Musa Noah Kamara


Musa Noah Kamara is a Sierra Leonean professional footballer who plays as a striker for Bo Rangers and the Sierra Leone national team.

Club career

Kamara was born in Tombo. After playing for AIK Freetong in 2018, he was the top scorer of the Sierra Leone National Premier League">Sierra Leone national football team">Sierra Leone National Premier League with 15 goals for champions East End Lions. He joined Swedish club Trelleborgs FF on a three-and-a-half-year deal in August 2019, but cancelled his contract after a week, citing the cold weather in Sweden. He retracted that statement the following day however, and insisted that he returned to Sierra Leone to play for the national team in the upcoming World Cup qualification fixtures. He transferred to Bo Rangers in April 2021.
Kamara won the highest goal scorer at the Sierra Leone Premier League since it was founded in 1994 with 12 goals by Sierra Leonean football legend Mohamed Kallon.

International career

Having previously represented Sierra Leone at under-20 level, Kamara made his senior debut for Sierra Leone against Liberia on 26 July 2018. He represented Sierra Leone at the 2019 WAFU Cup of Nations. He did not travel to Kono to play a friendly match in November 2019 after suffering a bereavement, but received a two match international ban from the Sierra Leone Football Association after it was discovered he played a community match in Freetown during this period.
Kamara was called up to Sierra Leone's squad for the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations tournament, which began in January 2022. He scored his first international goal with a "magnificent left-footed strike" in a 2–2 draw with Ivory Coast in Sierra Leone's second group match on 16 January 2022. He appeared in their third group match as they were eliminated from the competition after a 1–0 defeat to Equatorial Guinea.

International goals

No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
1.13 June 2022Japoma Stadium, Douala, Cameroon1–12–22021 Africa Cup of Nations
2.13 June 2022General Lansana Conté Stadium, Conakry, Guinea2–22–22023 Africa Cup of Nations qualification
3.27 August 2022SKD Stadium, Monrovia, Liberia1–21–22022 African Nations Championship qualification
4.20 March 2025Samuel Kanyon Doe Sports Complex, Paynesville, Liberia2–03–12026 FIFA World Cup qualification