World Cup
Argentina publication, Olé hails Morocco as ‘Land of Football’

Olé, an Argentine national daily sports newspaper published in Buenos Aires has hailed Morocco as an ultimate destination for football and football competitions.
After an explorative visit to the North African kingdom, the publication concluded that Moroccans have almost the same passion for football as the Argentines.
“The African country feels football like we do and is preparing to host the 2030 World Cup.”
Continuing, the publication asserts that “there is a champion in every neighbourhood” is a slogan that runs through the streets of Rabat, the capital of Morocco and is also heard in Casablanca, Marrakech, Tangier and every city in the North African country, which will host the African Cup of Nations and the 2030 World Cup.
Olé’s correspondent was able to walk among mosques, stadiums under construction, La Medina (historic centre), the Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts, monuments and many – many with emphasis – football pitches.
Football was palpable. “There, as here, the sport of football is in the air: wherever you look, there is one, be it in a square, on the beach, on a 5-a-side football pitch or in the incredible high-level training centre. Morocco dreams big and is preparing to make history.”
The 2030 World Cup will begin in the South American trio Argentina-Uruguay-Paraguay, with one match in each country, and the rest will be played in the European trio Spain-Morocco-Portugal.
Morocco is preparing for the African Cup of Nations, which it will host in late 2025 and early 2026, and also for the 2030 World Cup, and Olé was there touring the fields that are being built: Tangier, Hassan II and Prince Moulay Abdellah. Video: @maxifriggieri
Six countries, three continents. As unprecedented as it is culturally varied.
Olé emphasised that “Morocco is precisely an example of this conjunction of customs: it is a land where Arab, African and also Western history converge. There is everything.”
Four languages are spoken normally: French, Arabic, Spanish and English.
“Their religion is Islam, but with an interpretation of the Koran is not as radical as seen in other parts of the Arab world.
“The role of women is extremely important. They pray, yes. There are mosques, of course. But everyone is welcome. For example, football does not differentiate between languages, ideologies or religions.”
In Morocco, the form of government is a monarchy where King Mohammed VI has been the leader for 26 years. “His vision of the country’s growth goes hand in hand with sporting development, with football as its banner”, reports Olé.
For example, one of the leaders the king trusts is Fouzi Lekjaa, president of the Royal Moroccan Football Federation (FRMF), member of the FIFA Council and Minister of the Budget of Morocco.
“We can be champions in 2026, Fouzi Lekjaa tells Olé
He spoke to Olé and made clear the ambition of the Atlas Lions:
“We can be champions in 2026,” he said, without waiting for ‘his’ Cup in 2030.
In Qatar 2022, Morocco made history. They broke the “mental barrier” – as Fouzi says – of just going to compete and reached the semi-finals, winning their group over Croatia and Belgium, eliminating Spain, Cristiano Ronaldo ‘s Portugal and falling, controversially, to France.
Argentina then avenged them. According to Olé, Argentines and Moroccans were the two most important fan bases at the last World Cup.
Morocco and a connection with Argentina
Continuing, the publication reports that “history links Argentina and Morocco somewhat in terms of football.”
There are three friendlies between the teams, all with Albiceleste victories: 3-1 in 1994 in Salta with a goal from Diego Maradona, 1-0 in 2004 in Casablanca (Bielsa was the coach) and 1-0 in 2019 in Tangier (already with Scaloni in charge).
But that’s not all. Diego played a Peace Match in 2015 in Marrakech and another for charity in El Aiaiún (Western Sahara) in 2016.
Messi also visited the country: he scored three goals in a friendly in 2012, where Barcelona beat Raja Casablanca 8-0, and he also went on vacation to Marrakech with his family in 2023.
Leo also sent a post-earthquake message in 2023. The only stain was at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, a chaotic match that Morocco won 2-1, with controversies and unusual situations.
In Argentina, too, a phrase by Carlos Salvador Bilardo is remembered, when he said in 1990: “I said it in ’75 when we went to play the Mohamed Cup in Morocco and I said ‘this is where the future of football is. It’s not in Europe, in South America, it’s not in Asia…’ Because people still play.” That statement, from a man ahead of his time, was seen live and in person by Olé. Yes, in Morocco they play football.
