Colombia reached the World Cup round of 16 with a controlled 1-0 win over Ghana in Kansas City, Missouri, as Jhon Arias struck early and Nestor Lorenzo’s
side then protected the lead with authority to book a quarter-final play-off against Switzerland on Tuesday, rarely allowing Carlos Queiroz’s team clear chances across a largely one-sided last-32 contest.
The result continues Colombia’s strong campaign after finishing above Portugal to top Group K, strengthening the perception of Los Cafeteros as serious contenders, while Ghana exit following another game without a shot on target, extending an unwanted tournament streak and underlining how Queiroz’s cautious tactics offered little attacking threat against organised opposition.
The decisive moment arrived after just 14 minutes, when substitute Luis Suarez delivered a teasing cross from the right, the first attempt blocked by Gideon Mensah but the second dropping beyond Luis Diaz, allowing Palmeiras midfielder Arias to arrive unmarked at the far post and guide a precise side-footed finish into the bottom-right corner.
The goal entered Colombia’s record books as their second-earliest at a World Cup, timed at 13:49, with only Pablo Armero’s fifth-minute effort against Greece in 2014 coming quicker, while it also continued a memorable tournament for Palmeiras players following Maurcio’s strike for Paraguay, as highlighted by a statistical post shared shortly after the game.
2 - Estaa primeira vez na histria que dois jogadores diferentes do Palmeiras fazem gol numa mesma Copa do Mundo: Jhon Arias (Colmbia) Maurcio (Paraguai) Imponente. pic.twitter.com/nW7iEyqXGP OptaJoao (@OptaJoao) July 4, 2026
Colombia’s control was clear on the numbers, with Lorenzo’s side generating 20 shots to Ghana’s eight and leading the expected goals measure by 2.19 to 0.26, even after James Rodriguez left at half-time following a laboured opening 45 minutes from the former Real Madrid midfielder, whose passing still helped create several early openings.
Ghana, by contrast, finished yet another match without a single effort on target, meaning Queiroz’s team reached full-time in all four tournament fixtures without testing an opposition goalkeeper, becoming the only one of the 48 participating nations to fail to hit the target in every game, reinforcing criticism of a defensive, risk-averse plan.
| Team | Shots | Expected Goals (xG) | Shots on Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Colombia | 20 | 2.19 | Not specified |
| Ghana | 8 | 0.26 | 0 |
World Cup Colombia Ghana: Injuries and disrupted opening phase
The contest began in disjointed fashion, with both teams suffering early injury setbacks during the first 13 minutes, as Colombia forward Jhon Cordoba was forced off before Ghana defender Marvin Senaya also departed, appearing close to tears while leaving the pitch, yet Colombia handled the disruption better and quickly converted pressure into the decisive breakthrough.
After Arias’ strike, Colombia continued to threaten before the interval, with a delicate chipped pass from James sending Diaz into space to drive a fierce effort into the side netting, while Suarez headed wide from a promising cross and Johan Mojica’s close-range header was clawed away impressively by Lawrence Ati Zigi, who kept Ghana within a single goal at half-time.
World Cup Colombia Ghana: Second-half control and limited Ghana response
Colombia resumed after the break still on the front foot, testing Ati Zigi twice in quick succession as Gustavo Puerta saw a low attempt pushed away and Diaz had a shot blocked, while a sliding finish from the Bayern Munich attacker was ruled out for offside, denying Diaz the goal that Colombia’s superiority seemed likely to deliver.
Ghana relied on sporadic counter-attacks but rarely created true danger, with one of their better moments seeing Antoine Semenyo flash a low ball across the face of goal, yet no team-mate anticipated the pass, and Colombia remained far likelier to score again as Juan Fernando Quintero’s dipping 25-yard strike went close and Davinson Sanchez’s header drew another save.
Defensively, Colombia remained composed and largely untroubled, with the back line protecting goalkeeper Camilo Vargas so effectively that Ghana never came close to forcing extra time, as Queiroz’s side struggled to progress the ball through midfield and lacked numbers in attacking zones whenever possession was won in transition.
World Cup Colombia Ghana: Historical context and Arias’ personal milestone
This victory delivered Colombia’s first World Cup knockout success since the 2-0 win over Uruguay in the 2014 round of 16, adding further weight to their strong showing in this expanded tournament after finishing ahead of Portugal in Group K, a campaign that has increased expectations among supporters and observers.
For Arias, the winner carried special meaning, as the 28-year-old became only the second player this century to score a World Cup knockout-stage goal while playing in the Brazilian Serie A, matching Robinho, who achieved the feat for Brazil in 2010 while with Santos, a notable achievement after a difficult six-month spell at Wolves ended with a return to South America in February.
Lorenzo’s team will now turn attention to Switzerland on Tuesday, entering that quarter-final play-off with confidence after another assertive display in Kansas City, Missouri, built on early attacking fluency, disciplined structure without the ball, and a performance that underlined why Colombia have been viewed as dangerous opponents since the group stage.

















