When Ghana fans look at the 2026 World Cup group and spot Panama, it feels less like nostalgia and more like a quiet reminder of a night many have forgotten, but Lawrence Ati-Zigi hasn’t.
Ten years ago, at the 2015 FIFA U20 World Cup, a young Lawrence Ati-Zigi stood in goal when Ghana edged Panama 1–0. Emmanuel Boateng scored the winner, but Ati Zigi carried the weight of the match.
Panama tested him five times, and five times he answered: low dives, a fingertip stretch, brave smothers in crowded boxes, the kind of saves that keep a slim lead alive.
He even saved Ghana at the death, saving a last-minute penalty. That clean sheet was one of the early signs that Ghana had a future senior goalkeeper in their ranks.
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Fast-forward to today, and football has brought the same opponent back into his path, only this time on the biggest stage of all. Ghana’s opening game at the 2026 World Cup is once again against Panama, the same side he faced as a teenager.
But here’s the twist: Ati-Zigi is no longer walking into this World Cup as the guaranteed No. 1 as he did in 2022.
Hearts of Oak goalkeeper, Benjamin Asare has risen sharply and currently holds the starting spot. Ati-Zigi now finds himself fighting for his place, working from the shadows, hoping for another chance to step into the light.
And that’s what makes this reunion interesting. The team he once stopped with five saves now appears in the group where he’s battling to reclaim his shirt.
It’s not destiny in a dramatic sense, just football’s way of looping stories back around. The opponent from his youth resurfaces just when he’s trying to prove himself again.
Panama were part of his journey when he was a young keeper with gloves too big. Now they’re part of the chapter where he’s trying to win his position back. And if he does get the nod in that opening game, he will hope he walks away with another clean sheet.
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