
Africa's record ten: every CAF team at World Cup 2026, group by group
A record 10 African nations have qualified for the 2026 World Cup. This guide breaks down all ten CAF teams — South Africa, Morocco, Côte d'Ivoire, Tunisia, Egypt, Cape Verde, Senegal, Algeria, DR Congo and Ghana — by group, opponent, key player, and what it takes to advance.

Africa's record ten: who they are, where they play, and why this time feels different
The 2026 World Cup opened in Mexico City on June 11. For the continent of Africa, the opening whistle marked something more than the start of a tournament — 10 CAF nations have qualified, the largest contingent Africa has ever sent to a World Cup. 1 That number, up from five slots in previous editions, comes directly from FIFA's expansion to a 48-team format — but the quality backing up the numbers is the continent's own doing.
Below is a group-by-group breakdown of every African nation in the tournament, what the draw handed them, and what it will take to advance.
Group A: South Africa — the hosts' first opponent
South Africa open against hosts Mexico on June 11 at the Estadio Azteca, the same venue, and the same opponent, as the opening match of the 2010 World Cup. Bafana Bafana qualified despite being stripped three points during qualifying for fielding an ineligible player, recovering to seal their place with a 3-0 win over Rwanda in October 2025. 2
This is South Africa's fourth World Cup. They have never cleared the group stage. The most watched player on their squad is Orlando Pirates winger Relebohile Mofokeng, whose pace in wide areas will be tested against South Korea and Czech Republic in the other two group games.
Group A fixtures involving South Africa:
- Mexico vs South Africa — June 11
- Czech Republic vs South Africa — June 18
- South Africa vs South Korea — June 25 (simultaneous with Czechia vs Mexico)
Group C: Morocco — the highest-ranked African side
Morocco sit at the sharp end of expectations. The Atlas Lions picked up maximum points in CAF qualifying, lost a contested Africa Cup of Nations final to Senegal, and were then awarded the AFCON title two months later when CAF stripped Senegal of it. 2 They enter Group C as the highest-ranked African side in the tournament.
Their first game is against Brazil on June 13. That is a steep opening — but Morocco finished fourth at the last World Cup, beating Portugal and Spain along the way, and they carry real knockout-round pedigree that Brazil cannot ignore. Captain Achraf Hakimi of Paris Saint-Germain anchors a squad that blends European-league experience with continental cohesion built during years of Walid Regragui's coaching.

Group C fixtures:
- Brazil vs Morocco — June 13
- Scotland vs Morocco — June 20
- Morocco vs Haiti — June 25 (simultaneous with Scotland vs Brazil)
Group E: Côte d'Ivoire — perfect qualifiers with a point to prove
The Elephants had perhaps the most dominant qualifying campaign of any African side: eight wins and two draws, zero goals conceded across 10 group-stage matches. 2 That defensive record is the best among all CAF qualifiers.
Coach Emerse Faé took Côte d'Ivoire to the AFCON title in 2023 on home soil, then watched a listless title defence in 2025 end in group-stage humiliation. The 2026 World Cup is the reset. Group E contains Germany and Ecuador — neither game is free — but the Elephants' first match, against Ecuador on June 14, is winnable, and a strong start could open a path to the knockout rounds. Côte d'Ivoire have never gone past the group stage at a World Cup; this squad is capable of changing that.
Group E fixtures:
- Ivory Coast vs Ecuador — June 14
- Germany vs Ivory Coast — June 20
- Curaçao vs Ivory Coast — June 25
Group F: Tunisia — nine wins, zero goals conceded
Tunisia qualified with one of the cleanest records in all of CAF: nine wins and a draw, conceding nothing in ten matches. 2 Goalkeeper Aymen Dahmen was central to that record; Burnley midfielder Hannibal Mejbri brings intensity to the engine room.
Group F places them against the Netherlands, Japan and Sweden. New coach Sabri Lamouchi, appointed in January, has had limited time to build cohesion. Tunisia have beaten France at a World Cup (2022) and can trouble any team on a given day. But the group is competitive, and the Eagles of Carthage are yet to win a knockout-round match in their seven World Cup appearances.
Group F fixtures:
- Sweden vs Tunisia — June 15
- Tunisia vs Japan — June 21
- Tunisia vs Netherlands — June 26
Group G: Egypt — Salah's last tournament, finally?
Egypt's qualifying was statistically commanding: unbeaten, 20 goals scored, 2 conceded across 10 group matches in CAF Group A. 3 The driving force is Mohamed Salah, who left Liverpool at the end of the season and enters this tournament at 34. With the Premier League's all-time top foreign scorer looking for a World Cup to match his club legacy, the attention around Egypt is understandable. 2
The problem is Group G. Egypt face Belgium first on June 15. Belgium's squad still includes Kevin De Bruyne and Thibaut Courtois; they are the clear group favourites. Iran and New Zealand round out the group. Egypt need to win at least one of the two games that aren't Belgium — and with Salah's influence, they are capable. But the Pharaohs have won just one World Cup match since 1934, and this group won't make history easy.
| Metric | Detail |
|---|---|
| CAF qualifying record | W8 D2 L0 — 20 scored, 2 conceded |
| World Cup appearances | 4th time (1934, 1990, 2018, 2026) |
| All-time World Cup wins | 1 (vs Zimbabwe, 1990) |
Group G fixtures:
- Belgium vs Egypt — June 15
- New Zealand vs Egypt — June 22
- Egypt vs Iran — June 27
Group H: Cape Verde — debut on the biggest stage
Cape Verde's first-ever World Cup appearance is the story of this group. The Blue Sharks qualified as Group D winners in CAF, their rise powered by a generation of players born or developed in Europe — many of them in Portugal. 3
Group H is brutal: Spain, Saudi Arabia and Uruguay. Spain are the reigning European champions; their first match against Cape Verde on June 15 is a landmark moment for the archipelago nation. But Cape Verde have caused upsets before — they reached the 2023 AFCON quarter-finals and stunned bigger nations along the way. Getting out of this group would require a miracle. Getting their first World Cup goal and giving a performance the islands can carry forward — that is the real target.
Group H fixtures:
- Spain vs Cabo Verde — June 15
- Uruguay vs Cabo Verde — June 22
- Saudi Arabia vs Cabo Verde — June 27
Group I: Senegal — the AFCON champions enter the lion's den
Senegal won the AFCON title (whether they keep it is complicated — see the Morocco situation above), qualified unbeaten from CAF Group B with a +19 goal difference, and now face France in their group opener on June 16. 3
France vs Senegal is the marquee African narrative of the group stage. The two countries share deep historical ties, and many Senegalese players developed in the French football pyramid before choosing to represent the Lions of Teranga. Lamine Camara was decisive in qualifying, as was veteran anchor Idrissa Gana Gueye.

