Day 28: Mighty France overpower Morocco in the World Cup quarterfinals
· Yahoo Sports
France vs Morocco gave a scintillating start to the quarterfinal round of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. One side exuded a self-belief of gaining a confident victory while the other side waited patiently to catch their opposition off-guard with a punishing blow. However, Morocco’s plan turned out to be too pragmatic and gave France the breathing room to correct their mistakes and secure the win.
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After a fantastic showing against Netherlands, Morocco gave the two time World Champions too much respect and failed to take sufficient risk to give themselves any real chance after making it so far in the tournament. France, were once again a cohesive and well knit unit that turned it up a few notches when they needed to and secured their berth in the semifinals.
Ismael Saibari’s absence was a big blow to Mohamed Ouahbi and Morocco. It downgraded the team’s chemistry and made attacking chances very hard to come by against a well organized French side. But, credit to the North African side and their goalkeeper Yassine Bounou who fought hard to keep themselves in the game until the hour mark before the French pulled away from them. Here is the complete recap from this fixture:
The French cavalry flew out of the gates
There were no nerves, no sizing up the opponent for Didier Deschamps’ side. There was just belief. A belief that some may construe as cockiness that they would outplay, outscore and emerge the certain victors of the matchup.
Straightaway, France piled the pressure on Morocco and took the first shot in the 4th minute. It was Dayot Upamecano who had the first real chance with a header from a corner kick won by Kylian Mbappe. However, Upa mistimed his jump and made a mess of his header leading to a comfortable save for Bono. What followed was numerous well-crafted French attacks that lacked the finishing touch to get the scoreboard moving.
Désiré Doué who shouldered the left-winger duties created a chance from his pressing. After winning the ball from Bouaddi, Doué zipped into the Moroccan penalty box and fired off a shot. Bono’s quick reaction save prevented the goal but the Frenchman should have done better with his shot or passed to Dembélé who was open. It was moments such as these where Les Bleus let themselves down with the final touch.
Kylian Mbappe also fluffed his lines twice before getting the first goal. The penalty saved by Bono ended up a weak shot that missed the corner by a large margin. The VAR check gave the edge to Bono in taking away Mbappe’s rhythm before the penalty, but at this level, the best are expected to guarantee a goal from the penalty spot. The French captain’s second miss was not as hurtful due to his offside position, but the turn and pass from Olise in the 56th minute deserved a clean shot from Mbappe.
Despite being the better team, the wastefulness and inefficiency of Deschamps’ men is a huge chink in this team’s armor. With just 3 shots on target from 13 taken, and missing all three big chances Les Bleus left the game wide open at the end of 45 minutes despite owning their opposition.
AS Roma’s Kouadio Koné deserves a special mention as a player like him can get lost amongst the superstars of his team. The midfielder slotted in superbly in place of the injured Aurélien Tchouaméni and bossed the midfield along with Adrien Rabiot. He read the game brilliantly and was pro-active in cutting off the opposition passes. His energy and vision saw him make six recoveries as he imposed himself on the opposition.
The Moroccan goal that never came
Mohamed Ouahbi’s unbeaten run at the helm of Morocco sadly came to an end against France. Promoted from the U20 coaching job, the 49-year old has done well with his team. Morocco showed they can naturally play a direct and enjoyable brand of football or be flexible and park the bus if need be.
The North Africans had to pivot to a low-block in order to contain the unstoppable attacking Quadro of France. Overloading their own third of the pitch to cut passing channels and attacking spaces was the priority of the Ouahbi’s men. The emphasis on defense was prioritized over any meaningful attack. The overly pragmatic nature of Morocco’s play was reflected in their xG of just 0.14. Against the lethality of France’s attack who mustered an xG of 3.69, Hakimi and his men never stood a chance with their strategy.
The strategy to reserve energy in the first half and turn into a different team altogether in the second half bore fruit against Canada. But, it could not be replicated against France. In their attempt to prevent getting blown away by France’s irrepressible attack, the Moroccans kept playing safe waiting for an opportunity to strike back. However, unlike what happened in the game against Canada, the awakening of the attack never happened. Despite the wastefulness of France, they were the deserved winners through and through.
The injury of Ismael Saibari was perhaps the biggest blow as the Atlas Lions missed their fiercest hunter at the front of the attack. Sunderland’s Chemsdine Talbi and Stuttgart’s Bilal El Khannouss shared the striker duties between themselves. However, neither of these two could disrupt the opposition defenders or hold the attack until support arrived. With just 8 touches in the opposition’s penalty box, it took a great effort for Morocco to go high up the pitch.
On the rare occasions that Morocco did break away with the ball, they lacked genuine support as too many of their teammates preferred to hang back rather than join the attack. As a result, the French backline made short work of mopping up the ball and restarting their own attack.
Finding the next gear
The true mark of cohesion and bonafide ability of this French team has been their capacity to dig in and keep creating chances. Despite missing a big penalty, chances from point blank range, Mbappe and co just reset themselves mentally and went again. The second half was more favorable in terms of shot conversion as Deschamps drove his men to find their missing touch to finish their attacks.
Mbappe scored the first for his nation in the quarterfinal draw and gave the crucial lead. It was an incredible shot that curled around the Moroccan defender Issa Diop who stood in his way, the goalkeeper ahead of him and all the way into the side netting on the far side of the goal. Despite protests from the Morocco regarding Adrian Rabiot’s potential handball in the build-up of the goal, the referee was not advised by VAR to overturn his decision.
Ousmane Dembélé scored the second pouncing on the gap created by defenders teaming up around Mbappe. The Real Madrid man laid the ball for Dembélé outside 30 yards and bolted at Bono’s goal. Dembélé followed closely behind and had the opportunity to thread a ball to his lightening quick teammate but chose to capitalize on the space left by the Moroccan defenders. He drifted right and scored from outside the box with a powerful shot that clipped Bono’s fingers before finding its way into the net.
Who can stop this French side ?
Both the goals were inevitable, in fact France ought to have scored more in what was a one-sided fixture. And, that is where the key to stopping this French team lies. They have created the highest chances in the tournament at 27, yet they have scored just 16 goals. What makes this stat even worse than it looks like, is the brilliance of this team. Some of those goals were scored from just half-chances like the ones scored against Morocco. France missed all 6 big chances against their QF opponent. The two goals were really from just half-chances.
They have fantastic chemistry and Didier Deschamps’ deserves all the credit for making this team tick like a clock, but the coach can only manage so much. This team is very inefficient in front of goal. The players have to step-up and finish their chances orchestrated by the manager.
Regardless of who the better side on the pitch are, an opposition that can create and convert chances with lethal efficiency will give France a genuinely tough time. Argentina for example have scored 14 goals from just 16 big chances created and they are perhaps the opponent who can test Deschamps’ side to its limit. A robust defense combined with a lethally accurate attack would mean that Argentina don’t need to create chances all night to emerge victorious against Les Bleus.
Now that France has entered the semi-finals, who do you reckon will follow them to the next round in the knockouts as the World Cup has reached its juiciest stage yet, more importantly which team can give Mbappe and co a real run for their money ? Let us know your takes in the comments below.
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