Dear South Africa: Bafana Bafana are not the Springboks
South Africans should dream big at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, but they should not expect Bafana Bafana to be the Springboks.
As millions of South Africans prepare to watch Bafana Bafana at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, hope and expectation will naturally follow.
But before a ball is kicked in Mexico, the United States and Canada, one thing must be made clear: expecting South Africa to replicate the Springboks’ World Cup success is not only unrealistic, it misunderstands the vastly different realities of international football and rugby. It’s entirely different sporting worlds.
BAFANA BAFANA TO KICK OFF THE 2026 FIFA WORLD CUP AGAINST HOSTS MEXICO
Much of the criticism that will inevitably come South Africa’s way during the tournament will be rooted not in football knowledge, but in a poor understanding of just how different the global landscapes of football and rugby really are.
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None of this is to absolve the South African Football Association of responsibility. SAFA has spent years undermining the growth of the game through administrative failures, poor decision-making and a lack of long-term vision. South African football should be in a stronger position than it is today, and many of the obstacles facing South Africa can be traced back to years of mismanagement at the highest level.
But even if SAFA had been perfectly run for the last two decades, South Africa would still not enter a FIFA World Cup with the same expectations that accompany the Springboks at a Rugby World Cup. The global realities of football simply do not allow for that comparison.
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FOOTBALL IS A DIFFERENT MOUNTAIN TO CLIMB
For years, South Africans have become accustomed to watching the Springboks compete for, and win, Rugby World Cups. Four titles have created an expectation that when our national teams arrive on the biggest stage, they should challenge for trophies.
Football does not work like that.
The Springboks are one of rugby’s superpowers. Bafana Bafana are not one of football’s superpowers. Those are two very different conversations.
The first mistake many South Africans make is assuming that because both are World Cups, they carry the same degree of difficulty.
They don’t. Rugby is played professionally by a relatively small number of nations. Realistically, only a handful enter every World Cup believing they can win it.
Football is the most competitive sport on the planet.
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South Africa are competing against countries such as Brazil, Argentina, France, Spain, Germany, England, Portugal and Italy. Nations with decades of elite infrastructure, world-class leagues and generations of players competing at the highest level.
In rugby, South Africa are part of the elite.
In football, South Africa are trying to break into it. There is a massive difference.
Nobody expects Portugal or Romania to win the Rugby World Cup. Likewise, nobody realistically expects Bafana Bafana to lift the FIFA World Cup.
That isn’t disrespectful. It is simply an honest reflection of where the country sits in the global football hierarchy.
THE SPRINGBOKS HAVE ADVANTAGES FOOTBALL DOES NOT
There is another uncomfortable truth many people don’t want to discuss. The Springboks benefit from one of the most advanced rugby development systems in the world.
Every year, South Africa’s leading rugby schools produce players through highly organised structures. They have specialist coaches, strength and conditioning programmes, nutrition plans, elite facilities and competitive schoolboy environments that attract thousands of spectators.
Some school rugby matches are treated like professional events. Football does not enjoy the same ecosystem.
Many of South Africa’s best footballers emerge from community clubs, township structures and private academies working with significantly fewer resources. The pathway exists, but it is fragmented and often underfunded compared to rugby.
The result is obvious. Rugby has a conveyor belt. Football has to fight for every breakthrough. That makes what Bafana Bafana have achieved under Hugo Broos all the more impressive.
The real success story is not that South Africa have arrived at the World Cup as favourites. It is that they have qualified at all and earned the right to compete on football’s biggest stage.
So when the tournament begins across Mexico, the United States and Canada, support Bafana Bafana.
Dream with them. Celebrate with them. Criticise them fairly when necessary. But don’t judge them against a standard created by the Springboks.
The Springboks and Bafana Bafana represent the same nation. They just play in very different worlds.
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WHAT DO YOU EXPECT FROM SOUTH AFRICA AT THE WORLD CUP THIS MONTH?
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