Wales 1-1 Ghana, the equaliser arriving in the 90+3rd minute to rescue Craig Bellamy’s unbeaten start in Cardiff while Otto Addo left with the draw his rotated side had almost banked. The hosts had the ball, the visitors had the edge once the bench emptied, and it took the last kick of the night for parity.
Wales controlled the opening hour inside a 4-2-3-1 built on Ethan Ampadu and Josh Sheehan recycling possession, yet the fluency skipped past centre-forward Kieffer Moore. Daniel James and David Brooks found angles but Lawrence Ati Zigi stood up, and Thomas Partey’s yellow card in the 30th minute for a late press was the only time Ghana’s first-half shape creaked.
Addo tore up his plan at half-time, making four substitutions including Benjamin Asare replacing Lawrence Ati Zigi, and Ghana shifted into a more direct 4-4-1-1. The second wave arrived on 60 minutes when Caleb Yirenkyi replaced Elisha Owusu and Christopher Baah came on for Kamaldeen Sulemana. Six minutes later Yirenkyi justified the choices, ghosting into the box to convert and put Ghana ahead in the 66th minute.
Bellamy responded on the hour with Lewis Koumas taking over from Moore while Nathan Broadhead and Cameron Congreve added fresh support in attack. Wales spent the closing stages with Chris Mepham and Isaak Davies also involved, then Rhys Norrington-Davies and Kai Andrews as the hosts tilted into a 3-4-3. Under siege, Ghana leaned on Jerome Opoku’s positioning and Jonas Adjei Adjetey’s clearances, while Alidu Seidu’s yellow card for time wasting in the 90+2nd minute underlined how close they were to closing it out.
Then Neco Williams produced the decisive involvement. The right-back had been persistent all evening, and in the final passage he supplied the cross for Koumas, who scored in the 90+3rd minute to level. No flourish, just a simple finish that ensured Bellamy’s young striker left his mark in only his second cap.
Statistics confirm the story: Wales finished with 67 percent possession, 18 total shots, 13 inside the box, yet only three on target. Ghana’s 11 attempts were leaner but five forced Karl Darlow into saves, reflecting the menace of Jordan Ayew before his 75th minute substitution for Iñaki Williams. Addo’s side absorbed 622 Welsh passes, clearing danger through Opoku and Gideon Mensah before the late concession.
Key figures emerged on both sides. Williams’ assist capped a full-back display built on two key passes and relentless overlaps, while Ampadu’s six defensive interventions anchored the midfield. For Ghana, Yirenkyi’s cameo goal validated Addo’s willingness to trust the bench, and Opoku’s perfect duel record to his 76th minute substitution formed the foundation for Ghana’s defensive resilience. Partey’s early caution and Seidu’s late booking were the only disciplinary notes recorded.
Attention now moves to the next assignments. Bellamy will push this young core through another test window before autumn competition opens, the expectation being sharper cutting edge to match the structure. Addo departs Cardiff with evidence that Ghana’s depth is evolving and with selection calls to refine before the Black Stars reconvene later in the summer.







