Kofi Adams pledges salary to National Sports Fund

Kofi Adams pledges salary to National Sports Fund

Sports and Recreation Minister Kofi Adams has issued a rallying cry to lawmakers and the private sector, pledging two months of his own salary to the National Sports Fund as the country ramps up preparations for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

Addressing Parliament in Accra on Thursday, 19 February, Adams warned that talent and passion alone would not be enough to secure success on the global stage.

He argued that a “structured financing model” is now a matter of national urgency if the Black Stars are to thrive in a challenging Group L alongside England, Panama, and Croatia.

In a move designed to “match ambition with commitment,” Adams confirmed he would forfeit his earnings for February and March to bolster the fund.

The gesture sparked an immediate wave of pledges on the floor of the House, with the Sports Minister committing two months’ salary and the Majority Chief Whip pledging three.

Meanwhile, the Majority Front Bench and several select ministers collectively committed one month of their earnings each to the cause.

“Legislation alone does not finance sports; commitment does,” Adams told Members of Parliament.

“If we expect the private sector to invest, if we expect federations to reform, if we expect young athletes to commit, then leadership must also commit.”

Ghana is preparing for its fifth appearance at the FIFA World Cup, but the Minister’s vision extends beyond the pitch.

He highlighted a stark disparity in the global sports industry, which is valued at over $500bn (£395bn). In most African nations, sports contribute less than 0.5% to Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

Adams insists the Ghana Sports Fund is the vehicle to change this, providing a transparent and accountable framework to support elite athlete welfare, grassroots and school sports programmes, and vital infrastructure development across the regions.

“We have not yet built a financing system that match our ambition. The Ghana Sports Fund provides us that system,” the Minister added.

The fundraising drive has already gained momentum outside of Parliament. The National Investment Bank (NIB) was commended for its “timely intervention” after donating GH₵100,000 to the cause.

With the 2026 tournament looming, the government is hoping this display of legislative sacrifice will encourage corporate Ghana to close the funding gap.

For the Black Stars, the focus remains on the road to North America—but for the Ministry, the goal is ensuring the money is in the bank long before the first whistle blows.

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