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Wales 0-0 Ghana
Come on Leeds... I mean Wales (sorry)!
Rachel, Andover
Highlights: Wales and Ghana draw a friendly in Cardiff
Lewis Koumas headed an equaliser in time added on to earn Wales a 1-1 friendly draw at home to Ghana, who were denied a winning start under Carlos Queiroz as part of their World Cup preparations.
Daniel James hit the post and crossbar in quick succession for the home side during a first half which Wales controlled.
After an indifferent opening hour at a sparsely populated Cardiff City Stadium, Ghana rewarded their exuberant fans with the opening goal as substitute Caleb Yirenkyi struck on the rebound.
Wales eventually got the goal their performance deserved in the third minute of added time, when Neco Williams' inviting cross from the right was nodded in by a stooping Koumas to score his first international goal.
Having missed out on World Cup qualification by losing to Bosnia-Herzegovina at this ground in March, this was a third game without victory for Craig Bellamy's men, even if the performance had its bright moments.
As disappointing as it was for Ghana to squander their winning position, a draw after five successive losses will serve as a timely confidence boost before taking on a World Cup group in which they have been drawn alongside England, Croatia and Panama.

Lewis Koumas scored his first Wales goal after coming off the bench in the 60th minute
Whereas Ghana's players were eager to impress Queiroz – the veteran ex-manager of Real Madrid and Portugal among many others – there was seemingly little riding on this match for Wales.
However, the hosts did not look like a team winding down for the summer as they made a flying start.
James was blistering on the right wing, running menacingly at opponents and hitting the woodwork on two separate occasions.
First, his header was tipped on to the post by Ghana goalkeeper Lawrence Ati-Zigi and then the Leeds United winger smashed a half-volley against the crossbar, with David Brooks creating both chances.

This was the first meeting between Wales and Ghana
Wales played at a tempo that meant their visitors barely saw the ball during the first half.
In fact, Ghana's only real chance before the break came by way of a misplaced pass from Wales keeper Karl Darlow, who redeemed himself by smothering Jordan Ayew's subsequent shot.
That gave the Black Stars and their fervent fans some encouragement, but Wales still had the upper hand in the early stages of the second half.
Their inability to take their chances was punished, though, as Ghana pounced with a counter-attack. Ernest Nuamah forced Darlow into a save and, after the follow-up bounced off the post, fellow substitute Yirenkyi was on hand to finish.
Defeat would have been harsh on Wales given their dominance for large periods, and they finally managed to convert one of their opportunities when the diving Koumas headed in Williams' fine cross to give the small home crowd late reason to cheer.



Manager: Craig Bellamy
Formation: 4 - 2 - 3 - 1
Manager: Carlos Queiroz
Formation: 4 - 4 - 1 - 1
Friendlies
All competitions
In coming up against Ghana, this will be only the second time that Wales have faced an African opponent, previously losing 4-0 to Tunisia in a June 1998 friendly in Tunis.
Wales are unbeaten in their last six games when facing an opponent for the first time (W4 D2); the last side to beat them on the first attempt was North Macedonia in September 2013 (1-2 in a 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifier).
Ghana have lost each of their last five internationals, and have only won one of their last 13 against European nations, beating Switzerland 2-0 in November 2022 (D4 L8).
Wales have only won one of their last 11 friendlies (D6 L4) and are winless in all three under Craig Bellamy so far (D1 L2) – the last Wales manager to not win any of his first four friendlies in charge was Bobby Gould in 1997 (D2 L2).
Despite Ghana being the ninth different nation Carlos Queiroz has taken charge of, he has only faced Wales once previously, winning 2-0 with Iran at the 2022 FIFA World Cup (2-0).
Wales won four of their first five home games under Craig Bellamy (D1), but have since won just one of five on home turf, drawing the last two (L2); the Dragons last drew three consecutive matches at home in 1927.
Dan James has scored in his last two starts for Wales, the only time he has done so for his national team –since his debut in November 2018, the Leeds winger (10 & 10) is one of just two players to reach double figures for both goals and assists for the Dragons, along with Harry Wilson (15 & 11).
Ghana’s Antoine Semenyo has scored just once across his last 27 international appearances, going eight games without a goal since netting versus Chad in March 2025.