It was supposed to be Africa’s greatest World Cup ever. And honestly? In many ways, it still is.
A record 10 African nations qualified for the 2026 World Cup — a number that would have seemed impossible just a decade ago. Nine of those ten reached the Round of 32, the most from the continent in a single World Cup, shattering every previous benchmark. The group stage was a masterpiece of resilience, quality and African pride. But as the knockout rounds have shown, surviving the group stage is one thing — thriving in the pressure cooker of elimination football is another beast entirely.
Let’s break it all down — the glory, the grief, and who’s still standing.
The Ones Who Bowed Out — But Left With Their Heads High

South Africa arrived at this tournament as history-makers. Bafana Bafana reached the World Cup knockout stage for the first time ever — a milestone that belongs to them forever, regardless of what came next. What came next was a heartbreaker. Stephen Eustaquio’s last-gasp strike earned Canada a hard-fought 1-0 victory to send Bafana Bafana home. South Africa produced some eye-catching moves in the first half but were let down by their final ball. Painful — but the history? Permanent.

Ivory Coast were making their first-ever World Cup knockout appearance and ran into a sharp Norway side, falling 2–1. Nicolas Pépé’s brace in the group stage had lit the continent on fire — but the Elephants couldn’t replicate that magic when it mattered most.

DR Congo — the Leopards — made their knockout debut against England in a 2–1 defeat that felt far more competitive than the scoreline suggests. DR Congo booked their place in the Round of 32 by defeating Uzbekistan 3–1, with Yoane Wissa scoring twice — their first-ever World Cup victory. They arrived as underdogs, left as warriors.

Senegal gave Belgium an absolute thriller before losing 3–2 in a pulsating match. The Teranga Lions fought until the very last minute but couldn’t hold on in a game that could have gone either way.

Algeria — who scraped through the group stage with a dramatic last-day draw against Austria — met Switzerland at BC Place and were outclassed 2–0 in a cold tactical defeat. They had 55% of the ball and nothing to show for it. A cruel end to a campaign that started with so much noise.
The Star of the Show: Morocco
While the rest fell, Morocco did what Morocco always seem to do at major tournaments — they refused to die.

Morocco defeated the Netherlands in a penalty shootout to advance to the last 16 of the FIFA World Cup after a thrilling battle in Monterrey finished 1-1 following extra time. Dutch forward Cody Gakpo opened the scoring, just two days after announcing the loss of his unborn son — one of the most emotionally raw moments of the entire tournament. But Morocco never stopped. Issa Diop glanced in a dramatic equalizer in the first minute of stoppage time to force extra time, and when penalties came, goalkeeper Yassine Bounou made a clutch save before Ismael Saibari stepped up to blast home the winning spot-kick, sending Morocco through 3–2 on penalties. Achraf Hakimi, Hakimi the hero and captain, carried an entire continent’s dream forward that night.
The win sees Morocco into a last-16 clash with co-hosts Canada in Houston on July 4 — a game they are strongly favoured to win.
Three Nations Still Writing Their Stories
As of now, three African sides are yet to play their Round of 32 fixtures — and the continent is watching with everything it has.

Egypt face Australia in a match they are favourites to win. Mohamed Salah looks set to feature after recovering from a hamstring strain — and if the Liverpool legend is fit and firing, the Pharaohs carry real danger. Egypt qualified from a tough group and will fancy their chances against the Socceroos.

Cape Verde — the fairytale of this entire tournament — face defending champions Argentina in what looks, on paper, like a mismatch. Tournament debutants Cape Verde emerged unbeaten from their group after draws against Spain, Uruguay and Saudi Arabia. They are fearless, organised, and playing with the freedom of a nation that expected nothing and has already achieved everything. Could they pull off the upset of the century? Don’t rule it out.

Ghana face Colombia in a tie that is genuinely winnable. The Black Stars qualified from the group stage showing defensive discipline and the kind of tournament resilience that upsets are built on. Colombia are strong — but Ghana have been underestimated before.
The Bigger Picture
Of the African teams that have already played their Round of 32 fixtures, only Morocco have progressed. It is yet another painful reality for the continent after the euphoria of the group stage. But this World Cup has already rewritten records. History was made before a single knockout ball was kicked.
Now Egypt, Cape Verde and Ghana carry the torch. Africa needs you. Go make history.












