← Beyond the Pitch Group K

DR Congo

Les Léopards — 52 years later, back on football's biggest stage

Group
K
Region
CAF
World Cup Appearances
3
Code
CD

The Story

DR Congo's road to 2026 is the most improbable route in the field. They finished second in their CAF qualifying group behind Senegal — missing an automatic spot — then had to beat Cameroon in a CAF playoff semifinal (2-1 in Rabat, Mbemba goal), then beat Nigeria on penalties in the CAF playoff final (after a 1-1 draw and Chancel Mbemba saving two in the shootout), then beat Jamaica 1-0 in extra time in the March 2026 inter-confederation playoff in Guadalajara. Axel Tuanzebe scored in the 100th minute. The country did not sleep that night.

The manager is Sébastien Desabre, the Frenchman who took the job in 2023 and has rebuilt the squad around the diaspora — Wissa at Newcastle, Bakambu at Betis, Wan-Bissaka (yes, that Wan-Bissaka) at West Ham, Mbemba at Lille, Tuanzebe at Burnley. Most of this team was born in Europe to Congolese parents. All of them chose the Léopards. That choice, after 52 years of international irrelevance and a country still living with the consequences of Mobutu and the wars that followed, is the quiet through-line of the whole campaign.

Group K is Colombia, Portugal, and Uzbekistan. Honest read: one win, probably over Uzbekistan, would give them a real shot at the Round of 16. Honest dream: anything beyond that. The 1974 squad is mostly still alive, in their seventies now, watching from Kinshasa. They've been waiting a long time.

3 Players to Know

Yoane Wissa

The £55m Newcastle summer 2025 signing from Brentford, where he'd spent four years becoming one of the Premier League's most reliable pressing forwards. His first six months at Newcastle were wrecked by a knee injury picked up on international duty — DR Congo even faced a FIFA complaint over his workload — but he returned in March, scored in the playoff win over Jamaica, and is the main reason his country is in the World Cup. The team goes exactly as far as Wissa's fitness allows.

Cédric Bakambu

The 34-year-old striker who has played in France, Spain, China, Turkey, and is currently at Real Betis — the all-time leading scorer in DR Congo history (second on the list, 21 goals), and the emotional spine of this squad. After the Jamaica win he gave a post-match speech calling for peace in the eastern DRC, where war has displaced millions. The World Cup run matters to him in ways it doesn't to most footballers. He grew up in Vitry-sur-Seine outside Paris. This is his first and almost certainly only World Cup.

Axel Tuanzebe

The former Manchester United center-back, now at Burnley, who scored the 100th-minute goal against Jamaica that sent DR Congo to the World Cup — his first international goal, in the biggest match his country has played in 52 years. He was born in Bunia in eastern DRC, moved to Rochdale at age four, came through United's academy under Mourinho. Spent years as squad depth at Old Trafford before dropping down the English pyramid. He is, right now, a national hero. Nigeria filed a FIFA complaint trying to rule him ineligible. FIFA threw it out.

The Food

Signature Dish

Moambe chicken is the national dish — chicken simmered in palm-nut sauce (moambe is the red-orange pulp of the palm fruit, not to be confused with palm oil), served with rice, pondu (cassava leaves pounded smooth and cooked with peanut butter), and a side of fried plantain. Fufu — a stiff, smooth starchy mash of cassava and corn flour, pulled by hand and dipped — is the bread of the meal. Finish with a cold Primus beer, which is what every Kinshasa bar is serving.

Where to Eat in DFW

African Village Restaurant in Irving is the closest to authentically Congolese — they serve fufu and pondu proper, and the Congolese community in the metroplex (small but tight) shows up on weekends. For a broader pan-African option with a bigger menu, Aggie's African Restaurant on Skillman in Dallas is reliable. Little Lagos up in Irving is Nigerian, not Congolese, but the cassava-leaf and plantain dishes are adjacent enough that a Kinshasa expat will recognize the shelves.

The Music

A soundtrack for the matches, the pregame, and the afterparty.

Fan Culture

Congolese support is a moving sound system. Rumba Congolaise — the genre Papa Wemba and Koffi Olomide exported to every African capital and half the European ones — is the soundtrack to every match, before, during, and after. Expect drums, expect the guitar loops spilling out of phones in the concourse, expect a diaspora contingent from Brussels and Paris that will outnumber the fans who actually flew from Kinshasa. The flag is sky-blue and yellow with a red diagonal. The shirts are red, and there will be a lot of them. Sit near them and you'll find yourself in a dance circle you did not sign up for, being taught soukous steps by a man in a perfectly tailored three-piece suit — the Congolese *sapeur* tradition is real, and you will meet it.
Fun Fact

DR Congo's last World Cup appearance was in 1974 as Zaire — the tournament where goalkeeper Mwepu Ilunga famously charged out of his wall and kicked a Brazilian free kick away before it was taken, giving away a direct free kick and becoming a YouTube loop for the next half-century. He later explained he was protesting the regime of Mobutu Sese Seko, who had threatened the squad if they lost badly. They lost 3-0. He is probably the most-watched goalkeeper in history.

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