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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Rob Smyth

England 0-0 Ghana: World Cup 2026 – as it happened

Nico O'Reilly (left) and Harry Kane (right) react after they both miss chances to score
Nico O'Reilly (left) and Harry Kane (right) react after they both miss chances to score towards the end of the goalless draw. Photograph: Richard Pelham/Getty Images

That’s all for tonight. I’ll leave you with Dave Hytner’s report from Boston – bye.

Ed Aarons’ player ratings are here

Elliot Anderson Far too slow in possession. Has to be much more proactive with his forward passing. 5

Noni Madueke Caused Ghana problems with his directness but lacks quality with the final pass. 6

Updated

England had 78.8% possession, a new record for a team that failed to score in a World Cup game. Turkey held the record for a week and a half after having 78.5% in their 2-0 defeat to Australia.

Harry Kane's verdict

One of those games. Difficult team to break down. We were probably at our best in the last 15 minutes of each half. I had a big chance at the end – I’m backing myself to score that more often than not – and Nico hit the bar. Look, we wanted to win but we take the point and we’re still in a great position in the group.

I was man-marked by Partey for a lot of the game so I didn’t have the space to drop deep and then get in the box. They also defended the box well, and balls through the middle were tough to play because they were so compact. You go through games like that.

I spoke before about chunking it up into two separate tournaments – the group stage and then the knockouts. Hopefully we can win the group and then comes the second tournament.

It was a talking point beforehand in the England dressing room, Harry Kane bringing it up; a message with it, too. At each of the previous three tournaments, the team had spluttered in game two. The roll call of irritation took in the draws against Scotland and Denmark at the European Championship – either side of the draw against the United States at the last World Cup. Must do better this time, was the gist of what Kane said.

England did not do better. The idea was to maintain the momentum they had generated in the 4-2 win over Croatia in their opening Group L tie but there was no surge here. Only stodge. England laboured to create against an ultra-defensive Ghana team, their only pulse-quickening moments coming towards the very end.

Thomas Tuchel has made great play of his finishers and two of those he introduced from the bench almost made it happen. Bukayo Saka extended the Ghana goalkeeper Benjamin Asare with a low shot while Nico O’Reilly hit the top of the post with a header. From the rebound, Kane lashed high; a gilt-edged miss. In stoppage-time, Marc Guéhi saw a header cleared away from in front of the line.

We’ve seen replays of those two incidents involving the substitute Prince Kwabena Adu. The first one looks okay but the second, when Konsa challenged Adu, looks like a foul to me. Had it been given on the field, it wouldn’t have been overturned.

It may seem distinctly Scottish that the creation of football history could come with grumbling over the manner in which that was achieved. On Tuesday afternoon, the movable feast that is the best-third-place table at this World Cup had Scotland second and in a strong position to advance to the knockout phase for the first time. Heavy defeat against Brazil on Wednesday in Miami could damage that position but it remains perfectly feasible that the 1-0 win over Haiti and three points will take Scotland into uncharted territory. Denis Law did not emerge from a tournament group with Scotland. Neither did Kenny Dalglish. The 1974 World Cup team were unbeaten yet still on an early flight home. This has been a weight on the shoulders of Scotland teams for decades.

In a rare departure from sharp analysis, Rory McIlroy stated last week that Scotland had benefited from the expansion of the World Cup by means of qualification. In fact, they topped their section so would have participated regardless of size. What is undeniable, however, is that the path towards the last 32 can be almost laughably simple for some. Victory over Haiti was rightly expected, as was defeat by Morocco and – while not a certainty – so would be another loss to Brazil.

If Scotland stumble through, there will be whooping and cheering regardless of context that it feels sensible to apply. In defence of Steve Clarke and Scotland, they do not make the tournament rules. A group that includes two nations who stand in the world’s top six also constitutes a tough draw. Facing a hugely backed Brazil in the suffocating heat here will be among Clarke’s sternest challenges in management.

“Now that was an England World Cup group game,” writes Eddy Nason. “The last one with the xG and the goals felt so wrong.”

Declan Rice's reaction

It’s always difficult when you play against 11 behind the ball. You’ve gotta find solutions. In the last 10 minutes we probably found more than we had all game and we were unlucky not to score.

Look, we stay positive – we keep going, and we still have a great chance to top the group against Panama. [If they win the group they will avoid Cristiano’s Revenge a potential last 32 tie against Portugal.]

