AFRICA · WORLD CUP
Key Facts
—Record run: Nine of Africa’s ten teams reached the World Cup last 32, the continent’s best showing ever.
—Cape Verde’s miracle: With about 525,000 people, Cape Verde is the smallest nation ever to reach the World Cup knockouts.
—South-South clash: Cape Verde face reigning champions Argentina and Lionel Messi in Miami on 3 July.
—Holding Brazil: Morocco drew with Brazil and finished their group unbeaten, another Africa-meets-Latin-America moment.
—The headliners: Morocco, Senegal, South Africa, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Egypt and Algeria all reached the knockouts.
—Our lens: The tournament stages the South-South story that links Africa to Latin America, and to The Rio Times’ own roots.
Africa at the World Cup will look different this time: a record nine of the continent’s ten teams have reached the last 32, and on 3 July tiny Cape Verde will meet Lionel Messi’s Argentina in the tournament’s boldest South-South clash.
What Africa at the World Cup looks like in 2026
Africa has arrived at the 2026 World Cup with ten teams and will make history with nine. That will be the most African sides ever to reach the knockout rounds.
The group stage has delivered upsets and statements in equal measure. African teams have not just taken part; they have competed for the top places.
The expanded 48-team format has given the continent more slots than ever. Its teams are repaying the faith with results.
For a global audience, the message is plain. African football is no longer an outsider at the sport’s biggest event.
Cape Verde, the smallest giant-killer
The story of the tournament is Cape Verde, an Atlantic island nation of about 525,000 people. It has become the smallest country ever to reach the World Cup knockouts.
The Blue Sharks have earned it the hard way, with gritty draws against Spain, Uruguay and Saudi Arabia. They have finished above bigger, richer rivals.
Cape Verde is a Portuguese-speaking nation with deep ties across the Atlantic. Its diaspora stretches from Lisbon to Boston to Brazil.
That heritage makes its run resonate far beyond football. A tiny country has put itself on the world’s front pages.
A South-South collision
On 3 July, Cape Verde will meet Argentina in Miami, the reigning champions led by Lionel Messi. It is the boldest Africa-meets-Latin-America tie of the round.
The gap in resources could hardly be wider. Yet Cape Verde have already shown they do not read the script.
It is not the only such clash. Morocco held Brazil to a draw in the group stage on their way to finishing unbeaten.
These meetings pit the continent’s best against Latin America’s giants. They are the fixtures that capture the tournament’s global sweep.
Why this matters beyond football
The Rio Times sits at the crossroads of Latin America and a rising Africa. This World Cup dramatises exactly that connection.
The threads are real, not just symbolic. Language, migration and music tie Cape Verde and Angola to Brazil and Portugal.
Sport is often where these links become visible to the wider world. A match can do what a trade figure cannot.
For African teams, testing themselves against Argentina and Brazil is a measure of arrival. Win or lose, they belong on the same field.
The bigger South-South picture
The World Cup is only the most visible strand of a deeper tie. Africa and Latin America are increasingly linked by trade, migration and shared ambition.
Both regions are courted by the same great powers and face many of the same choices. Both are trying to turn raw potential into lasting wealth.
Football gives that relationship a human face. A match between Cape Verde and Argentina is easier to feel than a summit communique.
It also flips the usual script. Here the small island nation, not the superpower, is the story the world wants to follow.
A stage built for outsiders
The 2026 World Cup, hosted across North America, has given both continents a bigger platform. Its expanded format rewards regions long treated as afterthoughts.
Africa has seized the moment, and Latin America remains a favourite to lift the trophy. Their paths crossing is fitting for a tournament built on scale.
For African players, many based in Europe, the finals are a kind of homecoming. They carry the hopes of a continent, not just a club.
For readers who follow both regions, it is a rare shared spectacle. The same drama will be cheered in Praia and in Buenos Aires.
What to watch next
The immediate drama is whether Cape Verde can trouble Argentina. Even a close defeat would seal their fairytale.
Beyond that, how far the other African sides go will shape the story. A quarter-finalist or better would be historic.
Whatever the results, the direction is set. Africa has come to the World Cup as a contender, and the world is noticing.
Frequently asked questions
How many African teams reached the World Cup last 32?
Nine of Africa’s ten teams reached the last 32, the continent’s best-ever showing at a World Cup.
Who does Cape Verde play in the last 32?
Cape Verde face reigning champions Argentina and Lionel Messi in Miami on 3 July 2026.
Why is Cape Verde’s run historic?
With about 525,000 people, Cape Verde is the smallest nation ever to reach the World Cup knockout stages.
Did any African team beat a Latin American giant?
Morocco drew with Brazil in the group stage and finished unbeaten, one of several Africa-meets-Latin-America moments.
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