
Bafana Bafana
Nickname for South Africa's national football team, meaning 'The Boys' in Zulu.
Last refreshed: 11 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Can Bafana Bafana end a 16-year World Cup absence with an upset against Mexico on the Azteca's grandest stage?
Timeline for Bafana Bafana
Returned to the World Cup for the first time since 2010
2026 FIFA World Cup: Azteca set for a third World Cup opener- When did South Africa last play in the World Cup before 2026?
- South Africa last played at a World Cup in 2010, when they hosted the tournament but were eliminated in the group stage. The 2026 appearance ends a 16-year absence.Source: event
- What does Bafana Bafana mean?
- Bafana Bafana means 'the boys, the boys' in Zulu. It is the official nickname for South Africa's men's national football team.
- Who are South Africa's key players at the 2026 World Cup?
- Bafana Bafana's attack is built around Percy Tau, Lyle Foster, and young wide forwards Relebohile Mofokeng and Evidence Makgoba, with the team's game plan centred on pace and counter-attack.Source: event
Background
Bafana Bafana — meaning 'the boys, the boys' in Zulu — is the nickname for South Africa's men's national football team, governed by the South African Football Association. The team made history by hosting the 2010 FIFA World Cup, becoming the first African nation to stage the tournament, though they were eliminated in the group stage. Their only previous World Cup appearance before 2010 was in 1998, where they also exited at the group stage.
South Africa qualified for the 2026 FIFA World Cup under head coach Hugo Broos, ending a 16-year absence that began after their 2010 home tournament exit. They face Mexico in the tournament's opening match at the Estadio Azteca on 11 June, becoming the last opponents to face the Azteca's third World Cup opening crowd.
Broos built a side around pace and counter-attack, with Percy Tau, Lyle Foster, and Evidence Makgoba and Relebohile Mofokeng supplying width. The squad's return carries outsized significance in South African sport: football has occupied a complicated position alongside rugby since 1994, and World Cup qualification has reinvigorated public engagement with the national team.