
Representing your country on the grandest stage of them all is the ultimate footballing dream. For a localized core of Kaizer Chiefs superstars, that dream came agonizingly close to reality before Hugo Broos finalized his historic 26-man Bafana Bafana squad for the ongoing 2026 FIFA World Cup.
While left-back Bradley Cross stands alone as Amakhosi’s sole representative in North America, a quartet of his dropped Naturena teammates haven’t walked away completely empty-handed. Thanks to a massive global financial injection from the FIFA Council, a tidy sum of “comfort funds” has hit the club’s administrative books to reward the players who ground out the results during the brutal qualification cycles.
The Breakdown: How Much the Amakhosi Quartet Banked
To support clubs globally, the FIFA Council earmarked a staggering $100 million (R1.62 billion) specifically for teams that released their players for the grueling World Cup preliminary qualifiers.
According to official data, FIFA allocates approximately R39,000 to the club per player for every single matchday squad selection during the qualification campaign. For the four Chiefs stars who helped secure South Africa’s ticket to the tournament, the numbers add up significantly:
| Player | Qualification Matchday Involvements | Total Payout (ZAR) |
| Mduduzi Shabalala | 4 Qualifiers | R156,000 |
| Sibongiseni Mthethwa | 2 Qualifiers (vs. Benin & Rwanda) | R78,000 |
| Given Msimango | 2 Qualifiers (vs. Nigeria & Zimbabwe) | R78,000 |
| Thabiso Monyane | 1 Qualifier (vs. Nigeria) | R39,000 |
| TOTAL BANKED | 9 Combined Matchdays | R351,000 |
So Close, Yet So Far: Heartbreak for the Final Six Cut
While the financial compensation offers a minor silver lining, the emotional weight of missing out on the final flight to the United States, Canada, and Mexico is immense.
The heartbreak was felt most deeply by Amakhosi club captain Brandon Petersen, dynamic midfielder Lebohang Maboe, and fullback Thabiso Monyane. All three internal leaders survived the intense initial selections to make Hugo Broos’ provisional 32-man squad, only to be sliced in the final hour alongside Patrick Maswanganyi, Thapelo Morena, and Brooklyn Poggenpoel.
Though they might be watching the tournament from home, the Naturena faithful have every reason to hold their heads high—their collective efforts paved the financial and structural path for Bafana’s global return.