Stadiums, infrastructures and academies
Olé was able to see firsthand the construction of stadiums, some remodelled for the African Cup of Nations and others from scratch for the 2030 World Cup. The Grand Stade Hassan II is Morocco’s big novelty.
The Tangier stadium is under renovation.
It will be the largest in the world, with a capacity for 115 thousand people, and is the best to host the World Cup final.
Located on the outskirts of Casablanca, the first phase of construction began, which is excavation and filling. It is surrounded by a forest and will be more than a stadium: it will have hotels, a shopping centre and a station for the high-speed train. The design will be that of an Arab tent.
The Grand Stade de Tangier is being refurbished to hold 75,000 spectators. It is expected to be ready for use in July 2025. It will have hybrid grass, a roof on each stand, 4 changing rooms, VIP lounges and a car park for 5,000 places. The Stade Prince Moulay Abdellah is in Rabat, the capital. It will have a capacity of 68,700 people. It is expected to open in March/April this year.
Travelling around the country, you can also see machinery improving highways, the construction of the largest hospital in Africa, as well as hotels (there are interest-free loans to improve them and, in the process, create jobs), universities… Who is investing?
Many places, such as the United Arab Emirates, Spain, Qatar, France, Saudi Arabia and the United States, as the main ones.
The Mohammed VI Academy Football Complex is a top-level training centre. It has 11 pitches, five hotels, training for players and referees, a general clinic, rehabilitation specialists, the headquarters of FIFA in Africa and even a museum. Real Madrid has its training camp there. It is, of course, the home of the local national teams.
A selection that is a flag
Map of Morocco
Olé reports that Morocco is tradition and innovation, both in what we have been writing about and in its football in the Atlas Lions, who do not lose the culture of their game and improve it with players in the main leagues.
They are not satisfied with what they did in the last World Cup and they are going for more. To do that, they must first qualify for the 2026 World Cup. Africa has nine direct tickets and one to the play-offs.
The qualification is divided into nine groups and the winner of each goes to the World Cup. Morocco leads Group E, having won all three of its matches (there are eight matches in this phase).
They were 2-0 against Tanzania, 2-1 against Zambia and 6-0 against Congo. They are on track to play in their seventh World Cup. Before that, they will seek their second African Cup of Nations: they won it in 1976 and will host it this year.
They are currently 14th in the FIFA rankings, the best African team in the ranking. The extra fact is that the country has a team that will play in the unprecedented Club World Cup this year: Wydad Casablanca, which is in the group with Manchester City, Juventus and Al-Ain.
–Olé
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World Cup
Mahrez says 2026 World Cup will be his last as Algeria qualify

Riyad Mahrez ruled out extending his international career into his forties like Cristiano Ronaldo, declaring the 2026 World Cup will be his last after guiding Algeria to a fifth appearance at the tournament.
The 34-year-old winger, who plays for Al-Ahli – the reigning Asian champions – scored once and assisted twice in Algeria’s 3-0 win over Somalia in the penultimate round of African qualifying, securing top spot in Group G and a place at next year’s finals in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
“This will be my last World Cup. I’m not Ronaldo (40),” Mahrez told Algerian media.
“I’ll give everything I have to represent Algeria in the best possible way.”
Mahrez, who turns 35 in February, now has 33 goals in 106 international appearances. He praised his teammates, coach, and fans for their support, saying the team “dominated from start to finish” and that the focus now shifts to the Africa Cup of Nations.
“I thank God for this important win,” he said. “I’m happy to have helped with two assists, but the most important thing is that we’ve officially qualified.”
Algeria have now qualified for the World Cup for the fifth time following appearances in 1982, 1986, 2010 and 2014. Their best performance came in 2014 in Brazil, where they reached the round of 16 for the first time before falling to eventual champions Germany in extra time.
