
The round of 32 of the World Cup ended with Colombia defeating Ghana 1-0 as John Arias powered through the South American team.
Published July 4, 2026
Colombia beat Ghana 1-0 in sweltering weather in Kansas City on Friday to advance to the World Cup’s round of 16, with John Arias scoring the only goal, continuing a quietly impressive campaign that established them as dangerous outsiders.
Arias scored in the 14th minute, converting a cross from substitute Luis Suarez, and Colombia’s disciplined defense held out the rest as Nestor Lorenzo’s side extended their unbeaten run and booked a match against Switzerland in the next round.
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Despite Colombia finishing unbeaten in Group K against Portugal, Uzbekistan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, they received little attention at the tournament.

Friday’s breakthrough came from an unlikely combination of two players, with Suarez coming on in the eighth minute after John Cordoba was sent off with a groin injury, and feeding a pinpoint cross to the back post where Arias somehow broke free.
With time and space to position himself, Arias calmly guided the ball into the bottom corner, giving his team a deserved lead.
The stadium felt more like Barranquilla than Kansas City, with tens of thousands of Colombian fans making the match against Ghana, which is 60 places behind them, a de facto home game, giving the far-flung South Americans a level of support rarely seen before.

The stands were a rolling, dancing sea of yellow jerseys, rolled-up scarves and black-and-white sombrero vueltiao hats, many with their faces fanned in the brutal 30-degree Celsius (86-degree Fahrenheit) heat.
They bounced in unison, propelling the team forward with every attack, and regularly started chants of “Vamos Colombia! Esta noche tenemos que ganar!” (Spanish: “Let’s go Colombia, we must win tonight!”).
They didn’t need to worry. Colombia was the better team by some margin.
Luis Diaz had many chances to score. He fired a shot into the side netting in the first half and then celebrated what looked like his second goal of the game, curling home Arias’ cross early in the second half, but it was disallowed for offside.
Lorenzo’s side continued their onslaught for the second goal, with Ghanaian goalkeeper Lawrence Ati-Gigi, who had been superb all night, making one great save after another in the closing stages, and the Colombian fans cheering his team’s every touch of the ball.

Antoine Semenyo was Ghana’s biggest attacking threat, but Colombia’s disciplined defense prevented him from scoring clearly.
Colombia became the fourth South American team to reach the last 16, joining Paraguay, a surprise package for Germany, and Brazil and Argentina, who overcame their own fears.
Colombia, whose best result was reaching the quarterfinals in 2014, will play Switzerland in Vancouver on Tuesday.
