Forget everything you think you know about African football at World Cups. No more “brave performances.” No more “plucky underdogs.” No more nearly-but-not-quite. The 2026 FIFA World Cup in North America is Africa’s tournament to win — and the continent has never been better equipped to prove it.
Ten nations. Ten shots at history. And for the first time ever, a genuine belief that one of them can go all the way.
A Record Contingent, A Record Opportunity
The expanded 48-team World Cup format hands Africa its largest-ever representation at a single tournament — ten teams, compared to the five that went to Qatar in 2022. Morocco, Senegal, Algeria, Egypt, Tunisia, Ivory Coast, Ghana, South Africa, Cape Verde and DR Congo have all booked their tickets to the party. Nigeria, painfully, did not.

Let that sink in. Ten African nations on the world stage simultaneously. The continent isn’t just knocking on football’s door anymore — it’s kicking it clean off the hinges.
Morocco: From Fairytale to Favourites

If 2022 was the moment Africa made the world believe, Morocco were the ones doing the convincing. The Atlas Lions became the first African — and first Arab — nation to reach a World Cup semi-final, stunning Spain and Portugal before losing to France. That wasn’t luck. That was a generational squad operating at peak level.

And they’re back. Achraf Hakimi, arguably the best right-back on the planet, captains a squad packed with European-based talent — Brahim Díaz, Sofyan Amrabat, Noussair Mazraoui and more. Sixteen of their 26-man squad are new faces since Qatar, signalling not a decline but an evolution. Their group opener? Only Brazil. At MetLife Stadium. On June 13. No pressure, lads.
Senegal: The Return of the King

Just when Senegal thought they’d seen the last of Sadio Mané in international football, the 34-year-old Al-Nassr forward had other ideas. After announcing his international retirement amid the dramatic AFCON 2025 controversy, Mané reversed his decision and returned — because one last World Cup was too big to miss.

And what a squad he returns to. Nicolas Jackson, Iliman Ndiaye, Ismaila Sarr, Edouard Mendy, Kalidou Koulibaly — the Lions of Teranga are stacked from back to front. They face France, Norway and Iraq in Group I. Tough? Yes. Unwinnable? Absolutely not.
The Voices That Believe

The belief isn’t just coming from fans on social media. Ex-Senegal striker El Hadji Diouf didn’t mince his words when asked about Africa’s 2026 chances: “Why not? We are going there to win the tournament.” CAF president Patrice Motsepe echoed that sentiment, saying the continent’s problem was never talent — it was self-belief. Morocco, he argued, changed all of that in Qatar.

Nigeria legend Jay-Jay Okocha is more cautious, but even he admits the quality is there. The question is whether it can be harnessed on the biggest stage.
Africa’s Time

Ghana face England. Egypt face Germany’s group-stage rivals. Ivory Coast enter with Amad Diallo, Franck Kessié and Simon Adingra. This isn’t a continent sending squads to make up the numbers. These are genuinely dangerous football nations, dripping with Premier League, La Liga and Serie A quality.

Morocco showed in 2022 that a semi-final was possible. In 2026, with ten lions on the prowl, an African nation going all the way doesn’t just feel possible — it feels inevitable.
The world had better be ready.












