27 Mar
Fri
•21:00
Lusail Stadium • Doha
15 Jun
Mon
•12:00
Mercedes-Benz Stadium • Atlanta
21 Jun
Sun
•12:00
Mercedes-Benz Stadium • Atlanta
26 Jun
Fri
•19:00
Estadio Akron • Zapopan
22 Dec
Mon
•19:30
Marrakech Stadium • Ouahat Sidi Brahim
26 Dec
Fri
•22:00
Adrar Stadium • Agadir
30 Dec
Tue
•00:30
Marrakech Stadium • Ouahat Sidi Brahim
11 Jun
Thu
•14:00
Estadio Azteca • Mexico City
18 Jun
Thu
•12:00
Mercedes-Benz Stadium • Atlanta
South Africa burst onto the scene as an intense, direct unit, playing a vertical, physical brand of football inherited from the generation that lifted the Africa Cup of Nations in 1996 and climbed back onto the continental podium in 2023.
La Roja embodies a passing culture and territorial dominance: World Cup winners in 2010 and European champions in 2024, their identity is built on possession and aggressive pressing the moment they lose the ball.
On the biggest competitive stages, the European side has almost always come out on top, although Bafana Bafana have already tasted victory in friendlies against this powerhouse.
In a World Cup group stage, every detail can tip the balance: a lapse at the back, a perfectly executed counterattack or a flash of genius can completely reshape the standings.
South Africa head into the tournament relying on the cutting edge of Percy Tau, the set-piece mastery of Teboho Mokoena, the authority of Ronwen Williams between the posts and the tireless work rate of Evidence Makgopa.
Up against them stands the Iberian powerhouse, with a title-winning, instantly recognisable core in which Rodri anchors the midfield, Pedri links the lines, Lamine Yamal wreaks havoc out wide and Morata takes on the goalscoring responsibility.
Two contrasting paths to the summit of world football collide in 90 high-voltage minutes: lock in your ticket and witness live a showdown that could shape the future of both national teams.