Africa has achieved its greatest-ever performance at the FIFA World Cup, with nine of its 10 representatives advancing to the Round of 32 in a historic breakthrough at the 2026 tournament in North America.
The remarkable achievement marks the first time an African confederation has seen 90 per cent of its participating teams progress beyond the group stage, underlining the continent’s growing strength and competitiveness on football’s biggest stage.
Only Tunisia failed to reach the knockout rounds after suffering three consecutive defeats in the group phase, while every other African side secured qualification to make history.
The nine African nations through to the Round of 32 are South Africa, Morocco, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, Cabo Verde, Senegal, Algeria, DR Congo and Ghana.
The unprecedented success eclipses every previous World Cup campaign by African nations. Never before has the continent produced so many knockout-stage qualifiers in a single tournament, signalling what many observers regard as a new era for African football.
The record-breaking feat has also ensured African representation across virtually every section of the knockout bracket, giving the continent multiple opportunities to challenge for a place in the latter stages of the competition.
South Africa advanced from Group A alongside Mexico, while Morocco finished among the qualifiers from Group C with five-time champions Brazil. Côte d’Ivoire progressed from Group E, Egypt secured qualification from Group G, and Cabo Verde continued their fairytale debut World Cup campaign by reaching the Round of 32 from Group H.
In Group I, Senegal once again demonstrated their pedigree on the global stage by advancing with France, while Algeria snatched one of the final knockout places in dramatic fashion after Austria’s stoppage-time winner over Iran proved decisive. DR Congo emerged from Group K, and Ghana sealed their place from Group L despite narrowly losing their final group match to Croatia.
With nine teams still in contention, Africa now has its strongest-ever presence in the World Cup knockout phase and a genuine opportunity to surpass previous continental milestones.
As the Round of 32 begins, hopes are high that one or more African nations can build on this historic achievement and mount a deep run in the tournament, further cementing the continent’s growing status in world football.
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