Azzedine Ounahi was the difference at NRG Stadium on Saturday, scoring in the 50th and 82nd minute to put Morocco firmly in control before Samir Rahimi added a third in stoppage time. Canada, playing on home soil, never really threatened after the break and were undone by a Morocco side that did far more with far less possession of the ball. The Atlas Lions advance to the quarterfinals, while Jesse Marsch’s side exits a tournament they had hoped to make a deep run in front of their own fans.

Key Moments
- 20′, Redouane Halhal picked up the first yellow card of the match for a roughing foul, an early sign of the physical edge that would define a scrappy first half.
- 40′, Tensions boiled over near the end of the first half, with Achraf Hakimi and Canada’s Richie Laryea both cautioned for unsportsmanlike conduct in the same minute.
- 45′, A chaotic final minute of the first half saw both Ounahi and Bilal El Khannouss pick up yellow cards, leaving Morocco walking into the break with three bookings.
- 50′, Ounahi opened the scoring five minutes into the second half with a composed finish, breaking the deadlock the match had been stuck in despite both sides’ ill-discipline.
- 82′, Ounahi doubled his tally, finishing calmly to put Morocco 2-0 up and effectively end the tie as a contest.
- 90′, S. Rahimi completed the scoreline with a late goal in injury time, rounding off a polished second-half performance from Morocco.

Tactical Breakdown
Morocco controlled possession for most of the match, finishing with 55% of the ball and completing 82% of their passes (389 from 472 attempted). What made them dangerous was their efficiency: they produced only 5 total shots but put 4 on target, converting three of them. Their xG of 0.78 was actually lower than Canada’s 0.86, which tells the story of a Canadian side that created volume without clinical edge. Morocco played through the lines with patience in a 4-2-3-1, with Ounahi operating in the No. 10 space and repeatedly finding pockets of space behind Canada’s midfield block.
Canada set up in a 4-4-2 that gave them structural compactness in the first half, and the scoreless 45 minutes reflected that. Jesse Marsch’s side had 11 corner kicks across the game and 7 shots inside the box, but Yassine Bounou was rarely tested in any meaningful way, making 3 saves. Once Morocco took the lead in the 50th minute, Canada chased the game and opened up, which played into the Atlas Lions’ hands. The triple substitution from Marsch at 63 minutes (Oluwaseyi on) failed to shift the momentum.
Canada’s undoing was twofold: a lack of composure in front of goal (only 3 shots on target from 11 attempts) and persistent fouling that disrupted their own rhythm. Four yellow cards, 24 fouls committed, and a Jonathan David caution in the 43rd minute for holding all pointed to a team under pressure rather than one imposing its will. Once Ounahi struck twice in the second half, there was no path back.
Player Ratings
World Cup knockout bracket
Knockout results, aggregate scores across legs; winners in bold, penalty shootouts noted.
Head to Head
Verdict
Morocco advance to the 2026 World Cup quarterfinals with a result that flatters them slightly on paper (their xG was 0.78) but reflects a team that knows how to win when it matters. For Canada, eliminated on home soil, it is a bitter exit from a tournament they co-hosted and had circled as a genuine opportunity. Ounahi’s performance will be the talking point going forward; how far this Morocco side can go may depend on him staying on the right side of the referee after two yellow cards in 90 minutes.


