Benjamin Asare has written his name into Ghanaian football history by becoming the first goalkeeper playing in the Ghana Premier League to start a FIFA World Cup match, after the Accra Hearts of Oak shot-stopper kept a clean sheet as Ghana held England to a goalless draw at Gillette Stadium in Boston on Tuesday.
Asare, who has spent his entire club career in the Ghana Premier League, produced a composed and commanding performance to help the Black Stars deny an England attack packed with players from the Premier League, La Liga and the Bundesliga. None of them could find a way past a goalkeeper whose stage until recently was the pitches of Accra.

The Hearts of Oak shot-stopper was handed the starting berth against England after replacing Lawrence Ati-Zigi, who was ruled out due to an injury suatined during the Black Stars’ dramatic opening victory over Panama. That substitution- made at half-time of the Panama game in Toronto – was itself already historic.
He became the first Ghana Premier League-based goalkeeper to feature for the Black Stars at a FIFA World Cup, stepping onto football’s biggest stage carrying the pride of the domestic competition. Starting against England, in front of a global audience, elevated that landmark into something far greater.
Ghana’s World Cup history is littered with home-based goalkeepers who travelled to tournaments but never got playing time. At Germany 2006, Obuasi AshantiGold’s George Owu was the third-choice custodian and did not appear. In South Africa 2010, Liberty Professionals’ Daniel Agyei and Heart of Lions’ Stephen Ahorlu were in the squad, but Richard Kingson remained undisputed first choice. In Brazil 2014, Aduana Stars’ Stephen Adams filled the same peripheral role, while Asante Kotoko’s Ibrahim Danlad did likewise at Qatar 2022. They were Good enough to be called up but never got minutes of play.
Asare, born in Accra in July 1992, is no overnight sensation. He rose to prominence through Accra Great Olympics before joining Hearts of Oak, where he became one of the Ghana Premier League’s most dependable shot-stoppers. In April 2025, Hearts extended his contract until 2027. He was named Ghana Premier League Goalkeeper of the Month after keeping three clean sheets in five matches, and was crowned Male Home-Based Footballer of the Year at the 50th SWAG Awards, recognition that honoured both his club performances and his contributions to the Black Stars.
His first senior international call-up came as recently as March 2025, for World Cup qualification matches against Chad and Madagascar. He marked his debut with a clean sheet in a 5–0 win over Chad. Barely fifteen months later, he was starting a World Cup match against Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham.
Against England, Asare made some crucial saves, denying England’s star-studded attack time and again, and keeping his second consecutive clean sheet of the tournament. His save to deny Bukayo Saka’s curling effort in the 86th minute was the pick of the bunch: instinctive, low, and decisive. When Kane blazed a close-range rebound over the bar in the dying minutes, it completed a clean sheet that Asare had earned every second of.
His appearance was a landmark moment for the Ghana Premier League and a powerful statement about the quality that exists within the country’s domestic competition. For years, the narrative has been that Ghanaian football’s brightest talents must move abroad to be taken seriously at international level. Asare, at 33, in Boston, starting a World Cup group game against one of the tournament’s favourites, has challenged that notion in the most emphatic way possible.
He was the only home-based player selected in Ghana’s entire 26-man World Cup squad, becoming a lone flag-bearer for the domestic game on the grandest of stages. He has carried it with distinction, composure and, on Tuesday night, genuine world-class quality.
Ghana face Croatia in their final Group L fixture, and he will be available for selection if Ati-Zigi remains sidelined,
