African Countries With Saudi Pro League Stars Heading Into AFCON 2025

The Saudi Pro League is quickly becoming more than just a financial powerhouse; it is evolving into a high-performance environment for African footballers. With significant investments and the presence of global stars, the league now provides top-level competition.

As the 2025 TotalEnergies Africa Cup of Nations approaches, the form and sharpness of African players in the Saudi league could significantly impact their national teams’ prospects. In addition to the lucrative contracts, their performances in Morocco will serve as a concrete benchmark for assessing the league’s influence on player development. This will provide early insights into how competitive experience outside of Europe can contribute to international success.

Below is an overview of African countries with Saudi Pro League representatives, detailing player profiles and analysing how their experience could contribute to their national teams’ heading into AFCON 2025, should they receive a call-up.

Algeria

Players: Riyad Mahrez (Al Ahli), Saïd Benrahma (Neom SC)

Caps: Mahrez – 107; Benrahma – 40

Mahrez’s creativity, vision and chance-creation sharpen Algeria’s attack in a team that thrives on tactical organisation and controlled phases of possession. His ability to unlock compact defences is crucial for a side that often balances discipline with calculated attacking surges. Benrahma’s playmaking and ball-carrying add another layer of unpredictability in the final third, strengthening Algeria’s ability to transition from structure into incisive attacking movements. Both players arriving sharp from Saudi football support Algeria’s identity as a tactically balanced team that punishes mistakes when opportunities appear.

Senegal

Players: Sadio Mané (Al-Nassr), Édouard Mendy (Al Ahli), Kalidou Koulibaly (Al Hilal)

Caps: Mané – 117; Mendy – 50; Koulibaly – 98

Senegal’s playing identity relies heavily on physicality, compact defending and lethal counter-attacks, and their Saudi-based stars perfectly reinforce that system. Mané’s pace and directness increase Senegal’s threat on transitions, Mendy’s authority in goal underpins their defensive organisation, and Koulibaly’s leadership and duel-winning ability fortify a backline built on discipline and physical dominance. Competing in a league full of high-level attackers helps them maintain sharpness for knockout-style football, where Senegal excels.

Côte d’Ivoire

Players: Franck Kessié (Al Ahli), Amadou Koné (Neom SC)

Caps: Kessié – 96; Koné – 0

Kessié is central to an Ivorian team built on midfield strength, tactical flexibility and wide/full-back overloads. His ball-winning, composure and game-management help the Elephants control rhythm, protect defensive structure and launch structured attacks from midfield. Koné’s energy and creativity complement that philosophy, adding verticality and support for wide combinations should he get his first call-up. Their Saudi experience not only keeps them match-ready but aligns directly with Côte d’Ivoire’s blend of physical power, tactical maturity and wide attacking threats.

Egypt

Player: Ahmed Hegazi (Neom SC)

Caps: 88

Egypt’s identity: compact defending, patient possession and organised build-up, is reinforced through Hegazi’s presence. His experience helps maintain shape, defensive coordination and calm decision-making under pressure. His Saudi stint ensures he remains sharp in duels, aerial battles and leadership responsibilities, all of which are critical for a team that depends on defensive security before striking through wide transitions and set pieces.

Nigeria

Player: William Troost-Ekong (Al Kholood)

Caps: 83

As the captain of both Al Kholood and the Super Eagles, Troost-Ekong’s leadership and defensive composure embody Nigeria’s dual identity: an attacking football style paired with a stabilising presence at the back. His exposure to different tactical systems in Saudi Arabia keeps him ready for both high-tempo open games and disciplined, controlled phases, giving the Super Eagles reliability when organising the defensive line, handling transitions and navigating high-pressure moments in continental competition.

Morocco

Player: Yassine Bounou “Bono” (Al Hilal)

Caps: 80

Bono’s consistency and calm in high-pressure moments are ideal for a Moroccan team defined by exceptional defensive discipline, low-possession efficiency and rapid transitions. His command of the penalty area and game management provides confidence behind a defence that frequently protects narrow spaces and waits for the perfect counter-attacking moment. His continued success in Saudi Arabia ensures that Morocco retains a goalkeeper built for tournament football.

Mali

Player: Abdoulaye Doucouré (Neom SC)

Caps: 2

Doucouré’s intensity, physicality and ball-winning habits could make a big impact on Mali as a midfield-driven side that seeks to dominate duels and break quickly. His growing tactical maturity in Saudi football sharpens the qualities Mali rely on: controlling midfield battles, triggering presses and driving momentum into transition moments. His profile fits the heartbeat-midfield role Mali depends on to unsettle opponents.

South Africa

Player: Mohau Nkota (Al Ettifaq)

Caps: 7

Nkota’s pace and technical sharpness give Bafana Bafana an attacking option that complements their possession-based, creative playing identity. South Africa relies on movement, combination play and technical expression, and Nkota’s experience provides exposure to higher-tempo football and more diverse defensive structures, accelerating his growth as a difference-maker in wide or attacking spaces. His development could become valuable to a team that depends on firepower to turn possession dominance into goals.

Measuring the Saudi Pro League’s Impact on African Talent

AFCON is a results-driven tournament. Margins are small, knockout games are unforgiving, and experience matters. Saudi-based players arrive with recent exposure to high-stakes football and the confidence that comes with it. Their performances could directly influence standings, qualification paths and ultimately the title race.

This tournament will also offer a small but meaningful benchmark of the Saudi Pro League’s developmental impact. Beyond the financial benefits players can earn, AFCON will help answer a critical question: Does competing in Saudi Arabia elevate a player’s performance at the international level? The output on the pitch, decision-making, physical sharpness and consistency under pressure will provide early evidence.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/sindiswamabunda/2025/11/26/african-countries-with-saudi-pro-league-stars-heading-into-afcon-2025/