You have to give credit to Ghana: 5-4-1 without the ball, very compact, tight spaces to play through. On the other hand, maybe we could do more with the ball. But it’s tough, they’re good players and it was never gonna be an easy game.

Loads of top nations drew their first game. There’s no need to be negative or downbeat. We need to stay positive and that’s what we’ll do.

Updated

Next up: Panama v Croatia

“By the standards of a Carlos Queiroz team, the Black Stars are an interesting watch,” faintpraises Kári Tulinius. “The defensive block isn’t static, the Ghanaians moving around and altering their shape in anticipation of what England might do, their shifting patterns making sense once the English players commit to what they’ve threatened to do. It’s not fun, but it’s interesting. Not as interesting as a goal, but a starving man doesn’t complain about the consistency of his porridge.”

Full time: England 0-0 Ghana

That difficult second group game, eh. For the fourth major tournament in a row, England have followed victory in their first game with an underwhelming draw in the second. Send. Them. Home.

There’s no need to get carried away. England often struggle against a low block, and this game will bear little resemblance to the knockout matches England play. Besides, only the most tedious, irredeemably one-eyed Englishman would forget to give Ghana credit for a superb, strikingly callm defensive performance. They had all the earmarks of a Carlos Queiroz side, and might have nicked it in the second half when the substitute Prince Kwabena Adu started running in behind.

Updated

90+5 min: Ghana substitution Baba Rahman replaces the earlier substitute Prince Kwabena Adu. No shade on his excellent performance; Ghana just want another defensive resource.

90+3 min: Off the line!

A Rice corner is hooked back across by Eze (I think) towards Guehi, whose clever looping header is headed off the line. Not sure who the defender was, possibly Opoku, but he did his job perfectly.

Updated

90 min Six minutes of added time. The game feels more open than at any stage tonight.

89 min O’Reilly was really angry with himself for missing that chance. So many of his goals are the kind you expect from a No9, and that would have been another.

87 min: Ghana substitution Kojo Peprah Oppong replaces the excellent (and presumably shattered) Marvin Senaya.

Updated

86 min: O'Reilly hits the bar!

Ghana can’t out following that Saka shot. James flips an insouciant cross towards O’Reilly, who heads the ball off his shoulder and then onto the crossbar. It rebounds to Kane, who launches it into orbit from seven yards with his left foot.

You’d expect Kane to score but the bounce made it a deceptively awkward chance. The ball was not a James fan.

Updated

86 min Saka wriggles infield from the right and whips a tradedmark curler from 20 yards. Asare gets down smartly to his right to beat it away.

83 min: England substitution Marcus Rashford for Noni Madueke.

82 min Owen Linderholm writes in to say the Univision commentary team had the following verdict on the foul by Adu on Pickford in the 68th minute. “Both players arrived at the ball, Adu kicked out and missed the ball and got Pickford. Both went over. Ball went past. Immediate assessment, clear foul by Ghana, move on.”

Updated

80 min There was a defender on the line when Semenyo blocked Adu’s shot, but he was offside because Pickford was out of the game. He came to meet Adu, who was then challenged from the side by the flying Konsa. The ball ran past Pickford, who was unable to change direction, and then Adu manufactured a shot while lying on the ground.

79 min: Big chance for Ghana!

Ghana break four on four. Fatawu plays a simple pass in behind, allowing the substitute Adu to charge through on goal. He takes a heavy touch and is potentially fouled by the lunging Konsa. Play continues, Adu has a shot blocked in the six-yard box by Semenyo, who couldn’t get out of the way, and then the flag goes up.

I think the flag was for offside against Semenyo, not Adu, which would mean his chance was a big one.

Updated

77 min Here’s my colleague Beau Dure on that Jordan Pickford business in the 68th minute.

We’re being told on Fox (by one of their best commentator teams) that the play couldn’t be reviewed because it didn’t involve a penalty appeal or a potential red card.

On my referee message board, the word is that they can’t use the same “mistaken identity” excuse for checking things as they did when they switched a yellow card from Tim Ream (wrongly accused of foul) to Miguel Almiron (correctly accused of simulation) because no card was issued.

So if the ref had given a yellow to the Ghanaian player, THEN they could have gone to VAR.

Which ... doesn’t make a lot of sense.

