South Africa’s return to the global football stage has descended into farce after a bureaucratic paperwork blunder left several Bafana Bafana players stranded at OR Tambo International Airport, forcing the indefinite postponement of their crucial World Cup training camp in Mexico.
The national team was scheduled to board a chartered flight in the early hours of Sunday morning for the high-altitude city of Pachuca. However, the journey was halted at the last minute after it emerged that key squad members lacked the necessary visas for North America. Officials are now scrambling to engage the US embassy in Johannesburg as a matter of emergency, hoping to clear the logjam by Monday.
‘We are being made to look like fools’
The disruption has sparked fury at the highest levels of government, with Sports Minister Gayton McKenzie launching a blistering attack on the South African Football Association (SAFA).
In a post on X on Sunday morning, a furious McKenzie demanded immediate accountability, stating that the incompetence was grossly unfair to the players and the nation’s image.
“I have informed SAFA that I need a report and action must be taken against those responsible for this mess,” McKenzie wrote. “We are being made to look like fools”.
Altitude preparation at risk
For head coach Hugo Broos, the delay is more than just a logistical headache—it is a potential disaster for his tactical preparations.
The Belgian coach had specifically chosen Pachuca for its 2,300-metre elevation, insisting the squad needed a minimum of 10 days to acclimatise to the thin air before facing co-hosts Mexico on June 11. Every hour spent grounded in Johannesburg reduces that crucial adaptation window.
Broos had previously warned SAFA that commercial travel would be a disaster for recovery, requesting the chartered flight to mitigate fatigue.
A US hurdle for a Mexican trip
Ironically, the travel ban stems from issues with American immigration, not Mexican. The Bafana squad requires US entry permits because their second group match against the Czech Republic is scheduled to be played in Atlanta.
It is believed that while the Mamelodi Sundowns contingent already had valid visas from the Club World Cup, a significant portion of the squad and technical staff were left waiting due to an administrative oversight by the association.
Damage control
SAFA has confirmed the setback, acknowledging that the team “experienced challenges regarding visas for some players and officials”. The association stated that an emergency committee meeting is scheduled for Sunday night, and that the team will continue training in Johannesburg until the paperwork is resolved.
With a planned warm-up match against Jamaica looming on Friday, Bafana are racing against the clock to ensure they arrive in North America before their first World Cup appearance as qualifiers since 2002 becomes a race to catch up.




