When England won the World Cup at Wembley in 1966, not one African nation was at the tournament. Their absence was no accident — it was a coordinated protest that would reshape the game.

The rule that sparked it

In 1964, FIFA set out how the 16 places at the 1966 finals would be filled. Europe (with hosts England) received ten, Latin America four, and Central America and the Caribbean one. That left a single berth to be shared among Africa, Asia and Oceania — and even that was not guaranteed to Africa, because the African zone winner would have to win a further play-off against the Asia/Oceania side, Wikipedia records. For a continent of newly independent nations seeking recognition, a format that could send no African team to the World Cup at all was intolerable.

A continent walks away

The Confederation of African Football (CAF) demanded a single guaranteed place for Africa "in the name of fair play and equity." When FIFA declined, all of Africa's eligible nations withdrew from qualifying in 1964. The protest was driven in large part by Ohene Djan, Ghana's influential director of sports, with Tunisia among the first to announce a boycott, Goal reported. It was a costly stand: nations gave up a shot at the world's biggest tournament to make a point about dignity and fairness.

England 1966, without Africa

With Africa and most of Asia absent, the depleted qualifying path opened the way for North Korea, who reached England and stunned Italy — one of the tournament's most famous upsets. But the larger story was the empty space where an entire continent should have been.

FIFA relents

The boycott achieved its aim. Within a few years FIFA agreed to grant Africa its own guaranteed qualifying place from the 1970 World Cup in Mexico, Face2Face Africa reported. Morocco claimed that spot, becoming the first African side at a World Cup since Egypt in 1934. They went out in the group stage, but the principle was won — and Africa has been represented at every World Cup since.

From one place to ten

The arc from a single hard-fought berth to today is striking: a record number of African nations — around ten — are competing at the expanded 2026 World Cup. That presence traces directly back to the stand taken in 1964, when African football chose solidarity over participation and, in doing so, rewrote its place in the global game.