I don’t really mind loopholes like that, even if they’re not ideal. I wondered whether it was a potential Dogso red card for Pickford, but I guess that’s not the case from what you’ve said.

74 min Easy to forget, this being an English newspaper, what a draw would mean for Ghana. They haven’t played a World Cup knockout game since their unimaginably painful defeat to Uruguay in the quarter-final of 2010. A point tonight would all but ensure a place in the admittedly inflated knockout stage.

73 min: Double substitution Morgan Rogers and Eberechi Eze replace Jude Bellingham, who had a modest game, and Elliot Anderson.

72 min “Thomas Tuchel’s value won’t be seen until the knockout rounds when England play teams that are on the front foot,” writes Brendan Murphy. “Frankly, I’d be happy for England to just say: ‘Ok, eff it, you don’t want to play we won’t either. Queiroz is a famous pain in the arse. Don’t get worked up, take the point and move on…”

Yeah, in isolation this game is irrelevant to England’s chances of success, but I worry slightly about the impact on the all-important vibe.

71 min Hydration break o’clock.

Updated

70 min I’m surprised we haven’t seen Ivan Toney, who is probably England’s best option against such a deep defence.

England would have loved to have Toney at the back post to meet a brilliant cross from Madueke. Instead it was Saka, who couldn’t quite get on top of the ball and headed over the bar.

69 min Kane swishes a low, left-foot drive from 20 yards that is held by Asare as he falls to his left.

68 min Prince Kwabena Adu, who has just come on, runs onto a through ball that lures Pickford from his box. Pickford misses the ball, then collides with Adu – and the referee gives a free-kick to England.

It’s been cleared by VAR but I’d like to see that again.

Updated

67 min: Ghana substitutions Prince Kwabena Adu and Abdul Fatawu come on for Jordan Ayew and Inaki Williams.

65 min: England substitutions Bukayo Saka and Nico O’Reilly replaces Anthony Gordon and Djed Spence. That’s interesting; I assume Madueke will move to the left. O’Reilly is a much bigger goal threat, especially against a low block, than Spence.

63 min Gordon has improved a lot in the second half. When a free-kick is half cleared, he guides a careful pass across the edge of the area to Madueke, who opens his body and curls over the bar.

62 min That shot from Gordon in the 57th minute was the first on target at either end.

61 min Inaki Williams is booked for a lunging tackle on Gordon, who is starting to stir. Rice takes the free-kick and picks out the unmarked Anderson at the far post; his powerful header is well blocked.

Updated

59 min “Our wide forwards definitely seem to be the weak links at the moment,” says Fin. “Gordon and Madueke seem way off the level. Saka can help the right but will Rashford get the nod and not just as a finisher?”

I like Madueke. He’s erratic and frustrating, but at his best I think he can ruin any full-back in the world. Okay, most of them. He’s not as good as Saka but he is quicker and more direct, and England really need that in wide areas. Although Gordon’s start to the tournament is a bit of a concern, I think he (or Rashford) will be more threatening against better teams.

57 min England move the ball sharply from left to right, across the edge of the area. Madueke’s deflected shot is headed away in the six-yard box, then Gordon whips a shot straight at the keeper from the edge of the area.

54 min Bellingham takes a tumble in the area after running into Opoku. I don’t think it was a dive, but not was it a foul.

53 min “I missed an Elastica discussion,” writes Beau Dure, “Dang. That was a strong album through and through. FWIW, I thought the second Stone Roses album was great.

“I love hearing the Alan Parsons Project song Sirius as teams take the field. It’s a callback to the arena intro that raised the bar like a Mondo Duplantis of the 1990s.

“I think if I were on an opposing team, I’d race to the changing room out of abject fear even before they got around to introducing Michael Jordan.”

I’m not sure I’d call it a discussion. But it always warms my heart to know that there are football tragics out there who are as cool as me also like Elastica, and Bill Is Dead, and Jetplane by Sorry.

51 min I like Anthony Gordon a lot (sorry, Roy) but he hasn’t been at the races so far, and his defending was really poor just then.

Updated

50 min Ghana apparently have come to play in the second half. Mensah (I think) drives an extravagant crossfield pass towards Senaya, who ignores a half-arsed challenge, chests the ball into the area and stretches to hit a shot that is crucially blocked by the covering Spence. The ball ricochets across the area and eventually so safety.

