Black Stars at WC 2026: Good, bad, ugly

By Augustine Appiah 

Accra, July 06, GNA – The Black Stars’ performance at the 2026 FIFA World Cup (WC) ended with a familiar feeling—pride mixed with frustration, hope overshadowed by lingering questions, and a growing belief that Ghana continues to sabotage its own football potential. 

Ghana exited the tournament in the Round of 32 after a narrow 1-0 defeat to Colombia. Yet the scoreline alone does not tell the full story. The Black Stars exceeded many expectations by progressing from a difficult group that included England and Croatia before bowing out in the knockout stage. 

The tournament exposed both the resilience of the players and the structural weaknesses that continue to hold Ghanaian football back. 

The Good: A Team That Refused to Give Up 

Few gave Ghana much chance before the tournament. 

The Black Stars had endured years of inconsistency, coaching changes and declining public confidence. Carlos Queiroz was appointed only months before the World Cup, inheriting a squad that had little time to absorb his philosophy. 

Yet the team surprised many. 

They opened with victory over Panama, earned a disciplined draw against England and, despite defeat to Croatia, accumulated enough points to qualify as one of the tournament’s best third-placed teams. 

Defensively, Ghana looked more organised than in recent years. 

The players displayed commitment, tactical discipline and a willingness to sacrifice for one another. Goalkeeper Benjamin Asare emerged as one of the revelations of the tournament with several outstanding performances, while the back line showed far greater structure than many anticipated. 

Even against Colombia, Ghana remained competitive until the final whistle. 

For a team assembled under enormous pressure, reaching the knockout stage represented progress. 

The Bad: Missed Opportunities 

Football, however, rewards efficiency rather than effort. 

The Black Stars created opportunities but lacked the cutting edge needed to compete with elite nations. 

Their attacking transitions were often slow. 

Decision-making in the final third remained inconsistent. 

Clear chances were wasted. 

Against Colombia, Ghana struggled to convert possession into genuine attacking threat, ultimately exiting the competition after a narrow defeat. 

The tournament also highlighted Ghana’s overdependence on individual brilliance rather than cohesive attacking systems. 

Whenever key players were tightly marked, the team struggled to produce alternative solutions. 

The technical quality exists. 

The tactical consistency still does not. 

The Ugly: When Administration Becomes the Opponent 

The greatest disappointment may not have occurred on the field. 

It happened behind the scenes. 

For years, Ghanaian football has battled persistent accusations that football administrators exercise excessive influence over technical decisions. 

Whether in player invitations, backroom appointments or team management, perceptions of interference have repeatedly surfaced, creating unnecessary distractions. 

Before the World Cup, the Ghana Football Association expanded the technical team with several additional appointments as part of its preparations. While officially presented as strengthening the coaching structure, critics questioned whether an enlarged technical hierarchy risked blurring reporting lines and limiting the head coach’s autonomy. 

No publicly verified evidence has established that the GFA directly dictated team selection or tactical decisions during the tournament. However, the recurring perception that coaches must constantly navigate administrative pressures has become a longstanding concern within Ghana football. 

Successful football nations empower coaches. 

They define clear responsibilities. 

Administrators handle governance. 

Coaches handle football. 

When those boundaries become blurred, accountability disappears. 

If a coach cannot freely select his squad, determine tactics or manage his dressing room without external influence, failure becomes institutional rather than individual. 

Whether perceived or real, interference damages confidence inside the camp and fuels distrust among supporters. 

Queiroz’s Departure 

Perhaps the strongest indication that deeper issues remain unresolved came immediately after Ghana’s elimination. 

Carlos Queiroz resigned only three months after taking charge, despite guiding Ghana beyond the group stage. In his farewell message, he expressed pride in the team’s achievements while also pointing to the need for stronger support structures to help Ghana reach a higher level. 

His resignation inevitably raises uncomfortable questions. 

Why does Ghana continue to lose coaches so quickly? 

Why is long-term planning so difficult? 

Why does every World Cup seem to end with another reset? 

Until these questions are answered honestly, Ghana risks repeating the same cycle every four years. 

Lessons for the Future 

The Black Stars do not suffer from a shortage of talent. 

Ghana continues to produce technically gifted footballers capable of competing in Europe’s biggest leagues. 

The challenge lies elsewhere. 

The country needs stability. 

The national team needs long-term planning. 

The coach must be given complete authority over football matters. 

The GFA must focus on administration, logistics, player welfare and development—not tactical decisions. 

Successful football nations build systems that survive individual players. 

Ghana too often builds campaigns around personalities and politics. 

Final Whistle 

The 2026 World Cup should not be remembered simply as another knockout-stage exit. 

It should serve as a mirror. 

On the pitch, Ghana showed courage, discipline and signs of revival. 

Off the pitch, familiar concerns about governance, stability and institutional culture remain impossible to ignore. 

The players largely did their part. 

The question now is whether those entrusted with managing Ghana football will finally do theirs. 

Until that happens, the Black Stars may continue to inspire on the field while being undermined away from it. 

GNA 

Edited by Benjamin Mensah