France and Morocco meet again on the World Cup’s biggest stage, this time at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, and the history between these two sides adds real weight to tonight’s quarterfinal. France beat Morocco 2-0 in the 2022 semi-final in Qatar, a result that ended Morocco’s run as the first African and first Arab nation to reach a World Cup last four. Four years later, Morocco returns for revenge, and this time the run to the quarterfinal looks even more complete.
Bookmakers and pundits still favor France heavily. Les Bleus have won all five of their matches this tournament, scoring 14 goals and conceding just twice, and Kylian Mbappe leads the Golden Boot race with seven goals and two assists. That form has pushed France among the shortest odds to lift the trophy, with most models and betting markets calling this a comfortable passage to the semifinals.
Morocco, though, refuses to play the role of underdog. The Atlas Lions have matched France’s consistency step for step, going unbeaten across five matches while sharpening their game through genuinely difficult tests against Brazil and the Netherlands. Coach Ouahbi has built a Morocco side that trusts its shape, rarely beats itself, and has shown it can raise its level against bigger nations when the stakes rise.
That sets up a contest far closer than the odds suggest. France carries the sharper attack and the tournament’s most dangerous individual talent, but Morocco arrives with its own case for an upset. Here are three reasons the Atlas Lions can shock France tonight.
- Morocco Has Not Lost in 34 Matches
Morocco last tasted defeat on August 10, 2025, a run of 34 games. That unbeaten streak includes a 3-0 demolition of Canada in the last 16 that looked more comfortable than the scoreline suggested to any neutral.
The Atlas Lions have also drawn tough tests against Brazil and the Netherlands without cracking, showing a defensive discipline that has conceded only four goals across five matches.
- Azzedine Ounahi Can Exploit France’s Midfield Gaps**
Ounahi’s movement between the lines and his ability to receive and turn under pressure rank as Morocco’s most dangerous individual attacking quality. The Girona midfielder was influential in the round of 16 bagging two goals in the win over Canada.
Aurelien Tchouameni, still working his way back from an adductor injury that kept him out of the last-16 win over Paraguay, faces an uphill battle to start, and if he or Manu Kone fail to step up and intercept Ounahi’s runs early, the Moroccan midfielder can find the same space that hurt Canada and the Netherlands.
- Morocco knows exactly how to hurt France
The two sides met in the 2022 semi-final in Qatar, where France won 2-0, and that history has given Morocco four years to study Les Bleus up close. The Atlas Lions arrive with a more established defensive structure than in 2022 and a double pivot in Neil El Aynaoui and Bilal El Khannouss capable of playing through France’s high press. Add the psychological motivation of avenging that 2022 defeat, and Morocco has every reason to make this a fight rather than a formality.
France remain favorites on paper, but Morocco’s unbeaten run, its tactical discipline, and its hunger for revenge make this quarterfinal anything but a formality.
AFCON 2025