48 min Bellingham reminds everyone of his defensive acumen with a perfectly judtged tackle on Semenyo just outside the England area. I know he’d be wasted at No6, but there’s a part of me that wants to see him and Rice as a double pivot. Mind you, there’s a part of me that still wants to see Paul Ince and Roy Keane 2.0 as a double pivot.

47 min “England,” begins Brendan Murphy, “will never win a major trophy with Southgate as manager.”

46 min Ghana begin the second half. Apparently Ollie Watkins was warming up with intent at half-time.

Guess who’s back, back again

Half-time reading

Steve Clarke believes Scotland must be prepared for the threat provided by the “icon” Neymar in Miami on Wednesday. Neymar is expected to make his bow for Brazil in this World Cup after returning from injury as Group C reaches its climax.

“His qualities are without question,” Scotland’s manager said. “He’s one of the superstars of the modern era. We can expect a very dangerous opponent but I could go on about Brazil and so many dangerous opponents. Neymar is just one of them; even coming from the bench he would give them a lift because he is such an icon.

“Brazil have shown in the matches so far in this tournament that they are a big threat. I am sure they expect to be, as a minimum, last four of the competition.”

Half-time looking

Anthony Barry's half-time verdict

Overall it’s been an absolutely okay half from our point of view. A game we probably expeected – a physical challenge against a difficult opponent.

They defend deep, deep, deep so rest upon my chest – probably even deeper than we expected, 10-12 metres deeper than in their last two games. The spaces are really condensed, and then they have this incredible speed to close down any spaces that do appear.

The headline for us is probably: patience in the game, continue to attack with a stable base because they have exceptional counter-attack options and we’ve negated that so far.

Updated

Spence appears to refuse Partey handshake before game

Djed Spence appeared to be the only England player not to shake Thomas Partey’s hand before the game against Ghana. There had been doubts over whether Thomas Tuchel’s squad would snub the former Arsenal midfielder.

Partey is scheduled to go on trial next year at Southwark crown court after he was charged with five counts of rape and one of sexual assault last year. He was later charged with two further counts of rape. Partey has denied all the charges, with his lawyer insisting that he welcomes the chance to clear his name.

Television coverage cut away at the crucial moment but footage appeared to show Spence kept his hand in the right pocket of his tracksuit top when Partey, whose contract at Villarreal expires next week, walked past. That seemed to surprise Partey, who briefly glanced back towards the Tottenham player before carrying on.

Updated

Half time: England 0-0 Ghana

No goals and no shots on target at either end. England have been frustrated by a superbly organised Ghana, whose coach Carlos Queiroz has clearly still got it. Noni Madueke was the pick of the England attackers, allbeit in the face of flaccid competition.

As I type, Jude Bellingham is having words with somebody on the way off. Not sure what happened, and Bellingham’s facial expression is that of a man who has just been started on for no good reason. Who knows.

Updated

45+4 min Rice plays a quick short pass into Kane on the edge of the area. He dummies a couple of defenders nearly before hitting a left-foot shot that is well blocked by either Senaya or Adjetey, both of whom were stretching towards the ball.

Updated

45+2 min England’s most promising attacks have tended to come through Noni Madueke. On the other side, Anthony Gordon has again been a bit subdued.

Updated

45 min Six minutes of added time.

Updated

43 min Semenyo twists and turns to win a corner for Ghana. Ayew takes, Konsa heads clear, the end.

42 min The first bit of menace from Semenyo, who overpowers James near the touchline, then turns and moves into the England area. Konsa tracks him all the way, stays on his feet and makes a well-judged tackle.

41 min Rice tries to nick the ball off a defender, catches him fractionally late and is booked.

Updated

40 min “Hiring Carlos Queiroz really is a deal with the devil, isn’t it?” says Tom Hopkins. “He’ll get you to a World Cup at which you’ll do….ok, but geez that comes at a price.”

When Man Utd won the Champions League in 2008, thanks mainly to a defence that was coached by Queiroz, I was flootered for a month, so I’m not best qualified to comment.

Updated

36 min Madueke skins Mensah, gets to the byline and stands up a deep cross that is headed over by Rice. A tough chance but a lot better from England, who have upped the tempo since Thomas Tuchel’s hydration-break team-talk.

