
Mzansi fans are dusting off their official gear for Sunday’s historic showdown, but a burning question remains ahead of the spectacular clash at SoFi Stadium: which kit will the boys actually walk out in?
While fans have been eager to see the national team debut their sleek green-and-gold alternative away strip, the logistical reality of the tournament rules points in a completely different direction.
Why the Iconic Yellow and Green Dominates
For the fourth consecutive match at this FIFA World Cup, Bafana Bafana are highly likely to don their classic primary home kit: yellow shirts, green shorts, and yellow socks.
The reason comes down to the tournament brackets. In this specific Round of 32 fixture, South Africa has been designated as Team A (the official home side), while Canada is designated as Team B (the away side). Under strict FIFA tournament guidelines, the home side receives absolute first preference to wear their traditional colors.
Breaking Down the FIFA Colour-Clash Policy
FIFA regulations mandate that all participating nations submit two distinct kits for global broadcast approval: one predominantly light and one dark. This ensures maximum visual contrast for stadium fans, international television broadcasts, and color-blind viewers.
Because Canada’s traditional home strip is vibrant red, it contrasts perfectly with South Africa’s bright yellow. Therefore, both teams should be clear to wear their primary looks.
FIFA’s Kit Regulation Rule: “If the two teams’ colours might cause confusion, the host team [South Africa] shall be entitled to wear its official team kit and the visiting team [Canada] shall use its reserve team kit.”
If match officials determine during the pre-match technical briefings that the red-and-yellow combination is too intense under the Los Angeles stadium lights, Canada—not South Africa—will be instructed to pivot to their alternative black, grey, and red kit configurations.
The final, official kit allocation will be rubber-stamped by the match coordinators exactly 24 hours before kick-off, but fans can safely expect the sea of yellow to march on















