Beau Dure 

Colombia v Ghana: World Cup 2026 last 32 – live

Minute-by-minute report: Will Colombia or Ghana be the final team to secure a place in the last 16? Join Beau Dure
  
  

Jefferson Lerma in action with Jordan Aye as Colombia v Ghana gets under way in Kansas City.
Jefferson Lerma in action with Jordan Aye as Colombia v Ghana gets under way in Kansas City. Photograph: Claudia Greco/Reuters

11 min Colombia win a corner and take it quickly and short. If they were expecting to surprise Ghana, they did not.

And Senaya goes off limping. That’s two players injured while committing fouls that weren’t called.

9 min Should that be a penalty as Senaya clotheslines Diaz? In most of the world, yes. But fouls just don’t seem to be fouls any more.

8 min SUB for Colombia as Córdoba can’t continue. He’s replaced by Luis “Not That One” Suarez, who scores goals for fun in Portugal.

Is this the shirt-pullingest tournament ever? I can’t remember seeing so many torn shirts.

6 min Córdoba is in some distress. After some uncomfortable moments standing, he lies down on the field. It appears he injured himself while ripping Opoku’s shirt.

Updated

5 min Ghana seem content to yield possession here. We’ll see if Colombia fare better than England did in breaking it down.

Vlado writes: “That Cape Verde performance... at one point I literally thought, ‘This can’t be real. I’m dreaming.’”

Imagine a 16th seed taking it to the wire against a top seed in the NCAA Tournament, except 1,000 times more important.

3 min Colombia’s first attacking idea is to ping the ball down the left for Luis Díaz. There are worse ideas.

1 min Chance for Ghana! Colombia aren’t able to clear, and Partey rips a shot from 25 just wide.

Peep! Here we go.

Quick personal note: It was at this stadium that I met a fellow journalist who happened to have family ties to Kansas City. He was a fierce intellect who wasn’t afraid to take a stand. Grant Wahl is missed.

Home advantage …

I was hoping to find an overhead shot to show just how yellow the stands are. Both teams wear yellow, but Colombia have the vast majority of the crowd here, and the anthem was sung like a crowd at a Taylor Swift concert singing along with … OK, I don’t know which song would be a singalong at a Taylor Swift concert. I like Anti-Hero, but I don’t know if that’s a singalong. And I sing Shake It Off after a bad day of reffing.

Congrats to Taylor and Travis, by the way.

First email of the session, from someone just named “F”

“Why recast at all? Have Vozinha play himself! The man’s a rockstar. I wonder who will play Vozinha’s mother, though.”

Oh, that’s a tough one!

How Colombia got here …

In Mexico City, they managed the break down Uzbekistan.

DR Congo put up stubborn resistance, as they did against other teams, but Colombia took their second win.

Then they played a game against Portugal.

How Ghana got here …

First, they scored at the death while playing without Thomas Partey, who was denied a visa into Canada.

Then they managed to stay awake in a plodding game against England.

And I don’t know what to make of their game against Croatia at this point.

That was enough to advance as a third-place team.

Reader questions

As you consider what nuggets of wisdom to throw at me over the next couple of hours, please answer this: When the movie on the Argentina-Cape Verde match is made, whom do you cast?

I’m thinking Idris Elba as Vozinha.

Quick facts

Weather: An extreme heat warning in the Kansas City area has just been lifted, but it’s still 32 degrees Celsius, 89 degrees in American degrees. Also 61% humidity, and if you don’t think that makes a difference, spend back-to-back days in Las Vegas and Miami.

Referee: Clement Turpin (France). The VAR lead is fellow Frenchman Jerome Brisard.

Head-to-head: First meeting between these teams.

Best game ever played at the World Cup: Just ended. Wow.

Argentina have taken the lead for the third time against Cape Verde are straining to close it out, which in terms of sentences I ever expected to write would probably be the same probability as “Beau Dure is drafted by the Boston Celtics.”

Lineups

Colombia: Vargas; Mojica, Lucumí, Sánchez, Muñoz; J. Arias, Lerma, Puerta; Díaz, Córdoba, Rodríguez

Subs: Ospina, Montero, Machado, S. Arias, Mina, Ditta, Ríos, Castaño, Gómez, Portilla, Suárez, Quintero, Campaz, Cucho, Carrascal

Fullbacks Mojica and Muñoz started the first two games and will be back in those spots. Suárez started the first two games, but Córdoba took that spot in the Portugal game.

Ghana: Ati-Zigi; Mensah, Opoku, Luckassen, Senaya; Partey, Sibo, Yirenkyi; Williams, Ayew, Semenyo

Subs: Asare, Anang, Adjetey, Oppong, Mumin, Seidu, Baba, Owusu, Nuamah, Bonsu-Baah, Sulemana

Ati-Zigi came off at halftime of the 1-0 win over Panama, and Asare played in goal the rest of the group stage. Opoku was an injury concern after missing the third game, but he’s back starting alongside his replacement in that game (and Ghana’s goal-scorer in the 2-1 loss) Luckassen. Adjetey, who had started all the group games, makes way. Yirenkyi reclaims a starting spot after missing the final group game, replacing Owusu. Ayew and Semenyo have started every game, but Williams gets the nod after playing only 65 minutes in the tournament so far.

Preamble

The last time the World Cup was held in the United States, Colombia were among the favorites. Carlos “El Pibe” Valderrama. Adolfo Valencia. Faustino Asprilla.

And they fell flat. They lost to an unfancied Romanian side. Then their hopes vanished in one of the best games the USA have ever played.

Things were better in 2014 as Colombia blasted their way through the group stage, nudged aside Uruguay in the round of 16, then fell to Brazil in the quarterfinals. James Rodríguez led the way with six goals and is still on the team. The win over Uruguay is Colombia’s lone win in World Cup knockout rounds.

Ghana also have one win in the knockout rounds, and we’ll pause for a moment as US supporters groan at the memory from that 2010 game. (Several US players from that game are doing commentary of some sort this time around.)

So this match brings together two countries that have been on the periphery of the elite but haven’t quite knocked down the door. One of them will take a big step in that direction in a matter of hours.

Hello all, and welcome to …

… that’s OK, we’ll wait. The entire planet is watching this game right now:

Beau will be here shortly. In the meantime, here’s a look at this match from Graham Ruthven’s daily watch guide:

What to watch for

Colombia have grown into their role as dark horses, topping Group K ahead of Portugal to set up a favourable last-32 tie against Ghana. While the South Americans have scored more than one goal in just one of their three matches so far, they have shown enough to suggest a deep run could be on the cards.

Ghana have exceeded gloomy pre-tournament predictions by making it this far. Carlos Queiroz has managed to instil a doggedness in his team who have shown their defensive resolve in matches against Croatia, England and Panama. Colombia could find them difficult to break down.

Player to watch: Antoine Semenyo, Ghana – If Ghana are to stand a genuine chance of making the last 16, they’ll need Semenyo in top form. The Manchester City attacker has struggled for service, but is capable of magic with the ball at his feet.

 

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