34 min “God, I’d forgotten all about that Fall album, Extricate,” says Nick Parish. “My mate Bob played it to me to death back in the day trying to get me into it, and completely failed, with the exception of the inexplicably but somehow obviously delightful Bill Is Dead. Perhaps I should go back and try it again.”

I think Bill Is Dead is an astonishing song. From memory, James Murphy chose it as his last song when he did The First Time… on BBC 6 Music.

Updated

33 min Madueke injects some urgency with a run infield from the right. He’s crowded out eventually but the ball breaks to Bellingham, whose shot from the edge of the area is blocked by Partey.

For all England’s frustration, Ghana are defending superbly.

Updated

30 min “I’m at Turandot at Opera Holland Park,” chirps Gary Naylor. “We’re about 15 minutes away from Nessun Dorma. That would be a good tune for football – I’m surprised it hasn’t been done.”

A bald-faced plug there from Naylor, and why not.

29 min Back under way.

27 min It’s been a quietly frustrating start for England, who are struggling to find space in the final third. Carlos Queiroz has only been in charge for a couple of months but this Ghana defence bear all the earmarks of a Queiroz team.

26 min Scratch that, it’s time for the ad break.

25 min Maybe I’ve done humanity a disservice – the match has continued and there’s no sign of an official hydration break. England pick up where they left off, probing to find an eye in the needle.

24 min Play resumes.

22 min A clash of heads between James and Ayew leads to a break in play. The players wander over to the touchline, but it’s not the official hydration break, no siree Bob, so the referee waves them back.

This is a bit daft because the referee is going to blow for the official hydration break almost as soon as play resumes.

I suppose, as Danny Blanchflower famously said, the adverts have to go out at a certain time.

21 min England have had a whopping 88% possession, but they’re still waiting for their first shot on target. This is a good test for a team who aren’t always the best against a low block.

20 min No counter-attacks of note from Ghana, which is another way of saying Antoine Semenyo has been quiet so far.

19 min “This Golden Boot race really is one for the ages, Rob,” writes Simon McMahon. “Messi, Mbappé, Haaland, Ronaldo, Kane. It’s like a who’s who of modern striking greats. But if you think that’s an impressive list, just wait until Che Adams and Lyndon Dykes both get hat-tricks against Brazil in Miami” tomorrow...”

16 min Relentless pressure from England. Spence’s cross is cut out by the near post by Adjetey, who then does well to block Rice’s follow-up shot from the angle.

15 min Kane wins a long ball in the air and is headed from behind by Adjetey. It was accidental.

Updated

14 min Free-kick to England, 30 yards from goal. It’s touched off to Rice, who spanks it a few yards over the bar. Decent effort but the keeper had it covered.

Updated

13 min “I’ll never grow out of the fact that Paul Weller’s Out of the Sinking is the one tune that means football,” writes Colin Livingstone. “This is from its time many years ago as the Sky Super Sunday theme. Guitar riffs for days.”

If you’re talking evocative songs rather than themes, this is the first thing that came to my mind.

12 min Madueke plays a clever pass to the underlapping James, whose pass into the six-yard box is crucially cut out. That’s England’s best move to date.

10 min Bellingham tries to run onto a loose ball in the area but is well tackled by Mensah. England have started with the mixture of patience and intensity that Thomas Tuchel wanted; now they need some penetration.

7 min Ghana haven’t just parked the bus; they’ve taken the wheels off too. This isn’t a pejorative observation, and actually I’m quite excited about seeing whether England have the necessary subtlety to break them down.

Updated

3 min The first few minutes have been a training exercise, England’s attack v Ghana’s defence. Ghana’s newish head coach Carlos Queiroz certainly knows how to organise a defence; he was the unsung hero of Manchester United’s 2008 Champions League win. (See entry No5 here, or better still read Michael Carrick’s book.)

Updated

2 min “The punch of Elastica would surely make for a more exciting stadium sing-a-long than the morose Wonderwall,” writes Adrian Riley. “Maybe people struggle to remember the titles. Still, lets hope England don’t Stutter tonight, as they Line Up they need to find that Connection and be Waking Up the possibilities of winning this thing. Rather than, erm, going home singing to a Car Song.”

Shame England didn’t pick Martin Allen.

Updated

1 min Peep peep! England, in the form of Declan Rice, kick off from left to right as we watch.

