Morocco arrived at this quarter-final on the back of a 3-0 win over Canada in the round of 16, five days ago, the kind of performance that quieted any doubts about Vahid Halilhodzic’s side belonging at this stage. France, for their part, edged Paraguay 1-0 four days ago to keep a run of five straight World Cup wins intact. These two sides have met only once in a major tournament, but that meeting still carries weight: a 2-0 France win in the 2022 World Cup semi-finals that ended Morocco’s historic run to the last four. Now they are back, one round earlier, and the tension is real.

A rivalry rooted in history
France and Morocco do not share a club rivalry or a domestic fixture calendar. Their connection runs through something older and more complicated: colonial history, diaspora, and the unique dynamic of a French national team that has long included players of Moroccan descent. Several players in the current Morocco squad grew up in France or hold dual nationality, which gives this fixture a cultural charge that goes beyond football. Players like Achraf Hakimi, Sofyan Amrabat, and Bilal El Khannouss represent a generation that could have gone either way, and when these two sides meet, that backstory is never far from the surface.
On the pitch, the head-to-head record is thin. The only competitive meeting between the two nations at a World Cup came in Qatar in December 2022, when France beat Morocco 2-0 in the semi-finals. That result ended a Moroccan campaign that had captured global attention: the Atlas Lions had become the first African side to reach a World Cup semi-final, and the emotion of that run made the defeat all the more painful for Moroccan supporters. France went on to lose the final to Argentina. Neither side got what they ultimately came for, and both arrive in 2026 with unfinished business.
Head-to-head: the numbers
The H2H record between these sides at World Cup level is sparse: one match, one France win. In December 2022, France beat Morocco 2-0 in Doha. That is the only data point the record carries, and it would be a stretch to draw firm conclusions from a sample of one. What it does establish is that France have yet to drop a point against Morocco in a World Cup knockout match.
Recent form tells a more nuanced story. France have won all five of their matches at this tournament, scoring 14 goals across those games against Senegal, Iraq, Norway, Sweden, and Paraguay. Morocco’s run is less dominant but no less convincing: three wins, two draws, no defeats, including that 3-0 result against Canada that showed their attacking depth. Kylian Mbappe leads the tournament’s scoring chart alongside Lionel Messi on seven goals, with Ousmane Dembele also in double figures on four. Morocco’s defensive record and their ability to absorb pressure before hitting on the counter remains their most reliable tool.
What makes this edition different
In 2022, Morocco were the story of the tournament. This time, they arrive as a known quantity: a side with proven tournament experience, a settled defensive structure under Halilhodzic, and a squad that has grown into knockout football. The 3-0 win over Canada in the round of 16 was their most convincing result of this tournament, and it will have raised confidence across the group.
For France, Didier Deschamps has a squad that looks deeper and more fluid than the 2022 vintage in some positions. Mbappe is in the kind of form that changes matches on his own, with seven goals in five games. Dembele has added four goals from wide areas, and the midfield around N’Golo Kante and Adrien Rabiot has provided a platform that has been largely untroubled in the group stage and round of 16. The question for Deschamps is whether to press or sit, given that Morocco are at their most dangerous when given space to transition.
This is also a quarter-final, not a semi-final, which changes the emotional calculus. In 2022, Morocco had already made history by the time they faced France. Here, they would need to beat France, and then win a semi-final, to match that achievement. The stakes for Morocco are different: a win here would not just be an upset, it would set up the possibility of going further than any African nation has ever gone. For France, losing to Morocco a second time at a World Cup in the space of four years would sting in a particular way that statistics alone cannot capture.
Key Stats
World Cup knockout bracket
Knockout results, aggregate scores across legs; winners in bold, penalty shootouts noted.
Head to Head
Our Prediction
France’s depth and Mbappe’s form make them the clearer favourite on paper, and the 2022 result adds psychological weight on Morocco’s side of the ledger. That said, Morocco have shown this tournament that they can hold shape against top opposition and hurt teams on the break, as the Canada result showed. Expect a tighter match than the 2022 semi-final, but France’s firepower across multiple positions is difficult to contain across 90 minutes. A France win, though not comfortable, is the more likely outcome.