Ghana stand on the edge of another World Cup journey, and Accra is humming with anticipation. s.
Pot 4 is a chaotic mix: Jordan, Cape Verde, Haiti, New Zealand, Curacao, and a pack of playoff survivors from Europe and beyond. No home advantage, no favourable seeding — just Ghana’s raw ability and the chance to shock the world.
The draw format is simple: three opponents, one from each of Pots 1, 2, and 3.
The tension? Anything can happen.
Pot 1: giants, legends, and dream-nightmare matchups
Ghana’s name could drop into a group with the hosts USA, Mexico, or Canada or one of the superpowers: Argentina, France, Spain, Brazil, England, or Portugal.
Argentina would bring Messi’s final World Cup waltz.
France means Mbappé’s relentless brilliance.
An England rematch evokes 2010 heartbreak on the global stage.
Portugal could stage a farewell duel between Ronaldo and the Ayew legacy.
Pot 1 isn’t just tough — it’s box office.
Pot 2: African rivals and tactical landmines
This pot is the real balancing act. Morocco, Senegal, Colombia, Uruguay, Japan, Australia, and Croatia all sit here, each offering a different kind of danger.
A Ghana–Morocco draw writes itself tactical chess and revenge storylines.
A Senegal pairing creates an all-African blockbuster.
Croatia’s precision or Japan’s discipline would demand perfection.
Australia or Colombia offer openings, but no guarantees.
Pot 2 is where World Cup destiny can tilt.
Pot 3: rivalry, chaos, and hidden threats
Africa dominates this pot: Egypt, Algeria, Tunisia, South Africa, and Ivory Coast — any of them could turn the group into a CAF grudge match abroad.
Then come the curveballs:
Norway with Haaland’s hurricane.
Scotland’s Premier League engine room.
Uzbekistan, Qatar, Panama — unpredictable and dangerous.
Pot 3 is the pot that can make or break Ghana. It holds opportunity, but also traps.
Best and worst possible worlds
Dream scenario:
Canada, Australia, Uzbekistan ; a navigable path to the knockouts.
Nightmare draw:
Argentina, Senegal, Egypt ; a gauntlet of world champions and African giants.
On December 5, when the balls drop in Washington, the Black Stars won’t just learn their opponents.
They’ll begin the mission to redefine their identity and maybe African football itself.