Updated

A reminder of the teams

England (4-2-3-1) Pickford; James, Konsa, Guehi, Spence; Anderson, Rice; Madueke, Bellingham, Gordon; Kane.

Subs: D Henderson, Trafford, O’Reilly, Stones, Chalobah, Burn, Quansah, J Henderson, Mainoo, Rogers, Rashford, Eze, Saka, Watkins, Toney.

Ghana (4-3-3) Asare; Senaya, Opoku, Adjetey, Mensah; Yirenkyi, Partey, Sibo; Williams, Ayew, Semenyo.

Subs: Ati-Zigi, Anana, Seidu, Mumin, Rahman, Oppong, Luckassen, Owusu, Boakye, Fatawu, Thomas-Asante, Baah, Sulemana, Nuamah, Adu.

Referee Said Martinez (Honduras)

Updated

France will take on Norway in Boston on Friday for the right to top Group I, but one man thinks it’s already done. “Honestly I don’t care that much”, Erling Haaland told Fox in the US. “They’re probably going to win against us. They’re probably going to win the whole tournament.”

Haaland may have been playing mind games, and you will not hear Didier Deschamps making any such argument. But the French head coach certainly took satisfaction from his team’s storm-hit but ultimately straightforward victory over Iraq. Featuring another Kylian Mbappé double and two more assists for Michael Olise, this match’s notable success was Ousmane Dembélé’s arrival at the party, scoring his first tournament goal at the 20th attempt.

The Ballon d’Or winner got a second-half goal, finding separation in the box to convert a smooth Olise assist with a shot across the Iraq goalkeeper, Ahmed Basil. By this point he already had a notable assist, squaring simply for Mbappé after snaffling the ball during another Iraq defensive snafu. This brought particular joy to Deschamps as it ended the recent line of media questioning as to the role of the Paris Saint-Germain star in the team.

“There is no issue with Ousmane, he has had to readapt to a system he doesn’t play all year,” was Deschamps’ post-match verdict. “As long as Ousmane is well physically, it’s just fine-tuning. I trust in Ousmane, he knows that, and doing what he did today was important. He’s a decisive player, so is Kylian, but Ousmane has that capacity.”

In 10 of the past 12 World Cups, six goals has been the standard to bag yourself the Golden Boot. Usually a goal per game will suffice. In fact, on two occasions (in 2006 and 2010) a mere five strikes has been enough. Yet a quick glance at the current 2026 Geopolitics World Cup Golden Boot standings after most teams have played two games sees Lionel Messi top of the tree with five goals already from his two outings, having broken Miroslav Klose’s all-time tournament scoring record in the process.

The Argentinian’s latest two goals came in a 2-0 victory over Austria in which neither Argentina nor Messi did anything of note other than score – aside from the great man shanking an early penalty miles wide, which is becoming quite the common occurrence for Messi. Think how many World Cup goals he would have if he could beat a goalkeeper from 12 yards (answer: 21, three more than he has).

The conditions in Boston are perfect for England. It’s raining, the temperature is in the low 20s, and no armpit hairs are sprouting.

Thomas Tuchel on England’s defending against Croatia

We need to do things ­better. Defensively we dropped a little too deep from a middle block into a low block and deep block, which is in itself not a problem, but we went a bit too early. We were a bit too man-man focused and didn’t rely enough on our structure to be able to push out again.

If you just look at our goal that we conceded we played a back seven formation, which is just not us. Maybe it is good that we conceded, because it just tells us: ‘Let’s not do this again.’ It makes no sense, it’s not us, it doesn’t play to our strengths. We had too many easy ball losses after ball wins, so we had a huge effort against the ball, win the ball, gave it back straight away.

Thomas Tuchel's pre-match interview

[On the inclusion of Spence and Guehi] They deserve to play. They give us a little bit more speed and a different profile – Marc is faster and a little more agile than John [Stones], and it’s more convenient for him to play on the left side. Djed is faster and a bit more defensive, [which enables him] to control the counter-attacks.

[On Ghana] They are happy to give up possession. They want the opponents to feel safe, to fall asleep, and then they counter-attack with very fast and physical players. They’re not shy to use long balls. I think we will have a lot of duels in the full-back positions, and we need to be very aggressive to stop the counter-attacks before they get dangerous.