-Reuters
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World Cup
Cote d’Ivoire, Senegal edge closer to booking World Cup berths

An avalanche of goals for the Cote d’Ivoire and Senegal on Friday put both teams on the brink of qualifying for the 2026 World Cup, which they can secure with home success in their last group matches next week.
African champions Cote d’Ivoire beat the Seychelles 7-0 away to stay one point ahead of Gabon in the Group F standings and they will qualify if they win their final game at home to Kenya on Tuesday.
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang scored all four goals for Gabon, before being sent off, as they came from behind to beat the Gambia 4-3 in a thrill-a-minute affair in Nairobi that kept alive their hopes.
Senegal maintained their two-point advantage in Group B over the Democratic Republic of Congo as they beat South Sudan 5-0, while the Congolese recorded a 1-0 triumph in Togo. Senegal will qualify for a third successive World Cup if they beat neighbours Mauritania at home on Tuesday.
In Friday’s later matches, Aiyegun Tosin scored late to put Benin two points clear in Group C with a 1-0 victory in Rwanda.
Benin have 17 points while South Africa, who drew 0-0 with neighbours Zimbabwe, sit on 15.
Nigeria moved back into contention with 14 points following a 2-1 away victory over Lesotho with a penalty from captain William Troost-Ekong and a late effort from substitute Akor Adams.
The group will be decided on Tuesday when Benin go away to Nigeria and South Africa host Rwanda.
Ismaila Sarr gave Senegal a 29th-minute lead as Iliman Ndiaye delivered a cross to the back post from the right flank and the Everton winger was also the provider for Sadio Mane to score early in the second half.
Sarr then scored his second goal while Nicolas Jackson and Pape Cherif Ndiaye also found the net.
Cedric Bakambu broke away after an interception in the seventh minute to win the game for DR Congo in Lome, moving them to 19 points, two behind Senegal.
IVORIAN OPENED SCORING WITH GIFT PENALTY
The Ivorians were always expected to run riot against the Seychelles, who are 203rd out of 210 countries in the FIFA rankings, but were handed a gift of a penalty after six minutes, which Ibrahim Sangare converted to get things going.
After that followed goals for Emmanuel Agbadou, Oumar Diakite and Evann Guessand before halftime, and Yan Diomande, Simon Adingra and Franck Kessie after the break.
The 36-year-old Aubameyang kept alive Gabon’s hopes in a remarkable individual performance with two goals in each half before a needless red card late in the game.
He was booked for breaking the corner flag as he kicked it in celebration and then collected a second caution for a petulant shove on an opponent that means he is suspended for their last game at home to Burundi on Tuesday.
Already qualified Tunisia had a 6-0 win over minnows Sao Tome e Principe in Group H with two goals each for Mohamed Ali Ben Romndhane and Elias Saad.
The final round of African group qualifiers start on Sunday and conclude on Tuesday
-Reuters
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World Cup
BREAKING! Lookman Suspended for Crucial Benin Clash

BY KUNLE SOLAJA.
Nigeria’s Super Eagles have suffered a major setback ahead of their decisive 2026 World Cup qualifier against Group C leaders Benin Republic on Tuesday in Uyo, as star forward Ademola Lookman will miss the encounter due to suspension.
Lookman, one of Nigeria’s standout performers in the qualifiers so far, picked up a second yellow card of the campaign during Friday’s 2–1 win over Lesotho in Polokwane, South Africa. The booking automatically rules him out of the must-win tie against Benin.
The incident occurred in the 64th minute when Lookman, after being harshly tackled in midfield by a Lesotho defender, reacted by body-checking his opponent. Chadian referee Alhadi Allaou Mahamat deemed the action as retaliation and promptly issued a yellow card.
It was Lookman’s second caution of the qualifying series, the first coming in the 18th minute of last month’s away match against South Africa. The cumulative bookings have now triggered an automatic one-match suspension.
Lookman’s absence is a huge blow for Nigeria, who must defeat Benin to keep their World Cup qualification hopes alive.
The Atalanta forward has been instrumental in recent matches, contributing pace, creativity, and attacking spark to the Super Eagles’ frontline.
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