. Web site: FIFA.com. FIFA U-20 World Cup 2013 - News - Three A's see Ghana finish third . live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200812093030/https://www.fifa.com/u20worldcup/news/triple-see-ghana-finish-third-2135720. 12 August 2020. 24 January 2021. www.fifa.com. en-GB.
  18. News: Sellas Tetteh is loaned to be coach of Sierra Leone. 14 August 2015. BBC Sport. 17 May 2018. en-GB.
  19. News: Tetteh continues as Sierra Leone coach. 8 March 2016. BBC Sport. 17 May 2018. en-GB.
  20. News: John Keister takes over as Sierra Leone head coach. 18 May 2017. BBC Sport. 17 May 2018. en-GB.
  21. News: Ghanaian Sellas Tetteh named as Sierra Leone head coach. 14 August 2019. 14 August 2019. en-GB.
  22. Web site: Sierra Leone's Kei Kamara quits international football. 13 November 2019. www.bbc.co.uk.
  23. Web site: Sierra Leone boss Sellas Tetteh responds to Kei Kamara comments. 14 November 2019. www.bbc.co.uk.
  24. Web site: Sellas Tetteh: Ghana's U20 World Cup winner quits Sierra Leone ahead of Nigeria showdown | Goal.com. www.goal.com.
  25. Web site: Liberty Professionals sack David Ocloo; Andy Sinason takes over - Kickgh.com. 9 June 2021. www.kickgh.com. en-gb.
  26. Web site: 28 April 2021. Experienced coach Sellas Tetteh opens up on reasons behind Liberty Professionals return. 9 June 2021. GhanaWeb. en.
  27. Web site: Quansah. Maurice. 26 April 2021. Sellas Tetteh vows to save Liberty Professionals from relegation. 9 June 2021. Graphic.
  28. Web site: 18 May 2021. Sellas Tetteh confident Liberty Professionals can avoid relegation. 9 June 2021. GhanaWeb. en.
  29. Web site: Appiah. Samuel Ekow Amoasi. 18 May 2021. Liberty Professionals are motivated after stalemate against Kotoko - Sellas Tetteh. 9 June 2021. Modern Ghana. en.
  30. Web site: African U-20 Championship 2009. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20130315040434/http://rsssf.com/tablesa/afr-u20-09.html. 15 March 2013. 11 February 2015. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
  31. Web site: 16 December 2008 . Nigeria still the team to beat – Ghana's Coach . 30 January 2023 . The New Times.
  32. Web site: Arinaitwe. Ostine. 12 March 2010. Tetteh receives CAF award. 30 June 2021. The New Times Rwanda. en.
  33. Web site: 12 September 2010. Adiyiah wins SWAG gongs. 21 December 2021. Ghana Football Association.