Ghana produced a disciplined defensive display to hold England to a 0-0 draw at the 2026 FIFA World Cup and remain firmly in contention for a place in the Round of 32.
The Black Stars frustrated Thomas Tuchel’s side throughout the Group L encounter at Boston Stadium, moving to four points from two matches.
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England enjoyed most of the possession but struggled to break down a well-organised Ghanaian side that defended with patience, concentration and determination.
Goalkeeper Benjamin Asare played a key role in the result, making several important saves in the second half as Ghana resisted increasing English pressure.
Carlos Queiroz’s side lined up in a compact 4-5-1 formation and successfully denied England space in central areas.
England’s best first-half opportunity fell to Declan Rice, whose looping header drifted over the crossbar. Despite registering six shots before the break, England failed to record a shot on target.
The pressure intensified after halftime. Elliot Anderson saw a close-range effort blocked before Anthony Gordon’s shot was comfortably stopped by Asare. Harry Kane also tested the Ghana goalkeeper, but the Black Stars shot-stopper remained equal to the challenge.
Tuchel introduced fresh attacking options from the bench, with Bukayo Saka forcing another low save from Asare as England searched for a breakthrough.
Despite spending long periods without the ball, Ghana remained dangerous on the counterattack.
Their best chance arrived with less than ten minutes remaining when Abdul Fatawu broke through on goal. Ezri Konsa recovered to block the initial effort before Fatawu’s follow-up attempt was stopped near the goal line by Antoine Semenyo.
Ghana also appealed for a penalty after Prince Adu went down under a challenge from Konsa inside the area, but the referee allowed play to continue.
England’s clearest opportunity came in the 87th minute when substitute Nico O’Reilly headed against the crossbar from a Reece James delivery.
The rebound fell to Harry Kane, but the England captain fired over the bar from a promising position.
Marc Guehi later saw a header cleared near the line as Ghana survived a final wave of pressure.
The result leaves Group L finely balanced heading into the final round of matches.
Having beaten Panama in their opening game and earned a point against England, Ghana now know that a draw against Croatia on June 27 will be enough to secure qualification to the knockout stage.
For Queiroz and his players, the performance was built on organisation, resilience and tactical discipline.









