Ghana delivered one of the most disciplined defensive performances of the World Cup so far, holding England to a 0-0 draw in Foxborough and denying Thomas Tuchel’s side early qualification for the knockout stage.
England entered the match with momentum after their opening win over Croatia, but the Black Stars refused to play the role of passengers. They sat deep, blocked central lanes, slowed England’s rhythm and forced one of the tournament favourites into a night of frustration.

The clearest moment came late.
With England pushing for the breakthrough, Nico O’Reilly’s header came back off the crossbar and the rebound dropped invitingly for Harry Kane. The England captain, who had scored twice against Croatia, looked certain to punish Ghana. Instead, he lifted his effort over the bar, leaving Kane with his head in his hands and Ghana still alive. Match reports from ESPN and Sky Sports confirm the game ended 0-0, with Kane’s late miss the defining chance of the contest.
For Ghana, this was not a lucky escape. It was a plan executed with cold discipline.
Carlos Queiroz’s side defended in numbers, absorbed pressure and left England without the clean attacking patterns they enjoyed in their first match. AP reported Queiroz’s summary of the Ghana approach: “Our plan was to block and frustrate them from the first minute.”

England dominated the ball, but Ghana controlled the emotional temperature of the match. The longer the game stayed goalless, the heavier England’s possession became. Crosses were cleared. Shots were blocked. Ghana’s back line held firm. Benjamin Asare kept the clean sheet, while the defensive structure in front of him made England look predictable for long spells.
The result keeps both teams on four points after two Group L matches. ESPN’s group table lists England and Ghana level on points, with Croatia behind them on three and Panama still without a point.
That makes the final round dangerous.
England still have a strong path to the round of 32, but they must now finish the job against Panama. Ghana, meanwhile, go into their final group match against Croatia with real qualification hope, and with proof that they can stand up to one of the strongest squads in the tournament.
There was also an African statement inside the result. Ghana did not need to dominate the ball to damage England’s certainty. They needed courage, shape and patience. They found all three.
England will look at Kane’s miss and call it the moment two points slipped away. Ghana will look at the same chance and see the night their World Cup campaign gained belief.
The Black Stars did not beat England.
But they bent the group.

