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2026 FIFA World Cup
4JUL

South Africa reach a first knockout

2 min read
10:34UTC

Thapelo Maseko's 63rd-minute goal beat South Korea 1-0 in Guadalajara, carrying South Africa to the World Cup knockout rounds for the first time in their history.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

South Africa reach the World Cup knockouts for the first time, after three previous group-stage exits.

South Africa beat South Korea 1-0 at Estadio Akron on 24 June, Thapelo Maseko striking on 63 minutes to send Bafana Bafana into the World Cup knockout rounds for the first time in their history. A side ranked in the world's low 60s, beaten 2-0 by Mexico in its opener, finished second in Group A on just 4 points, enough to clear a stage it had failed in three times before: 1998, 2002, and as 2010 hosts.

The format made the recovery possible. The expansion to 48 teams added a third-place qualification path the old 32-team draw never offered, so a low-ranked side can lose its opener and still go through. Under the previous maths a single opening defeat usually ended such a tournament. Mexico had topped the group as the tournament's first qualifiers a week earlier ; South Africa took the slower road behind them.

South Africa now open the round of 32 against co-host Canada on 28 June at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, the first knockout tie of the tournament. South Korea and Czechia, the group's other two sides, both exit.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

South Africa have been to four World Cups but had never won a knockout match, or even made it past the group stage. At the 2010 World Cup they hosted the tournament on home soil and still went out in the group stage, which tells you how hard that barrier has been to cross. This time they only needed 4 points from three games to go through, because the tournament now has 48 teams instead of 32. That means more spots in the knockout rounds, and you can even lose a game and still advance if your points and goals are good enough. South Africa lost to Mexico, beat South Korea, and scraped through on 4 points, a total no African side has needed so little from to reach the last 32.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

South Africa's three prior group exits share a common structural cause: under the 32-team format, a loss in the opener typically eliminated an African side from contention. In 1998, 2002, and 2010, Bafana Bafana collected either no wins or insufficient point margins to survive. The 48-team format's critical mechanical change is that it converts the groups from a binary pass/fail into a tiered contest: lose one, win one, and your goal difference rather than your wins total governs advancement.

Coach Hugo Broos, appointed in 2021, rebuilt the squad around a domestic and diaspora blend that reduced dependence on a single playmaker. Captain Themba Zwane's three-match suspension forced a collective defensive shape against South Korea that proved sufficient for a 1-0 win.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    South Africa's 4-point qualification sets a new floor for what African teams can achieve under the 48-team format without topping their group.

  • Consequence

    Canada face a South Africa side with nothing to lose and genuine defensive organisation, a trickier opener than their seeding suggests.

First Reported In

Update #29 · South Africa reach a first knockout

France 24· 25 Jun 2026
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