Ghana arrives in 2026 with the most chaotic pre-tournament setup of any team in the field. On April 14, exactly 72 days before kickoff, the Ghana Football Association fired manager Otto Addo after consecutive friendly losses to Austria and Germany — and hired the 73-year-old Portuguese veteran Carlos Queiroz, the man who once managed Real Madrid, assisted Sir Alex Ferguson at Manchester United, and led Iran through three consecutive World Cups. He has roughly six weeks to put a squad together.
The good news is the squad mostly picks itself. Mohammed Kudus is a £55m Tottenham winger and the best Ghanaian attacker in a generation. Iñaki Williams is the senior pro, the one who chose Ghana over Spain in 2022 and whose brother Nico plays for La Roja. Thomas Partey, six years of Arsenal in his legs, anchors the midfield. Antoine Semenyo at Bournemouth, Jordan Ayew, Alexander Djiku — this is a Premier-League-and-La-Liga squad, deep enough to compete with anyone.
The bad news is Group E. Portugal, Uruguay, South Korea, and the Black Stars in one of the four hardest groups of the draw. The headline, of course, is the rematch — Uruguay knocked Ghana out of the 2010 quarterfinal in extra time on a Suárez handball that Africa is still mad about. Sixteen years on, Ghana finally gets another swing at them. Queiroz, who knows the South American game better than anyone, gets to be the one drawing up the plan. Soccer is rarely this neat with its narratives. Ghana would like very much to make the most of it.