There anxiety for England Coach Gareth Southgate as  England youngster Callum Hudson-Odoi inch closer to switching to play for Ghana.

A report by one of the biggest newspapers in England indicates Odois's continuous rejection to participate for England in recent times is a mark of worry for the English Coach amid the strong interest by Ghana to get the boy back to his father land.

This revelation has sparked the Ghana Football Association (GFA) into an overdrive to attract the player who was in Ghana over the summer and met high ranking officials of the football federation and government.

The GFA are hitting the phones of the Chelsea star and his father to get him to accelerate their quest to grab the youngster who has already spoken to officials about his potential switch.

The Chelsea forward refused an invitation to play for the England Under 21 team in the European Championship qualifiers against Romania and Kosovo earlier in the month.

The 20-year-old's reluctance to play for the European country's youth side has sparked concerns by the England boss Southgate that the Blues youngster is on verge of switching nationality to play for Ghana.

Hudson-Odoi parents are Ghanaians and his father played for the country and Ghanaian champions Accra Hearts of Oak for several years before he retired from his playing career.

Hudson-Odoi met the President of Ghana Nana Akufo Addo in the summer
Hudson-Odoi met the President of Ghana Nana Akufo Addo in the summer
This means the Chelsea player holds dual nationality and, according to FIFA rules, he is able to switch nationality to play for the West African country that is keen on reviving itself.
That is becasue since he hasn't played for England in the finals of major tournaments and his senior competitive appearances occurred before he turns 21, the tricky winger can apply to play switch and play for the Black Stars.

Hudson-Odoi has not ruled out the potential of playing for Ghana in the past when he was asked about the chance of snubbing England to play for the Black Stars, insisting the West African country too is 'home'.

"I think obviously when you’re young, you have the opportunity to play for England throughout all the years, from under 15 to under 16 all the way up," Hudson-Odoi said when he was asked about the chance of playing for Ghana.

“When they obviously gave me the opportunity to come I was in the country already.

“It’s something that I already had in my mind, set on already playing for England.

“So it was the thing obviously choosing Ghana or England, and at the end of the day I said I always had the right people around me who always advise me – what’s right, what’s wrong. England came and I said 'Yeah, let me go and play for my country.

“But I said Ghana is my home as well, so we’ll see, we’ll see. You’ll never know, so.”

However, Hudson-Odoi will have to wait until November 2022 in order to play for Ghana which is three years since his last appearance for England.
Considering that timing, he would secure his nationality switch papers from FIFA in time to play for the Black Stars for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

The 20-year-old is frustrated by the England FA's consistent snubbing and being dropped to the Under-21s of the Europeans.

He became the youngest person to ever make an match-day appearance for England in the European Championship qualifier against Czech Republic two years back.

The player of Ghanaian heritage feels that his peers Bukayo Saka, Jadon Sancho, Phil Foden and Jack Grealish have been favoured ahead of him even though some believe he can play better.

Hudson-Odoi has a strong connection to Ghana and visited Accra during the summer, where the team met Ghana president Nana Akufo Addo, the minister of sports Mustapha Ussif as well as Ghana FA coach Kurt Okraku.