← Beyond the Pitch Group C

Morocco

The Atlas Lions — the team that walked into the 2022 semifinal and changed what an African side could do at a World Cup

Group
C
Region
CAF
World Cup Appearances
7
Code
MA

The Story

Before 2022, no African team had ever reached a World Cup semifinal. Then Morocco beat Belgium, beat Spain on penalties, beat Portugal on a Youssef En-Nesyri header that didn't seem to come back down, and walked into the final four against France. They lost 2-0. Nobody who watched it remembers them losing. They remember Achraf Hakimi celebrating with his mother on the pitch. They remember Sofiane Boufal dancing with his mom in his kit. They remember half the Arab world adopting Morocco as their team for a month.

The Atlas Lions arrive in 2026 with most of that squad still intact and a brutal Group C draw with France, Germany, and Australia. Walid Regragui — the coach who built the 2022 miracle — is reportedly stepping down after Morocco's AFCON 2025 final loss to Senegal, which means a new manager will inherit one of the most cohesive squads on the planet just months before kickoff.

The fundamentals are still there. Hakimi is now the African Footballer of the Year, treble winner with PSG, sixth in the Ballon d'Or. Bounou still saves penalties. En-Nesyri still rises. The diaspora will travel — France, Spain, Belgium, Netherlands, the U.S. — and turn neutral stadiums into something else. Morocco at a World Cup is no longer a feel-good story. It's a real team.

3 Players to Know

Achraf Hakimi

The captain, the heartbeat, and as of November 2025 the African Footballer of the Year — the first defender to win that award in 52 years and the first Moroccan since 1998. Finished sixth in the 2025 Ballon d'Or, the highest a Moroccan has ever placed. Right back for PSG's historic treble side (first-ever Champions League, 5-0 over Inter in the final). At 27 he's the best right back in the world and the player around whom Morocco's entire attacking shape is built.

Yassine Bounou

Just call him Bono — every Moroccan does. The Al-Hilal goalkeeper who saved two penalties against Spain in the 2022 Round of 16 shootout and then watched his teammates put away the third to send Morocco into the quarterfinals. He's 34 now, still first-choice, and still capable of single-handedly stealing a knockout match. The most decorated Moroccan goalkeeper in history and the most chronically underrated keeper in the world.

Youssef En-Nesyri

The Fenerbahçe striker who scored the goal — the header against Portugal in the 2022 quarterfinal that made Morocco the first African team in a World Cup semifinal. He hung in the air longer than physics allows, beat Diogo Costa to it by a foot. He's 28 now, still Morocco's first-choice No. 9, and still the player Regragui's successor will trust to make the same kind of run again.

The Food

Signature Dish

Tagine is the answer everyone gives, and the answer is correct. The classic is lamb with prunes and almonds, slow-cooked in the conical clay pot the dish is named for, served with khobz to mop up everything. But the breakfast and post-match dish is harira — the tomato-lentil soup eaten to break the fast in Ramadan, dense with chickpeas and threads of lamb, finished with a squeeze of lemon. Get a side of msemen (flaky square pancake) and mint tea poured from three feet up. The pour is part of the dish.

Where to Eat in DFW

Baboush in Dallas (Uptown and West Village) — a Lebanese-Moroccan fusion from veteran restaurateur Yaser Khalaf, where the lamb tagine and Moroccan mezze are the closest thing DFW has to Marrakech right now (Medina Oven & Bar in Victory Park closed in early 2024). For a more adventurous market-and-cafe experience, Darna at Legacy West in Plano is Marrakesh-inspired with tagines on the menu and a full North African pantry attached.

The Music

A soundtrack for the matches, the pregame, and the afterparty.

Fan Culture

If you've never been near a Morocco crowd at a major tournament, here's the texture: the drums are constant, the chanting is in Darija, the women are loud (this is not universally true at World Cup matches and you'll notice). "Dima Maghrib" — "always Morocco" — is the chant you'll hear on a loop. The flag is everywhere, the green star up against the red, often draped over a Palestinian flag in solidarity. The diaspora support is the secret weapon — France-based, Spain-based, Belgium-based, Netherlands-based, U.S.-based — and in 2022, half of every "neutral" stadium in Qatar turned into a de-facto Moroccan home crowd. Expect that again at AT&T and across the U.S. host cities. Bring earplugs only if you're being a coward.
Fun Fact

When Morocco beat Portugal in the 2022 quarterfinal, Sofyan Boufal danced with his mother on the pitch in his kit. The image went global in about ninety seconds. Half of Morocco watched the team's run with their families on the same couch, and you could see it in the players — they kept inviting their parents onto the field after the matches. No team in modern World Cup history has been more visibly tied to its mothers.

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