Congo becomes 8th African team to make the World Cup round of 32
Congo's Yoane Wissa (20) celebrates with teammates after scoring their third goal during the World Cup Group K soccer match between DR Congo and Uzbekistan in Atlanta, Saturday, June 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)
ATLANTA (AP) — Africa had a historic 10 nations qualify for the 2026 World Cup. And now, following Congo’s 3-1 defeat of Uzbekistan on Saturday night, eight are officially headed to the knockout stage.
The previous record was two.
After 17 days of competition, Morocco, South Africa, Senegal, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Cape Verde, Egypt and Congo qualified for the round of 32. Algeria can advance with a win or a draw against Austria on Saturday night.
Morocco was the first African nation to reach the semifinals of the World Cup four years ago in Qatar and looks capable of going deep again, having already held Brazil to a 1-1 draw. It is a co-host for the next edition of the World Cup in 2030.
Only six African countries had ever qualified for the knockout stage (several of them multiple times). The most in the same year had been two, in 2014 and ’22.
This year’s tournament has shown the strength of African soccer goes deep, with Cape Verde and Congo both surprise names in the round of 32.
Congo has a tall task in facing England next, but for now, the team is soaking in the moment.
“It’s really historic for our country, Congo,” forward Fiston Mayele said after the game. “It’s the first win and the first knockout stage. Today, I have to be proud here, and almost everywhere in my country, everyone is happy with what we did. We’re proud to be Congolese, and I think we will keep going.”
Mayele scored a goal 78 minutes in, sandwiched between two scores from Yoane Wissa — a penalty kick at the 68-minute mark and another in stoppage time.
After the game, with the player of the game trophy by his side, Wissa described the long road it’s been for Congo to get to this point.
“It’s only the second time we are in the World Cup, 52 years later. We started to qualify for the World Cup four years ago with this group,” Wissa said. “First game against Portugal, you drawed. You lost against Colombia. Now you’re losing one-nil after (10) minutes, so yeah, nothing is easy in football. We just need to show resilience, and when a time like this comes, you have to enjoy, because it’s not easy.”
Wissa hopes that the success in this World Cup shows that the future is bright for African soccer teams with young talent paving the way.
“Now every African team can dream big. The last World Cup, Morocco has been to the semifinal. Now I think it’s eight teams,” Wissa said. “What’s coming next is good for the African teams, and we can see that now youngest players come earlier, and we showed our team with (Noah) Sadiki, (Ngal’ayel) Mukau, so that’s good, and that shows our federation can dream big.”




