Ghana are, by every practical measure, going to the 2026 FIFA World Cup, but not officially.
Despite their thunderous 5–0 victory over the Central African Republic in Marrakech on Wednesday, October 8, 2025, which sent them three points clear at the top of Group I with a commanding +16 goal difference, FIFA has yet to confirm the Black Stars among the qualified nations for the tournament.
Here’s why.
In FIFA’s qualification system, mathematics always takes precedence over momentum. Ghana are on top of Group I 22 points, followed by Madagascar with 19, with both teams having one game left to play.
Even though Ghana’s goal difference advantage stands at a massive eight goals, it remains theoretically possible for that gap to be overturned.
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For Ghana to miss out, two extraordinary events would have to unfold in perfect and improbable harmony:
1 Ghana would need to suffer a heavy defeat at home to Comoros.
The Black Stars host Comoros in Accra on Sunday, October 12, 2025, knowing even a draw will confirm their place.
But for the nightmare scenario to happen, Ghana would have to collapse completely, losing by a wide margin, something like 0-3 0–4 or 0–5.
That would not only hand them zero points but also drastically cut their goal difference, opening the narrowest of mathematical windows.
Yet such a result seems far-fetched. Ghana have lost just once at home in a World Cup qualifier in over two decades, and Comoros have never won an away qualifier by more than two goals in their history.
2 Madagascar would have to pull off a near-miracle in Bamako. While Ghana play in Accra, Madagascar face Mali away, a fixture few teams escape unscathed.
To overtake Ghana, Madagascar wouldn’t just need to win; they will need to win big.
Think of something along the lines of a 4–0 or 5–0 victory, on Malian soil. That’s an enormous task: Mali, since losing 2-1 to the Black Stars in 2024, have not lost at home in five qualifying games, including the Africa Cup of Nations, and rarely concede more than one goal in Bamako.
For Madagascar to win by such a margin would require a collapsed Mali team and a performance of a lifetime from the visitors.
In short, both those extreme results would need to happen on the same day, Ghana losing heavily, and Madagascar winning by an equally heavy margin, to overturn the goal difference and snatch the top spot.
That’s the only reason FIFA’s confirmation is on hold.
So while Ghana’s World Cup seat is practically reserved, the mathematics insist on one final signature.
Sunday in Accra isn’t about securing qualification, it’s about making it official.
FKA/JE