Colombia vs Ghana: a low-block duel engineered for silence

Some matches announce themselves as festivals of goals. This one whispers the opposite. Colombia arrive as the cleaner, deeper side; Ghana arrive with a game plan designed to make watching paint dry look thrilling — and I mean that as a compliment to Carlos Queiroz.
The gospel according to Queiroz
Ghana's entire tournament identity is a compact block, chosen press and the selective counter. That blueprint suffocated England to a goalless draw and turned a supposedly winnable Panama fixture into a 94th-minute rescue.
Even the Croatia defeat was a two-goal margin decided by set-piece lapses, not by any open, breathless flow. Queiroz himself has framed this knockout as a match where "there is no room for mistakes" — hardly the language of a man planning a track meet.
He is also missing Mohammed Kudus, the squad's most inventive creator. Without that individual spark, Ghana's attacking output becomes even more conditional: transition, set pieces, or an opponent's error. None of those tend to produce a goal glut.
Colombia: dominance that scores sparingly
Here is the twist the favourites' price hides. Colombia are excellent at owning territory and stubbornly ordinary at converting it. They needed a 76th-minute Muñoz strike to finally break down DR Congo.
Against Portugal they dominated stretches of a group decider and still walked off with a frustrated 0-0. Lorenzo admitted they "owed a finish" — a candid confession that this side wins by single goals, patiently, rather than by burying opponents.
Their group victories in open play were all one-goal affairs. A dominant team that struggles to multiply its chances, facing a side purpose-built to concede narrowly, is the textbook recipe for a controlled scoreline.
The heat as an accomplice
Kansas City is baking under oppressive, humid conditions around matchday. Sweltering weather rewards the team happy to sit deep and manage tempo, and punishes anyone tempted to chase the game at full throttle.
Add the knockout context — where nobody wants to be the side that overcommits and gets caught — and the incentives all pull toward caution. I did glance at the draw, given Ghana held England, but a full-strength Colombia usually finds the one goal that matters, so leaning on the total sidesteps that coin-flip risk.






















