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Bafana Bafana, spying scandals and the erosion of fair play in football

Mail & Guardian · Jun 10, 2026, 8:46 AM

Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.

International football is a high-stakes world where preparation is everything. As South Africa’s Bafana Bafana geared up for the 2026 Fifa World Cup, a recent incident has spotlighted a growing concern: the breach of privacy in training sessions. Their final warm-up match against Jamaica, played behind closed doors at Estadio Hidalgo in Pachuca, Mexico, on Sunday 7 June 2026, ended in a 1-1 draw. Yet clips of the encounter quickly surfaced on social media, prompting questions about how footage from a supposedly private fixture became public. Coach Hugo Broos expressed surprise but remained unfazed, focusing on the team’s readiness for their opening clash against Mexico. While no evidence points to deliberate espionage by opponents, the leak underscores a broader issue plaguing modern football: unauthorised surveillance that compromises tactical secrecy. The match, intended as a low-pressure environment to test strategies without external scrutiny, saw goals from Oswin Appollis for Bafana Bafana and a late equaliser for Jamaica. Behind-closed-doors protocols exist precisely to safeguard such preparations but in an era of smartphones and instant sharing, maintaining the veil has become challenging. This incident is far from isolated. Football history is rife with spying scandals that have tested the boundaries of sportsmanship. In football, Marcelo Bielsa’s “Spygate” involving Leeds United in 2019 made headlines when a staff member was spotted observing Derby County’s training. Bielsa openly admitted to the practice, saying he did it for every opponent and viewed it as standard due diligence. While not illegal, it sparked ethical debates and highlighted how some coaches prioritise intelligence-gathering over mutual respect. Similar incidents have occurred elsewhere, including drone spying by the Canadian women’s team at the Olympic Games in 2024 and various club-level infiltrations. The episodes reveal a troubling pattern. Teams invest heavily in tactics, set pieces a

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