The Black Stars’ difficult tour of Asia continued on Tuesday as Ghana slipped to a narrow 1–0 defeat to South Korea in Busan, closing their Kirin Cup campaign without a single win and raising fresh concerns ahead of next year’s competitive fixtures.
A second-half header from Lee Tae-Seok settled the contest in favour of the hosts, punishing a Ghana side that created chances but lacked the cutting edge and composure required at this level.
Ghana began brightly and produced several promising moments in the first half.
Kamaldeen Sulemana forced an early save after drifting inside, while Christopher Bonsu Baah had a shot blocked inside the box.
Goalkeeper Benjamin Asare one of Ghana’s standout performers kept the game goalless with a series of sharp saves, including a strong effort to deny Kwon Hyeok-Kyu from close range.

The Black Stars controlled spells of the first half but too often made poor decisions in the final third. Headers from Prince Adu and later Bonsu Baah evaded the target, and Brandon Thomas-Asante struck the post from distance early in the second half.
South Korea, however, grew into the game. After sustained pressure and consecutive corners, Lee Tae-Seok finally broke the deadlock in the 63rd minute rising highest to guide a cross from Lee Kang-In into the bottom corner. Brandon Thomas-Asante twice went close, missing the target from the centre of the box, while Kamaldeen flashed a shot inches wide after a clever link-up with Caleb Yirenkyi.

There was further drama in the 74th minute when Korea earned a penalty, but Benjamin Asare produced a brilliant save to deny Hwang Hee-Chan and keep Ghana alive.
Despite the late surge, Korea managed the game well, slowing the tempo and winning key fouls to frustrate Ghana’s momentum.
With this defeat, Ghana end the Kirin Cup without registering a single victory having fallen to Japan and South Korea in successive matches.
The implications are immediate:
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FIFA Rankings slide: Ghana are set to lose more points in the next world rankings update, potentially dropping further from the top 60.
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Attacking concerns: The Black Stars created chances but lacked precision; goal-scoring remains a clear weakness.
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Pressure on Otto Addo: Though still early in preparations for 2026, the tactical clarity and balance of the team remain under scrutiny.

The Black Stars will return to Ghana with valuable lessons but urgent work to do. Defensive discipline has improved, and some individuals impressed, but the inability to score in open play throughout the tournament is a concern the technical team must address.
Ghana’s next international window presents an opportunity to reset, rebuild confidence, and stabilise a team that desperately needs fluidity and results.






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