I just heard the grass is a bit long so we’re happy that it’s raining – let’s see, we need to adapt. We will have the majority of the ball, I think, and it’s important we find a good balance between patience and intensity.

We have a very difficult group, so after a tough first match comes another tough game against a strong opponent. We will go for the win.

Full time: Portugal 5-0 Uzbekistan

Cristiano Ronaldo scored twice as Portugal revved up with a comfortable win over Uzbekistan.

Updated

Who could England play in the last 32?

England probably need one more point to reach the knockout stage, though they’ll be looking for all six. Here’s what will happen if/when they get through.

  • If they win the group they will play a third-placed team from one of five groups: E, H, I, J and K. (Worst-case realistic scenario: Senegal or Ecuador)

  • If they finish second they will play the runners-up in Group K, probably Portugal or Colombia.

  • If they finish third send ‘em home anyway they will play the winners of Group K, probably Portugal or Colombia.

Updated

“To be honest I came here expecting to read more about elásticos than Elastica,” writes Peter Oh, “but I do see the Connection.”

It didn’t take long for one wag in the travelling England caravan to come up with a deeply inappropriate nickname for that jazzed-up high-energy start to the second-half performance in Dallas last Wednesday. That name was: Packetball.

The word packet is, the Urban Dictionary confirms, slang for a small sachet of the same illegal and wholly inadvisable stimulant that was discovered in more than half of the Wembley Stadium toilets by a newspaper investigation after a home qualifier during the Southgate era.

Who knows, maybe England have found a way to connect on a more profound level with certain elements of the fanbase. There was often a sense of textural disconnect between the carefully metered football of that successful England team and the more adrenal demands of parts of the support crowd for a faster, quicker, more Packetball-coded style.

Antoine Semenyo was only 10 years old when Ghana came within a Luis Suárez handball of becoming the first African team to reach the semi-finals of a World Cup. The Manchester City forward can still vividly recall the emotions that night as he watched with his family in Bexleyheath, south-east London.

“I remember being at my uncle’s house, and we were screaming after the handball, thinking we were going through,” he said in an interview last month. “Watching Ghana play in the World Cup was so special. Mum, Dad, uncles, aunties, cousins all turn up to one house, and we would watch all the games together, celebrating and screaming. Ghana came in [for me] when I was 19 or 20, so I was never going to turn it down.”

Yet while Asamoah Gyan and co certainly made an impression on the young Semenyo – who will come up against familiar faces in Nico O’Reilly and John Stones against England in Massachusetts on Tuesday – the legacy of the Black Stars’ historic run to the quarter-finals in 2010 in South Africa has largely been disappointment. Ghana’s appearance at the next World Cup in Brazil ended in an early elimination after finishing bottom of their group and they didn’t fare much better in Qatar four years ago, despite beating South Korea. Their failure to reach the Africa Cup of Nations finals last year for the first time since 2004 was a national embarrassment that was only eased by qualifying for a fifth World Cup.

Team news

England make two changes from the win over Croatia, as flagged half an hour ago by Jacob Steinberg. Marc Guehi and Djed Spence replace John Stones and Nico O’Reilly.

Thomas Partey, who missed the match against Panama because his visa application was rejected by the Canadian government, replaces Elisha Owusu in midfield. That’s one of four changes from the Panama game. The goalkeeper Benjamin Asare, who replaced the injured Lawrence Ati-Zigi at half-time against Panama, starts tonight. Inaki Williams and Kwasi Sibo are preferred to Kamaldeen Sulemana and Ernest Nuamah.

England (4-2-3-1) Pickford; James, Konsa, Guehi, Spence; Anderson, Rice; Madueke, Bellingham, Gordon; Kane.

Subs: D Henderson, Trafford, O’Reilly, Stones, Chalobah, Burn, Quansah, J Henderson, Mainoo, Rogers, Eze, Saka, Watkins, Toney.

Ghana (4-3-3) Asare; Senaya, Opoku, Adjetey, Mensah; Yirenkyi, Partey, Sibo; Williams, Ayew, Semenyo.

Subs: Ati-Zigi, Anana, Seidu, Mumin, Rahman, Oppong, Luckassen, Owusu, Boakye, Fatawu, Thomas-Asante, Baah, Sulemana, Nuamah, Adu.