Group I also includes Iraq and Norway — both winnable. Senegal reached the quarter-finals in 2002 and the round of 16 in 2022; this squad has the quality to go further.
Group I fixtures:
- France vs Senegal — June 16
- Senegal vs Norway — June 23
- Senegal vs Iraq — June 26
Group J: Algeria — Mohamed Amoura and the qualifying golden boot
Algeria topped a group that included Nigeria and Cameroon in the CAF playoff picture. Their standout individual over the qualifying campaign was Mohamed Amoura, who finished as the top scorer of the entire CAF qualifying competition with 10 goals. 3
Group J pairs Algeria with defending champions Argentina, Austria and Jordan. The Algeria vs Argentina opener on June 17 is one of the tournament's most loaded fixtures: North Africa's strongest team against the reigning world champions. Algeria's best chance for advancement likely requires points from Austria and Jordan, but the group stage will tell us whether this squad can compete with elite opposition.
Group J fixtures:
- Argentina vs Algeria — June 17
- Algeria vs Jordan — June 23
- Algeria vs Austria — June 28
Group K: DR Congo — back after 52 years
The Democratic Republic of Congo's qualification is the most dramatic of the ten. The Leopards finished second in CAF Group B behind Senegal, reached the inter-confederation playoffs, and beat Jamaica 1-0 in extra time to clinch the final African spot — ending a 52-year absence from the World Cup. 1 Their last appearance was 1974.
Group K is Portugal, Uzbekistan and Colombia. Portugal have Cristiano Ronaldo and an experienced squad; Colombia are a strong South American side. DR Congo face Portugal on June 17 in what will likely be their hardest test. The aim is to avoid heavy defeats and build a platform from the Uzbekistan and Colombia games.
Group K fixtures:
- Portugal vs Congo DR — June 17
- Congo DR vs Colombia — June 24
- Congo vs Uzbekistan — June 28
Group L: Ghana — against England in the group stage
Ghana qualified as Group I winners in CAF, recovering from the embarrassment of an early 2022 World Cup exit. They enter Group L alongside England, Croatia and Panama. The draw placed them directly against England on June 23 — a pairing that last produced one of the 2010 World Cup's memorable moments, Asamoah Gyan's heartbreaking penalty miss.
Ghana need to get points against Croatia (June 18 opener) and Panama to give themselves a shot at the knockout rounds. The England game is a referendum on how far the Black Stars have come.
Group L fixtures:
- Ghana vs Panama — June 18 (opener)
- England vs Ghana — June 23
- Croatia vs Ghana — June 28
How Africa qualified: the map

The full picture
| Team | Group | First match | Key player |
|---|---|---|---|
| South Africa | A | Mexico, June 11 | Relebohile Mofokeng |
| Morocco | C | Brazil, June 13 | Achraf Hakimi |
| Côte d'Ivoire | E | Ecuador, June 14 | Emerse Faé (coach) |
| Tunisia | F | Sweden, June 15 | Hannibal Mejbri |
| Egypt | G | Belgium, June 15 | Mohamed Salah |
| Cape Verde | H | Spain, June 15 | Debut squad |
| Senegal | I | France, June 16 | Lamine Camara |
| Algeria | J | Argentina, June 17 | Mohamed Amoura |
| DR Congo | K | Portugal, June 17 | Returns after 52 years |
| Ghana | L | Panama, June 18 | Debut group-stage run |
In 2022, Morocco's semi-final run made the continent pause and consider what was possible. In 2026, ten teams carry that question into the tournament. Whether one of them goes further than Morocco did — that is what this channel is here to track.
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