)
Every World Cup has them — the supporters who travel further, shout louder, and paint themselves in colours that end up on the front pages. For DR Congo, that person is the fan known as 'Patrice Lumumba'. And according to Pulse Sports, he won't be in the stands when the Leopards face England on US soil at the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
The details around the entry ban are thin. Pulse Sports reports that the supporter — known to DR Congo fans by the name 'Patrice Lumumba' — has been barred from entering the United States ahead of the group-stage fixture against England. Whether that name is his legal identity or a nickname, and whether the restriction is a visa refusal or another form of travel block, has not been confirmed. The reasons for the ban have not been made public.
Editorial note: This story is currently based on a single report from Pulse Sports. We are seeking corroboration from a second source and will update if one is confirmed.
What is clear is that he is a well-known figure in DR Congo football culture — the kind of fan whose presence in the stands signals something to the players on the pitch. Superfans carry a weight that goes beyond noise. They are continuity, colour, and proof that someone back home cares enough to show up.
DR Congo's qualification for the 2026 World Cup is not a small thing. The Leopards are back on the biggest stage, and a group-stage match against England — one of the tournament's most-watched sides — is exactly the kind of fixture that defines a nation's World Cup memory. Missing it, for any reason, cuts deep.
His situation speaks to a wider pattern that supporters' groups have flagged: the 2026 World Cup, co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, has drawn concern about the US entry process — particularly for fans travelling from African and other Global South nations. A World Cup that markets itself as the most accessible in history has a real question to answer if the fans most passionate about their teams cannot get through the door.
He won't be there when the Leopards walk out. The flag will still be somewhere in the crowd — just not in his hands.
Somewhere in Kinshasa, a man named 'Patrice Lumumba' will watch England on a screen and know he should have been in the stadium.
Every World Cup has them — the supporters who travel further, shout louder, and paint themselves in colours that end up on the front pages. For DR Congo, that person is the fan known as 'Patrice Lumumba'.
Quellen
Pulse Sports
Flagside-Artikel sind Eigenrecherchen aus mehreren Quellen. Wir nennen jedes Outlet, das in den Text geflossen ist.
Die Highlights der Nacht, was das Transferfenster macht und die eine Kolumne, die du heute lesen solltest. Keine Ads. Keine Tipps. Keine Operator.
Ein-Klick-Abmeldung. Wir geben deine E-Mail nicht weiter.
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
INTPatrice Motsepe is not a man who deals in quiet ambition. The CAF President has gone public with his vision for what it will take for an African nation to lift the FIFA World Cup — and with 2026 on th
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
INTPatrice Motsepe is not a man who deals in quiet ambition. The CAF President has gone public with his vision for what it will take for an African nation to lift the FIFA World Cup — and with 2026 on th