South Africa returns to a World Cup for the first time in 16 years — and the first since they hosted the 2010 tournament, which is still, for a generation of Americans who got into soccer that summer, the World Cup. Vuvuzelas. Waka Waka. Tshabalala's opener. Ghana's agony. The African continent hosting football's biggest event for the first and still only time.
The man who took them back is Hugo Broos, the 73-year-old Belgian coach who has quietly become one of the best CAF managers of the last decade. He led Cameroon to the AFCON title in 2017, took the South Africa job in 2021, got them to fourth at the 2023 AFCON (their best finish in 23 years), and spent the 2024-25 qualifying campaign beating Nigeria to the top of Group C on the final matchday. He's already announced this is his last job in football. He wants to leave with something memorable.
Group A is Mexico (hosts, opening match, Estadio Azteca), South Korea (dangerous, organized, Son Heung-min-led), and Czechia (the tournament's dark horse UEFA side). The draw is actually kind. Beat Czechia, steal a point off Korea, and survive Mexico in the opener, and you're through to the knockouts. Lyle Foster has to score. Ronwen Williams has to save penalties (he's good at that). And the amapiano has to be loud enough to be heard in Pretoria. All three of those are reasonable asks.
Week 1 Update: The opener was a gut punch — 2-0 to Mexico at the Azteca, the same fixture, the same result direction as 2010 but without Tshabalala's thunderbolt to soften the landing. Bafana Bafana are bottom of Group A with zero points, and the math just got very real. Beat Czechia and everything reopens. Lose, and the 16-year wait was a short stay.
Matchday 2 Update: A 0-0 draw with Czechia — Bafana Bafana finally got on the board with a point, but it's still just one point from two matches. Williams was immense in goal, and the defense showed the steel Broos has been building for three years. The final matchday is everything now. South Korea awaits, and anything less than a win probably sends South Africa home.
Matchday 3 Update: One-nil over South Korea — and the 16-year wait is over. Bafana Bafana finish 2nd in Group A with 4 points, through to the knockouts for only the second time in their history. Williams was immense again, the defense Broos built held when it mattered most, and a team that lost its opener 2-0 to Mexico clawed back with the country's best-ever group stage. South Africa are dancing.
Round of 32 (June 28): Canada 1, South Africa 0 — and the dance ended in the 95th minute. Stephen Eustaquio's stoppage-time strike at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles is the moment Bafana Bafana's tournament ended. It was a match they were in until the last breath — Williams was outstanding again, the defense held for 94 minutes — and then one moment of quality from a Canadian side that has been building to exactly this tournament. South Africa are eliminated. But Broos got them further than anyone since 2010, and further than most expected when the group stage started with a 2-0 loss to Mexico. They leave with more than they arrived with. That counts.