Before the football world could fully absorb what happened in Nantes, the message had already spread across the sport: Europe is no longer untouchable for Ghana
Ivory Coast had just defeated France 2–1 in a statement win that went far beyond a friendly result. It was a reminder that African football is no longer waiting for approval ; it is taking moments by force.
Amad Diallo’s late winner completed the upset, but the deeper story was not the scoreline. It was the structure, the discipline, and the confidence Ivory Coast showed against one of the most technically refined nations in world football. They absorbed pressure, stayed compact, and struck when the game opened. In modern football terms, it was a blueprint for disruption.

And almost immediately, the conversation may have shifted.; for me
If Ivory Coast can beat France… what stops Ghana from doing the same to England?
Ghana’s resolution
It is the kind of question that sounds emotional on the surface but becomes more interesting when you break it down tactically.
Ghana enter the 2026 World Cup with something different: not dominance, but danger.
This is not the Ghana of possession control or extended tactical superiority. Under experienced leadership and a transitional style of play, they are shaping into a team built for moments ; not control. And in tournament football, moments are often everything but still at that , there are major doubts

England, on the other hand, arrive with a very different identity. Structured possession, positional depth, and a squad filled with Premier League consistency. On paper, they control almost every metric: depth, experience, and defensive stability.
But football is not played on paper in my humble opinion
Ivory coast’s resolve
Let’s pinch ourselves to situations like this
- Saudi Arabia beating the 2022 FIFA world Cup champions Argentina
- Cameroon 1-0 Argentina (1990): The tournament-opening match in Milan delivered a massive surprise. Despite being reduced to nine men due to red cards, the Indomitable Lions held on to defeat the defending champions led by Diego Maradona.
- Senegal 1-0 France (2002): In their first-ever World Cup match, the tournament debutants stunned the reigning world and European champions in the opening game
The list goes on..
It is played in transitions, emotional swings, and 10-minute chaos windows where games are won and lost.
That is where Ghana become dangerous.
Players like Thomas Partey, provide structure in midfield, while pace and directness from attackers such as Antoine Semenyo, Iñaki Williams, and Ernest Nuamah give Ghana the kind of vertical threat that can punish high defensive lines
🗣️ “England can 100% win the World Cup”
Kobbie Mainoo is feeling confident about England’s chances following the squad’s first training session in Miami 🏴 pic.twitter.com/WU77cxgrZ6
— Sky Sports News (@SkySportsNews) June 2, 2026
Fresh faces like Caleb Yirenkyi, the youngest squad member , the list goes on with how beautiful that is if we play the tournament like how we played the second half of the Wales game
If there is one tactical lesson from Ivory Coast’s win over France, it is this: you do not need to dominate the game to win it. You need to survive the phases where you are under pressure and then execute when the opponent is stretched.

That is exactly the scenario Ghana would be aiming for against England.
England’s strength lies in structure, but structure often requires full concentration. Against a team that sits compact, absorbs pressure, and attacks quickly, even small lapses become decisive. A loose pass. A delayed recovery run. A half-second of hesitation.
That is all Ghana would need.
Historically, Ghana have thrived in this psychological space. Their most famous World Cup run in 2010 was built on resilience, counter-attacking precision, and emotional momentum{ the best squad Ghana ever had in the tournament in my opinion}. The identity has never fully disappeared it has just fluctuated depending on coaching cycles and stability.
The key question heading into this hypothetical clash is not whether Ghana can control England.
It is whether they can survive England long enough for the game to break open.
If Ivory Coast’s victory proved anything, it is that African teams are increasingly comfortable in uncomfortable matches. The physical intensity is no longer a disadvantage. The tactical discipline is no longer naive. And the mentality gap that once defined Europe vs Africa fixtures is narrowing.

However, caution is necessary.
England remain one of the most complete tournament teams in world football, they are 4th in the FIFA rankings ( Ghana is 73rd by the way)
Their ability to manage game tempo, rotate possession, and control emotional momentum makes them extremely difficult to break down. They do not rely on chaos they suppress it.
For Ghana to win, chaos must exist.
They would need:
- A disciplined mid-block to frustrate England
- Efficient transitions with minimal touches
- Clinical finishing in limited chances
- And above all, emotional control in key moments
Without those elements, the match becomes a long defensive exercise.
With them, it becomes a genuine upset opportunity.

So is the headline “Ghana will win against England” realistic?
Not quite.
But is the idea of Ghana beating England impossible?
Absolutely not.
Ivory Coast have already shown the psychological barrier is gone. The next step for African football is consistency turning isolated shocks into repeatable performances on the world stage.

If Ghana were to deliver such a result in 2026, it would not just be another upset.
It would be a continuation of a shift already in motion a World Cup where traditional hierarchies are no longer guaranteed, and where belief is becoming just as important as pedigree with Africa ready to show on the global stage
And if Nantes was a warning, then Ghana vs England could be the next test of how far that change has gone.









