World Cup finals appearance.
The 'Black Stars' took an early lead, were 3-1 in front by half-time, and another three goals left Egypt facing an almost impossible task on November 19 in Cairo.
Asamoah Gyan scored twice and Majeed Waris,
Sulley Muntari and Christian Atsu once for the home team while Wael Gomaa conceded an own goal.
Mohamed Abou Trika was the lone Egyptian
marksman, converting a spot-kick to pull the
score back to 2-1 before the Ghanaians took
total control.
It was a remarkable scoreline that not even
the most partisan supporters of the 'Black
Stars' could have imagined before the kick-
off.
Ghana started with inexperienced centre-backs Jerry Akaminko and Rashid Sumaila in place of injured John Boye and Jonathan Mensah.
Midfielders Mohammed Rabiu and Kevin-Prince
Boateng were also sidelined by injuries and a suspension ruled out play-anywhere Harrison Afful.
The 'Black Stars' line-up comprised
footballers from nine countries, with Italy
and South Africa providing two each, while
eight of the Egypt line-up came from African
champions Al-Ahly.
Those chosen from the Cairo 'Red Devils' included a couple of 'golden oldies', centre- back Gomaa, 38, and midfielder Abou Trika, 34, seeking first World Cup finals appearances.
Egypt resembled nerve-riddled amateurs in the early stages before a near-capacity crowd at the 50,000-capacity Baba Yara Stadium in the second biggest Ghanaian city of Kumasi.
Gyan scuffed a chance after just 11 seconds
and they could have been two goals ahead
before he put Ghana in front on five minutes.
The former Sunderland striker picked up a
loose ball, drove into the box and fired a low shot across goalkeeper Sherif Ekramy into the far corner.
Ekramy was working overtime, blocking a Kwadwo Asamoah shot and changing direction to push away a Waris header as Ghana dominated.
It was no surprise when the home side doubled their advantage on 22 minutes after dazzling dribbling from Chelsea midfielder Essien.
He took the ball past several opponents and
when his charge was blocked by Ekramy, the
ball struck shaven-haired Gomaa and rolled
into the net.
Egypt, the only country to win all six Africa zone group games, were rattled and American coach Bob Bradley switched from a back four to three central defenders.
With five 'Pharaohs' in midfield, the visitors gradually came into the game and unmarked Mohamed Naguib wasted a chance by heading over at the far post.
It was a warning for the 'Blacks Stars' and
Daniel Opare almost conceded an own goal
before Egypt halved the deficit four minutes
from the break.
Sumaila fouled Mohamed Salah and Abou Trika
calmly stroked the penalty into the corner as Fatawu Dauda dived the wrong way.
But Ghana took just three minutes to regain a two-goal advantage with Waris nodding a
Muntari free-kick across Ekramy and into the
far corner.
Egypt needed to score first in the second half to get back into the game, but fell even further behind eight minutes after the
restart.
An attempted bicycle kick from Muntari hit the turf and as the ball rose, Gyan nodded past Ekramy for his fifth goal of the qualifying campaign.
The goalkeeper was forced to retire injured
soon after and when replacement Ahmed El
Shenawy pulled down Waris, Muntari converted
the penalty before Atsu completed the rout.
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