The 2026 FIFA World Cup delivers a heavyweight quarter-final rematch as France meet Morocco at Boston Stadium in Foxborough, MA on Friday, 10 July 2026. Four years after their 2022 semi-final clash, both nations arrive with new narratives: Mohamed Ouahbi leading a fearless Atlas Lions, Soufiane Rahimi ready to fill the attacking void, and Didier Deschamps’ reign entering its final chapter. Here’s everything you need to know.
Morocco
FranceBoston Stadium · Foxborough, MA · USA
1. Ouahbi Leads the Way: From U-20 Glory to Senior Belief
Mohamed Ouahbi isn’t new to beating France. The 49-year-old guided Morocco’s U-20 side to World Cup glory in Chile 2025, eliminating France at the semi-final stage. Few expected him to get the senior job after Walid Regragui quit in January 2026, with critics citing his “lack of senior head coach experience”. He’s proven them wrong.
Ouahbi has transformed Morocco from 2022’s surprise package into genuine contenders. His message is clear: “The bonus is to win the World Cup. This is how we have come this far and we will go further.” He rejects satisfaction with a quarter-final: “We will take stock at the end of the tournament… I will not say anything now because we can have more.” Born in Belgium, shaped at Anderlecht’s academy, and trusted by players like Bilal El Khannouss, Ouahbi’s blend of European structure and Moroccan identity makes him France’s toughest tactical test yet.
2. Rahimi Ready: Can He Replace Saibari’s Firepower?
Morocco’s plans took a hit when Ismael Saibari was ruled out with a hamstring injury picked up in the last-16 win over Canada. Saibari scored in each of Morocco’s three group games and netted the decisive penalty vs Netherlands. Ouahbi confirmed: “All players are ready, except for Ismael Saibari. This match comes a little too soon for him”.
Enter Soufiane Rahimi. The forward is tipped by fans to “explode tomorrow and score two goals” and features in Morocco’s 26-man squad. With Ayoub El Kaabi, Brahim Diaz, and Chamseddine Talbi also options, Ouahbi insists on squad depth: “Morocco possesses a large pool of ready players”. Rahimi’s movement could be key to unlocking a French defence that’s conceded just once in the knockouts.
3. Deschamps’ Reign Nears the End: One Last Dance?
Didier Deschamps has led France since 2012, winning the 2018 World Cup and reaching the 2022 final. But 2026 feels like the end of an era. With a tournament-leading 14 goals and a front four of Kylian Mbappe, Ousmane Dembele, Michael Olise and Bradley Barcola, Deschamps has “removed some of the shackles”.
Yet cracks show. France edged Paraguay 1-0 with a scrappy Mbappe penalty, and Deschamps admits: “We have to be efficient, offensively speaking… We are efficient but we could have done better”. Facing Morocco is different. Deschamps warned: “They are not here to play. They are here to win. We have to be ready”. With Aurelien Tchouameni a doubt, this could be Deschamps’ final major knockout test.
4. Morocco’s Mentality Shift: No Longer Underdogs
In 2022, Morocco were “surprise outsiders”. In 2026, they’re “no longer the surprise outsiders but a confident side aiming for the title”. Ouahbi’s confidence is striking: “I was more worried before facing Canada, but not for this game”.
The stats back it up. Morocco topped Group C with 7 points, beating Brazil, Scotland and Haiti, then eased past Netherlands and Canada 3-0. They’ve not lost any of their last 33 games. As Ouahbi told media: “It doesn’t matter whether we play against France or Paraguay, we are completely ready”.
5. France’s First Real Test: Firepower vs Structure
France brushed aside Sweden and Paraguay, but Morocco offer the first full football examination. Reuters notes Morocco can “suffer, control spells of possession and punish opponents with speed and precision”.
Deschamps knows it: “Morocco’s profile is not the one of Paraguay… They have top individuals”. The midfield battle of Amrabat & Ounahi vs France’s engine room could decide it. With Mbappe on 7 goals, second to Messi’s 8, France’s attack is lethal. But as betting previews warn: expect a tight game.
6. The Goalkeeper Duel: Bounou’s Wall vs French Onslaught
Yassine Bounou remains Morocco’s hero. He’s in the 26-man squad and fans say “Bounou locking down the post” gives them revenge hopes. France have scored 14, but Morocco’s defence and Bounou’s shot-stopping made them 2022 legends.
If France’s front four click, Bounou will need another tournament-defining performance. If not, “Ounahi in insane form” could launch counters that test France’s high line.
7. History & Stakes: More Than a Rematch
This is a rematch of the 2022 World Cup semi-final, when France won 2-0. But context has flipped. Morocco are now “serious title contenders”, the first African nation to reach consecutive quarter-finals.
For France, it’s about legacy. For Morocco, it’s about breaking ceilings. Ouahbi summed it up: “We have to play at 2,000% and not think what we have done up to now is not bad”. Kickoff is 9.00pm Morocco time, and the Atlas Lions believe “Africa’s World Cup dream” is alive.


