
Where are the politics of Bafana Bafana?
While most sports in South Africa are inseparable from the national political imagination, men's football manages to stay relatively removed.

While most sports in South Africa are inseparable from the national political imagination, men's football manages to stay relatively removed.

Does the development of African football necessitate a trade off in vibes at continental tournaments?

How the Congolese national team has become a rare source of unity, recognition, and solidarity for communities living through war.

What the presence of an unlikely trio of football icons at AFCON tells us about migration, African identity, and the histories that continue to shape the modern game

How Senegal rose to become one of the most fertile grounds in African football, and why this success still struggles to transform the local football economy.

Comment le Sénégal est-il devenu l'un des viviers les plus prolifiques du football africain, et pourquoi ce succès peine-t-il encore à transformer l'économie du football local.

What it sounds like on the ground in Morocco at the 2025 edition of Africa Cup of Nations.

In Morocco, football has become a site for the slow re-Africanization of the country’s national identity.

The Super Eagles don’t suffer from a shortage of talent, but represent a country unwilling to admit that greatness is not a birthright.

Distanced at club level, and scrutinized at home, there is no player with more to prove at this Africa Cup of Nations than Mohamed Salah.

Bafana Bafana’s resurgence has been forged where South African football always lives—between brilliance and the bizarre.

An African Cup of Nations at home for red hot Morocco is a chance to put past trauma aside and charge on to the world stage.