Quarterfinals
Thursday, July 9
France vs Morocco (22:00 CAT)
Four years after becoming the first African nation to reach the semi-finals of a World Cup in Qatar, Morocco are once again among the last eight teams standing.
Consistency at the highest level is what separates a lucky run from a footballing powerhouse and the Atlas Lions are proving that Qatar was no miracle. It was the beginning of something bigger.
As Africa's other representatives departed the tournament, Morocco remained standing, once again carrying the hopes of an entire continent.
Yet, strangely, not everyone is willing to embrace them.
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Every time Morocco enjoys success on the world stage, a familiar debate resurfaces, particularly among some fans in sub-Saharan Africa.
"Morocco isn't really African."
"They're Arab."
"They're closer to Europe."
The arguments are repeated across social media whenever the Atlas Lions make headlines.
But geography is stubborn.
Morocco is in Africa.
Being culturally connected to the Middle East does not somehow remove Morocco from the African map any more than Egypt ceases to be African or South Africa becomes European because of its colonial history.
Morocco can be African, Arab, Amazigh and Mediterranean all at once.
The beauty of the continent lies precisely in that complexity.
Ironically, the same country some Africans hesitate to claim will soon help write another chapter in African football history.
In 2030, Morocco will become the second African nation to welcome the FIFA World Cup, this time as co-hosts alongside Spain and Portugal.
Some see the partnership with two European neighbours as proof that Morocco belongs elsewhere.
The opposite may be true.
Rather than leaving Africa behind, Morocco is helping bring the world's biggest sporting event back to African soil for only the second time after South Africa hosted the tournament in 2010.
Its geographical position has become an advantage rather than an identity crisis-a bridge between continents instead of a barrier.
But geography alone does not explain Morocco's remarkable rise.
Football does.
The Atlas Lions have become Africa's benchmark because they have built a sustainable football project rather than relying on one exceptional generation.
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Their domestic infrastructure has improved significantly over the past decade.
Their football federation invested heavily in coaching, youth development and elite training facilities.
Many of their players have grown up in Europe's top academies while maintaining a deep emotional connection to the national team.
That blend has produced a squad that is tactically disciplined, technically gifted and mentally resilient.
Perhaps most importantly, Morocco plays like a team.
They may not possess as many global superstars as France, but they rarely depend on one individual.
Collective organisation has become their greatest weapon.
Every player understands his role. Every player runs. Every player defends.
That togetherness has repeatedly frustrated opponents with superior individual talent.
Now comes their biggest examination-France.
France possess arguably the tournament's most frightening attacking unit.
Kylian Mbappé remains one of football's defining players. Ousmane Dembélé continues to torment defenders with his pace and unpredictability and Michael Olise has emerged as another devastating creative force capable of changing matches in an instant.
On paper, France should have too much quality.
Football, however, has never been played on paper.
Morocco know that better than anyone.
In Qatar, they eliminated Belgium, Spain and Portugal despite entering each match as underdogs.
They defended with extraordinary discipline, attacked with purpose and displayed a belief that inspired millions across Africa and the Arab world.
They have already shown they can upset football's established order.
Can they do it again? Absolutely.
Will they? That is another question entirely.
France has greater squad depth, more experience of winning major tournaments and perhaps the most dangerous player in the competition.
Yet knockout football rarely rewards reputation. It rewards concentration, courage and moments.
Morocco has repeatedly demonstrated they possess all three.
Regardless of what happens in the quarter-finals, their achievement already carries significance beyond results.
For decades, African football was praised for producing exciting players but criticised for lacking organisation, tactical maturity and consistency.
Morocco has challenged those stereotypes.
They have shown that an African team can combine technical quality with tactical intelligence, emotional control and world-class preparation.
Their success also raises the standard for the rest of the continent.
Instead of celebrating isolated breakthroughs every generation, African football can now aspire to sustained excellence.
The question is no longer whether an African nation can compete with the world's best. Morocco has answered that.
The challenge now is whether others can follow.
Nigeria, Senegal, Egypt, Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Cameroon, Algeria and South Africa all possess enormous potential.
Morocco has simply demonstrated what becomes possible when long-term planning meets exceptional talent.
Whether the Atlas Lions reach another semi-final or fall to France, they have already reshaped perceptions of African football.
They are no longer merely Africa's surprise package.
They are Africa's standard-bearers.
And perhaps it is time the entire continent embraced them as such.
France and Morocco face off today at Boston Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, with a place in the World Cup semi-finals at stake. The winners will take on either Spain or Belgium in Dallas, Texas, on July 14.