Four into one - how do African World Cup play-offs work?

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DR Congo defender Chancel Mbemba, Cameroon goalkeeper Andre Onana, Nigeria striker Victor Osimhen and Gabon striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang are seen from chest up in the four vertical columns of a split image, wearing the national shirts of their respective teams. Osimhen is also wearing a black face mask around his eyes while Aubameyang has his mouth wide open in a roarImage source, Getty Images

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Only one of DR Congo, Cameroon, Nigeria and Gabon will have the chance to reach the 2026 Fifa World Cup

Four contenders will be reduced to one in African play-offs for the 2026 Fifa World Cup over this international window.

After missing out on the continent's nine automatic qualification spots, Cameroon, DR Congo, Gabon and Nigeria travel to Morocco for a winner-takes-all mini-tournament.

But, depending on their world ranking, the victorious nation faces one or two more matches in order to reach next year's tournament in Canada, Mexico and the United States.

BBC Sport Africa explains how this stage works - and what comes next.

How did the sides reach African play-offs?

The quartet reached this stage as the four best second-placed finishers across Africa's nine World Cup qualifying groups.

Results against the sixth-placed side in eight of those groups were discounted because Eritrea withdrew on the eve of competition, leaving Group E with only five teams.

Gabon had the best record, followed by DR Congo and then Cameroon.

Nigeria only just sneaked in to the play-offs on goal difference, with Frank Onyeka's 91st-minute volley in their 4-0 win over Benin edging out Burkina Faso by a single goal.

How was the African play-off draw decided?

The Fifa world rankings were used to work out the pairings for the semi-finals, with the highest-ranked side facing the lowest-ranked.

As a result, Nigeria (41st in the world) will play Gabon (77th) on Thursday (16:00 GMT) before Cameroon (54th) take on DR Congo (60th) later the same day (19:00 GMT).

The semi-final winners will face off on Sunday (19:00 GMT) for the chance to keep alive their dream of reaching next year's World Cup.

All three matches will be held in the Moroccan capital Rabat.

What happens to the winners?

A split image showing New Caledonia's Joris Kenon and Bolivia's Enzo Monteiro from waist up in action during football matches. The bearded Kenon is running in a black and red shirt, with his dark, tight, curly hair flying out behind him as he moves. Monteiro, who is in a green shirt and matching undersleeves, is raising his left index finger to point upwards Image source, Getty Images

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New Caledonia and Bolivia are among potential opponents for the winners of African World Cup play-offs

Africa's play-off winners will progress to a six-team intercontinental qualifier, which will be staged from 23-31 March 2026 and will decide the final two sides at next year's World Cup.

Two nations from the Concacaf (North, Central America and the Caribbean) region and one side from each of the Asian, Oceanian and South American confederations will also be involved.

The six nations will be split into two brackets.

The two highest-ranked sides will be seeded and advance directly to the final in each bracket, with the four lowest-ranked competitors meeting in semi-finals.

The United Arab Emirates and Iraq will play off for Asia's spot, while Bolivia, representing South America, and New Caledonia, representing Oceania, have already booked their places.

Given Bolivia and New Caledonia are respectively ranked 76th and 150th in the world at present, that boosts the chances of Africa's representative advancing directly to a final.

The draw for the play-offs, which will be played in single-leg knockout matches, with extra-time and penalties if required, will be held on Thursday, 20 November.

Who are the favourites to win Africa's play-offs?

Eric Chelle, seen from chest up wearing a predominantly black tracksuit with green trim on the arms and a Nigeria Football Federation logo on the left breast, stands with a pensive look on his face. Chelle has a goatee beard flecked with grey and a shaved headImage source, Getty Images

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Nigeria boss Eric Chelle is under pressure to deliver World Cup qualification

This is the million-dollar question.

On paper, Nigeria boast the strongest side according to the world rankings but had the worst qualifying campaign of the African quartet.

The Super Eagles had three different managers oversee their Group C fixtures and struggled when Victor Osimhen was absent through injury, only picking up four points from a possible 15 without their talismanic striker.

Yet the West Africans are unbeaten in six competitive games under Eric Chelle as they bid to avoid missing out on successive World Cups.

Cameroon are another heavyweight of the continental game who underperformed, finishing four points behind Cape Verde in Group D.

The Indomitable Lions only won one of their five away games, which does not bode well for playing on neutral soil this month.

Cameroon hold the African record for the most World Cup appearances, but will need to improve their form to extend that to a ninth trip to the global showpiece.

Yoane Wissa is seen from waist up wearing a blue DR Congo shirt with a national flag above the number 20 on the chest and red detail on the right shoulder. He has a black armband on his left upper arm, while he also sports a black beard and shaved headImage source, Getty Images

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DR Congo will be without injured Newcastle striker Yoane Wissa for the play-offs

DR Congo, whose only previous World Cup appearance came as Zaire in 1974, finished two points behind Senegal in Group B.

The Leopards paid the price for letting a 2-0 lead slip against the Senegalese on home soil in September, eventually losing 3-2.

Newcastle's Yoane Wissa is still absent through injury, but fellow forward Cedric Bakambu has been in good form in qualifying with four goals.

Gabon, who are bidding to reach the World Cup for the first time, ended a point adrift of Ivory Coast in Group F.

The Panthers boast a potent attack in Denis Bouanga and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, who scored eight and seven goals respectively in the group stage.

The bulk of Aubameyang's goals came when he netted four times against The Gambia last month before being sent off, although he is now back from suspension.

Who will they face at the World Cup?

The 2026 World Cup draw will take place on Friday, 5 December, when the 48 sides will be split into 12 groups of four.

Forty-two of the teams will be decided by the time of the draw.

Only the two intercontinental play-off winners and the four winners of European play-offs will remain unknown.

As a result, the African side involved in next year's intercontinental play-off may know all of the sides they will potentially face in their World Cup group - should they make it.

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