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England frustrated by Ghana

For the fourth straight major tournament, Three Lions draw their 2nd group match


June 25, 2026 00:00:00


England's Harry Kane looks desperate after misses a chance against Ghana during the World Cup Group L match in Foxborough, Mass., near Boston, on Wednesday (as per BST) — AP

FOXBOROUGH, Massachusetts, June 24 (Agencies): England failed to find a way through a resolute Ghana side and had to settle for a 0-0 draw in their second World Cup Group L match on Tuesday, a result which left both sides well placed to move into the next phase but was a disappointment for Thomas Tuchel's side after their opening 4-2 win over Croatia.

Ghana, who pulled off a last-gasp 1-0 victory over Panama in their opening match, made their intentions clear right from the kickoff as they lined up to blunt England's attacking style.

For the fourth major tournament in a row, England have followed victory in their first game with an underwhelming draw in the second.

England improved their dismal record in opening tournament matches to win all four under Southgate and extended that with Tuchel by beating Croatia in Arlington, Texas, last week. But there is something of a "second-game syndrome" with England, having drawn their last three middle group-stage games.

Make that four. Declan Rice revealed on the eve of this game that Kane had addressed the squad about this specific issue, warning against standards slipping but whether this was physical, tactical or psychological, there was a clear drop in performance in Foxborough.

The good news is it hasn't stopped England in the past. They went on to win the group in each of their previous three tournaments and face Panama next, when they will be overwhelming favorites to secure a win that seals the top spot. But a disappointing trend continues.

Under a constant ?drizzle, the Three Lions had almost 80 per cent of possession in the first half but were limited to half chances as Ghana players swarmed around England captain Harry Kane and anyone else on the few occasions they got into dangerous positions.

The opening 45 minutes were the first in any game at this World Cup in which neither side had a shot on target and one of the biggest cheers was for the sight of former England captain David Beckham watching the game in a suit and shown on the giant screens at the home of the New England Patriots NFL team near Boston.

Tuchel had said he expected Ghana to be well drilled by Carlos Queiroz, at his fifth World Cup as a coach and who has first-hand experience of English football from his two spells as assistant manager at Manchester United.

England assistant coach Anthony Barry said at halftime that Ghana were defending "deep, deep, deep, probably deeper than we expected" and England needed to be patient.

Tuchel sought to break the deadlock by introducing Bukayo Saka and Nico O'Reilly in the 65th minute followed by Morgan Rogers and Eberechi Eze less than 10 minutes later and finally throwing on Marcus Rashford.

Ghana, who scored in the dying seconds against Panama, threatened to hit England on the break through the ?pace of Antoine Semenyo and substitute Prince Kwabena Adu.

But it was England who spurned the best chance of the game in the 86th minute when O'Reilly headed against the bar and Kane blasted the rebound over.


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