Ghana’s Black Stars step onto football’s biggest stage today in a crucial 2026 FIFA World Cup opening group fixture against Panama that the Ghanaians cannot afford to lose.
In Group L that also contains European heavyweights England and Croatia, tonight’s clash at the Toronto Stadium (kickoff: 11pm) has assumed enormous significance as the game most likely to shape the trajectory of the Black Stars’ campaign before the tournament truly gathers momentum.
For a Black Stars side missing four key players and searching for its first victory since qualification was secured eight months ago, tonight’s opener represents a defining test that Carlos Queiroz’s rebuilding project is taking shape.
Importance of win
A victory against Panama would provide three priceless points, give the Black Stars the needed confidence and momentum, and ease the pressure ahead of far tougher tests.
Defeat, however, would leave Ghana staring at the uncomfortable prospect of having to take points from opponents widely regarded as stronger and more experienced at the highest level.
Daily News Reports
The stakes have been heightened by an increasingly troublesome injury list for Queiroz.
Already without Mohammed Kudus, Mohammed Salisu and Alexander Djiku, Ghana must also cope without midfield lynchpin Thomas Partey, whose absence strips the side of one of its most experienced and influential performers.
Collectively, those losses remove leadership, experience, physical presence and technical quality from every department of the team.
Experienced Queiroz must now redesign the team’s balance in the absence of his influential stars. It leaves captain Jordan Ayew, embarking on his third World Cup campaign, carrying even greater responsibility as the standard-bearer of a team attempting to turn the page on recent disappointments.
Without Kudus’ creativity and Partey’s authority in midfield, Manchester City forward Antoine Semenyo assumes even greater importance as Ghana’s primary attacking weapon.
His pace, power and direct running could prove decisive against a Panama side renowned for defensive organisation, while youngsters Ernest Nuamah and Abdul Fatawu Issahaku will be asked to convert potential into production on football’s biggest stage.
In midfield, Elisha Owusu is likely to inherit Partey’s role, while Caleb Yirenkyi and Kwasi Sibo could be tasked with providing the energy, discipline and defensive cover necessary to maintain Ghana’s structure.
Tactical play
The expectation is that Queiroz will again employ the organised hybrid 4-4-2 system used against Wales, capable of shifting into a 4-2-3-1 shape when required.
The Portuguese tactician arrives at his fourth World Cup with little preparation time with Ghana and just one friendly match under his belt — a 1-1 draw with Wales, which showed encouraging signs of improvement with the team structure clearer, tighter organisation and a collective commitment far stronger than was witnessed during the reign of former coach Otto Addo.
With injuries forcing significant adjustments, Queiroz has devoted much of his short tenure to building chemistry, collective responsibility and tactical discipline.
“Our expectation is to go out, play the best football and win every single game,” Queiroz declared.
“We carry the hopes and dreams of millions of people on our shoulders, and we want to make them proud.”
That discipline will be essential because Panama arrive in Toronto as one of the most cohesive teams in the competition
If Ghana possess greater individual talent, Panama arguably hold the advantage in continuity, collective understanding and tactical identity.
Under Danish Coach Thomas Christiansen, ‘Los Canaleros’ have undergone one of the most impressive transformations in CONCACAF football.
Since his appointment in 2020, Panama have reached the CONCACAF Nations League Finals, finished runners-up at the 2023 Gold Cup, impressed at the 2024 Copa America and secured qualification for only the second World Cup appearance in their history, arriving in North America unbeaten throughout their entire qualifying campaign.
Eight years after making their World Cup debut at Russia 2018, Panama have retained a valuable core of experience.
Seven members of that pioneering squad — Yoel Bárcenas, Eric Davis, Ismael Díaz, Fidel Escobar, Aníbal Godoy, Amir Murillo and José Luis Rodríguez — remain central figures today.
Panama’s identity is unmistakable. Christiansen favours a fluid 3-4-3 system that quickly transforms into a compact 5-4-1 when defending. The structure is disciplined, physically demanding and exceptionally difficult to break down.
Creative midfielder Adalberto “Coco” Carrasquilla, the reigning CONCACAF Player of the Year, remains a fitness concern but could still play a pivotal role if available. Meanwhile, striker Ismael Díaz arrives after scoring eight goals during qualifying.
The greater concern for Ghana may be Amir Murillo.
Ghana Politics Coverage
The Beşiktaş defender was Panama’s leading assist provider during qualification and remains their most technically accomplished player.
His overlapping runs from the right flank are a major attacking weapon, making Ghana’s ability to neutralise his influence one of the game’s critical tactical battles.
Christiansen has already identified Ghana as the key fixture in Panama’s group campaign, fully aware that victory would dramatically improve his team’s chances of progression.
Recent results at this World Cup have already demonstrated that the traditional hierarchy of international football is narrowing.
Smaller nations are increasingly capable of matching established powers.
