Four years after Qatar, France and Morocco are back on a World Cup stage together, and this time there’s an even bigger prize on the line. The two sides meet in the quarter-finals of the 2026 FIFA World Cup on Thursday, July 9, at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Boston, with a semi-final berth in Dallas waiting for whoever comes through.
It’s a repeat of the 2022 semi-final in Al Khor, where Theo Hernandez and Randal Kolo Muani scored either side of halftime to send France through 2-0 on their way to the final. Morocco, for their part, made history that night simply by being there, the first African nation ever to reach a World Cup semi-final. Three and a half years on, both teams arrive in Boston looking like sharper, more complete versions of themselves.
France have not put a foot wrong all tournament. Didier Deschamps’ side topped Group I with three straight wins, 3-1 over Senegal, 3-0 against Iraq, and a 4-1 statement win over Norway, before brushing aside Sweden 3-0 in the round of 32. The round of 16 clash with Paraguay was a different kind of test altogether: a scrappy, physical affair that France ground out 1-0 courtesy of a Kylian Mbappé penalty. Five games, five wins, 14 goals scored and only two conceded. Mike Maignan has been beaten just twice all tournament, and Mbappé leads the Golden Boot race with seven goals from open play and set pieces combined.
Morocco’s route has had more twists. Mohamed Ouahbi’s team opened with a hard-fought 1-1 draw against Brazil, then beat Scotland 1-0 and edged a wild 4-2 win over Haiti to finish second in Group C. The round of 32 against the Netherlands needed extra time after a 1-1 stalemate, with Issa Diop’s late headed equaliser forcing penalties, which the Atlas Lions won. In the round of 16, Azzedine Ounahi’s brace and a late strike saw off Canada. It’s a run built on resilience rather than dominance, and that’s exactly the identity Morocco have carried since their 2022 heroics.
Team news and injury concerns
The big worry for Morocco is Ismael Saibari, who has been troubled by a hamstring issue and is a doubt for Thursday’s game. Saibari has been central to Morocco’s attacking rhythm, and his absence would put more creative responsibility on Ounahi and the wide players. Ouahbi is expected to name his strongest available XI otherwise, keeping faith with the defensive shape that has served the team well.
For France, there are no fresh fitness concerns of note heading into the quarter-final. Deschamps has options across the front line, with Ousmane Dembélé, Michael Olise, Bradley Barcola and Désiré Doué all having contributed goals at various stages of the tournament, giving him the flexibility to rotate or adjust depending on how Morocco set up.
Match details: date, kick-off time and venue
- Fixture: France vs Morocco, FIFA World Cup 2026 Quarter-Final
- Venue: Gillette Stadium, Boston/Foxborough
- Date: Thursday, July 9, 2026
- Kick-off: 4:00 PM ET / 1:00 PM PT (10:00 PM in Paris, 9:00 PM in Rabat)
- Next round: The winner advances to the semi-final in Dallas on July 14, where they’ll face the winner of Portugal, Spain, USA or Belgium.
Head-to-head history
France and Morocco have met just twice in a competitive or notable senior fixture before this tournament. The first came back in 1998, when Morocco beat France 6-5 on penalties after a 2-2 draw at the King Hassan II Tournament. The more significant meeting came at Qatar 2022, when France won the World Cup semi-final 2-0. This quarter-final is effectively the decider in their World Cup rivalry, and Morocco will have revenge very much on their minds.
Prediction
On paper, this looks like the toughest match still available on France’s side of the draw, but the form book leans firmly toward Les Bleus. They’ve been the most clinical side left in the competition, scoring in every match and rarely looking troubled defensively. Morocco’s biggest asset is their ability to frustrate favourites and strike on the counter, but doing that for 90 minutes against a France side with Mbappé, Dembélé and Olise rotating through the front line is a tall order, especially with Saibari’s fitness in doubt.
Expect a cagey opening period as Morocco try to keep things compact, followed by France finding a way through in the second half. A narrow, low-scoring French win, in the 1-0 or 2-0 range, looks the most likely outcome, though few would be shocked if Morocco once again punched above their weight and took this all the way to penalties.
Prediction: France to win 2-0.
Key facts at a glance
- France have won five straight World Cup matches and are yet to concede more than one goal in any game this tournament.
- Kylian Mbappé is the tournament’s top scorer with seven goals heading into the quarter-final.
- Morocco remain unbeaten in five matches, with two of their knockout ties decided by penalties or extra time.
- A France win would send them into a third consecutive World Cup semi-final, a feat only matched by a handful of nations in tournament history.
- Morocco reaching the semis again would mark back-to-back last-four finishes for an African nation for the first time ever.
Whatever happens at Gillette Stadium on Thursday, this quarter-final carries the weight of unfinished business from Qatar, and a place in the last four of the 2026 World Cup on the line.