Referee Said Martinez (Honduras)

Updated

If I were Elastica, I would simply make a first album so great that whatever came after it didn’t matter,” writes Zach Neeley. “Obviously that’s not true, I would struggle to match the quality of Body Wishes. Hats off to Justine Frischmann, who helped make Suede, made Elastica, had an important hand in the one truly great M.I.A. album, and then most impressively, said I’m out.”

Agreed. I feel like that bit gets more impressive by the year.

This is only the second meeting between England and Ghana (men’s football department). The first was a really enjoyable 1-1 draw at Wembley in 2011, when Asamoah Gyan scored a late equaliser after Andy Carroll had given England the lead. This was the England team:

Hart; Johnson, Jagielka (Lescott), Cahill, Baines; Milner, Barry, Wilshere (Jarvis); Downing, Carroll (Defoe), Young.

In today’s first World Cup game, Cristiano Ronaldo is filling his flourescent boots against Uzbekistan.

The Football Association has remained coy over what will happen when England line up for their next World Cup match, against Ghana on Tuesday, and come up against a familiar opponent in Thomas Partey. The former Arsenal midfielder played for Villarreal this season, but will be released at the end of his contract this month.

In the pre-match ceremony, all players are expected to shake hands with opponents and the FA will leave England’s players to decide whether they wish to go through the ritual with Partey. The squad includes two of his former clubmates, Declan Rice and Bukayo Saka.

For some, a handshake will seem uncomfortable. Partey is scheduled to go on trial next year at Southwark crown court after he was charged with five counts of rape and one of sexual assault last year. He was later charged with two further counts of rape. Partey has denied all the charges, with his lawyer insisting that he welcomes the chance to clear his name.

Inside the foyer of the England team hotel in Kansas City, along with the TV screens that show the World Cup matches, there is an anachronism. It is a record player and it is worth reporting there were younger members of the squad who looked genuinely baffled by it. What were these strange plastic circles that went on it?

The Football Association found out the favourite songs of each player and obtained vinyl versions of them. And very popular the whole thing has been, even if Harry Kane has been determined to play country and western on it. Harry, this is not leadership.

Music has been the answer for England. As their training sessions have got under way, there have been songs blasted out from pitch-side speakers. On the Sunday before last, for example, it was Dr Dre, Coolio and Tupac. Luther Vandross has also been heard. It has been eclectic. But for the moment of communion, which came after England started their Group L campaign with the 4-2 win over Croatia in Dallas last Wednesday, it was all about Oasis.

Ghana started their campaign with a 1-0 win over Panama. Caleb Yirenkyi’s injuy-time goal turned frustration into joy, and one point into three.

It’s fair to say this isn’t a vintage Ghana side; they didn’t qualify for the most recent Africa Cup of Nations, the first time that has happened since 2004. But they have Antoine Semenyo, arguably the best wide forward in English football, and Yirenkyi looks a star of the future. Maybe even the present.

Interactive

Updated

Spence and Guehi set to come into England XI

We’re expecting two changes to the England team that beat Croatia last week. They come in defence, with Djed Spence set to play one of the full-back roles and Marc Guehi starting in central defence. It’s likely to be Spence over O’Reilly at left-back.

Preamble

Ever do that thing where you fix one problem and unwittingly create another? If so, there are three lions who know how you feel. To explain. For decades, England were notoriously poor starters at a major tournaments. Between 1986 and 2016, they won only two of their 14 opening matches at a World Cup or European Championships. Then Harry Kane scored a late winner against Tunisia in 2018 and it all started to change.

Englnd have won their last five opening games, culminating in Wednesday’s happy-go-lucky 4-2 defeat of Croatia. But that has facilitated a different problem, one with which all Stone Roses and Elastica fans are familiar: the difficult second group game.

At the last World Cup, under Boring Boring Gareth, England started with a 6-2 win over Iran. The next game was a bloodless, goalless draw with the United States. England cruised through the group regardless and eventually lost to France in the quarter-finals despite producing arguably their best performance under Southgate. A similar thing happened at the last two Euros, when victory in the first game was followed by deflation draws with Scotland and Denmark respectively.

A draw tonight, even a defeat, wouldn’t jeopardise qualification for the last 32 but it would pollute the ultra-positive vibe created by the win over Croatia. Such things matter more than ever. If the fans are England’s 12th player, as the cliché goes, then Maurice Mentum is their 13th.

Kick off 9pm

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