There is something quietly profound about following African club football from the southern tip of the continent. While the noise of European leagues drowns out most conversations, those paying attention know that the CAF Champions League and the CAF Confederation Cup tell stories every bit as compelling – stories of ambition, identity, and the slow but undeniable rise of Southern African football on the continental stage.
Sundowns and the Benchmark of Excellence
Mamelodi Sundowns have fundamentally changed what South African football means to the rest of Africa. Their CAF Champions League triumph in 2016 was not a fluke – it was the beginning of a sustained period of continental relevance that has only deepened with time. Under disciplined coaching structures and backed by serious financial investment, Sundowns have become the club that North African giants like Al Ahly and Wydad now expect to see in the latter stages of the competition. That expectation alone represents enormous progress.
What Sundowns have built is not simply a talented squad. They have constructed a footballing culture – one built on high defensive organisation, pressing patterns, and squad depth that most PSL clubs can only dream of. When you watch them in CAF competition, the contrast with some continental opponents is stark. They arrive prepared. They arrive professional. And increasingly, they arrive as genuine contenders rather than hopeful participants.
The Confederation Cup and the Broader South African Picture
Beyond Sundowns, the picture is more complicated. South African clubs competing in the CAF Confederation Cup – the continent’s secondary club competition – have had mixed fortunes. There are promising performances, genuine moments of quality, but also painful reminders that consistency over two-legged ties requires a depth of resources and tactical adaptability that not every PSL club currently possesses.
The Confederation Cup, however, serves a vital purpose. It exposes players and coaches to continental football at a competitive but slightly less punishing level, building experience and raising standards over time. Clubs from Zambia, Zimbabwe, and other Southern African nations compete in this space too, and the regional picture is one of gradual improvement rather than dominance.
A Southern African Lens
From a Southern African perspective, the African club game carries a particular emotional weight. These competitions are not abstract tournaments watched from a distance – they involve clubs from our neighbourhoods, players we have watched develop, and national pride measured in continental performance.
The dominance of Egyptian and Moroccan clubs over the past decade reflects genuine structural advantages – better-funded leagues, stronger domestic competition, and deeper football infrastructure. But the gap is narrowing. Sundowns are proof of that. And the conversations now happening around PSL investment, player retention, and coaching development suggest that South African football is taking its continental ambitions more seriously than at any point in recent memory.
What African club football needs – and what it is slowly finding – is parity. Not uniformity, but genuine competition across regions. The day a Zimbabwean or Zambian club makes a deep CAF Champions League run will be celebrated across Southern Africa as a collective triumph. Until then, Sundowns carry the flag, and they carry it with considerable pride and growing authority.
The continental game is watching. So are we.
