"Ghana are going to win," he beamed cheekily as he went in to join his Ghana flag-draped mate Dennis Amoabeng.
Within a minute or two, the Ghana-supporting duo were back outside dynamically sharing hugs with their new best enemies and taking a few knocks about their own team.
Feeding off the brunchtime bonhomie, another cafe-goer insisted on snapping pictures of the smiling six who had gathered in the Canadian city for the World Cup Group L opener between Panama andGhana.
"I've been watching football for years," said Safo who had taken time out from his studies in business administration to travel from his home in Montreal with Amoabeng for the tie.
"Normally I watch it on TV but I couldn't pass up a chance to come and see Ghana live at a World Cup. It was too good a chance to miss."
The 36-year-old, who was born in Kumasi in central Ghana, paid Can$ 400 for his ticket at the Toronto Stadium. There was no remorse.
"It's worth it," he said. "The game against Panama is a must win. It's non-negotiable.
"I've no expectations from the games against England and Croatia. We get what we get. "But against Panama we have to get the win."
Warning over high expectations
On the eve of the match, Ghana head coach Carlos Queiroz warned against expecting an easy game against Panama.
"They are a well organised team," said Queiroz. "They are very experienced and they are competitive. We hold them in high regard and we respect them as we respect England and Croatia."
Ghana lodges protest over Canada's refusal to admit rape case suspect Partey
The 73-year-old took over in April following the dismissal of Otto Addo who had steered Ghana through the African qualifying campaign.
Queiroz was appointed less than a month after he failed to lead Oman to the World Cup.
"He is a very experienced coach," said Safo of Queiroz. "He has been to the tournament with a lot of teams. We have to trust him."
Football history: Jules Rimet, the man behind the World Cup plan
Ghana have not reached the knockout stages since the surge to the last eight at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.
Back then the competition was a 32-team affair with the top two from the eight groups of four producing the candidates for the knockout stages.
With the expansion in 2026 to 48 teams, a last 32 knockout round has been created for the top two from the 12 groups as well as the eight best third-placed teams.
"If we got to the quarter-finals," mused Safo, "I'd be happy with that."


Gunfire at airport in Niger's capital: residents
Tehran and Washington sign interim peace deal to end US-Israeli war on Iran
Why are Kenyan kids burning schools and killing their classmates?
Yirenkyi's late flourish launches Ghana's World Cup party
World Cup 2026: Ghana break Panama resistance with stoppage-time winner
VIDEO: Watch the only community toilet carried away by floods
We don’t owe Tema Motorway contractor any amount of money — Agbodza
Swift response by Saki High Tension residents helps contain warehouse blaze in K...
Bank of Ghana converts 147 rural and community banks into community banks
Five fake soldiers grabbed for armed robbery at Ashanti mining community