FIFA rejects Zwane appeal as Broos hails Bafana bond
June 28, 2026 2:02 am
Bafana Bafana Midfielder Themba Zwane
By Peter Akinbo
South Africa will head into Sunday’s 2026 World Cup round of 32 clash against Canada in Los Angeles without midfielder Themba Zwane after FIFA rejected the South Africa Football Association’s appeal against his three-match suspension, dealing Bafana Bafana a significant blow on the eve of the most important match in the country’s World Cup history.
Zwane was handed the ban by FIFA’s Disciplinary Committee following a red card in South Africa’s opening group match against co-hosts Mexico. SAFA had appealed the decision, arguing the punishment was disproportionate to the offence, but the world governing body was unmoved.
“We are disappointed with the outcome of our appeal because we firmly believe the punishment is significantly harsher than the offence Themba is alleged to have committed,” SAFA said in an official statement.
The rejection means Zwane will sit out the Canada fixture, serving the final match of his suspension. It is a painful absence for a team that has already shown considerable character to reach this stage of the competition.
There is at least one consolation for coach Hugo Broos heading into the fixture. Midfielder Teboho Mokoena, who served a one-match suspension against South Korea, is available again and is expected to bolster the engine room that has been central to Bafana Bafana’s disciplined performances throughout the group stage.
South Africa’s achievement in reaching the knockout rounds is already historic. In all of their previous World Cup appearances, including as host nation in 2010, the team failed to advance beyond the group stage. Victory over Canada on Sunday would surpass even that benchmark and cement this squad’s place in South African football folklore.
For Broos, the secret behind the run has less to do with tactical sophistication than with the relationships he has built within his dressing room over the years since taking charge.
“Between me as a coach and them as players is maybe something unique. I am the coach, but I am not just a coach. I think I am a friend of theirs. So the relationship between the players and me is very good,” the veteran Belgian said ahead of the Canada clash.
He expressed confidence that his players would rise to the occasion again, driven by an awareness of how close they are to making further history.
“I just know that the players will be ready again and try to achieve the third round. This should be even more historic. Those players are chasing those things. Those players want to prove to everyone and show that they are a good team. We will see on Sunday if we can go further,” Broos said.
Canada, who also advanced with four points from Group B, will be the favourites in Los Angeles. Jesse Marsch’s side beat Qatar 6-0 but stumbled to a 2-1 defeat against Switzerland in their final group match. Sunday’s fixture will also make history as the first time a World Cup co-host has played a match outside its own borders, with the game taking place on American soil.
Peter, who has been covering sports for PUNCH for close to two years, focuses on combat sports reporting, special features and human angle stories
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