Wales Earns Positive Marker Against World Cup-bound Ghana, Says Darlow
Wales left it late against Ghana, but Karl Darlow viewed the 1-1 draw as a positive sign for Craig Bellamy's side. Lewis Koumas struck four minutes into second-half added time on Tuesday, cancelling out Caleb Yirenkyi's opener and giving Wales a result against opponents preparing for the World Cup.
Darlow, starting for Leeds United this season, felt the performance showed clear progress for a squad still dealing with missing out on the tournament. Wales lost a penalty shoot-out to Bosnia-Herzegovina in March, ending hopes of reaching North America and shifting the focus towards friendlies and long-term development.

Darlow stressed that the display, more than the scoreline, offered encouragement for Wales. "I think we probably deserved the win, to be honest with you," Darlow told BBC Match of the Day Wales, reflecting on a match where Wales pressed high, used the ball well and tried to dictate play against one of Africa's leading sides.
The goalkeeper highlighted how the opening 45 minutes set the tone. "With the way that we played in the first half, we dominated possession and created a lot of chances, so I think if we had gone one or two goals up in the first half it could have been a comfortable result." Wales repeatedly pushed Ghana back but lacked a decisive finish.
The underlying data supported Darlow's view that Wales carried more threat across the 90 minutes. Bellamy's team produced 18 shots compared with Ghana's 11 and generated 1.86 expected goals to the visitors' 1.3 xG. However, Ghana managed five efforts on target, while Wales hit the target only three times despite their territorial dominance.
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Darlow felt the goal conceded owed much to bad luck rather than poor shape. "It was unfortunate for the goal, it just deflected off Joe (Rodon) and hit the post and it's gone in. So it was unfortunate and on another day, we wouldkeep a clean sheet." The deflection left Darlow wrong-footed and briefly put Wales behind.
Despite that setback, Darlow believed the group responded with character against Ghana's World Cup-bound squad. "I think we can all be pleased as a group with what we've done tonight. It's not easy when we have to play a friendly game when we'd rather be at the World Cup. We played a side who are going to the World Cup and they're a very good side. But we played really well tonight, and I think we can be pleased with that." The late equaliser rewarded sustained pressure.
The draw continued a broader pattern in Wales' recent friendly record. They have not won any of their opening three fixtures of a calendar year (D3) for the first time since 2016 under Chris Coleman, when the team recorded one draw and two defeats. More recently, Wales have managed only one victory in their last 12 friendlies, drawing seven and losing four.
That run includes six friendlies without a win since a 4-0 success against Gibraltar in October 2023, a match that previously looked like a turning point. The stalemate with Ghana therefore offered mixed signals: improved attacking metrics and resilience, yet another match without a victory as Wales search for consistency in non-competitive fixtures.
Attention now turns quickly to Romania, who visit on Saturday for another friendly test. After measuring themselves against World Cup-qualified Ghana, Wales will look to convert possession and chances into a complete result, while maintaining the front-foot approach that Darlow and Bellamy regarded as a useful benchmark for future international windows.


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