AFCON
Morocco Ushers in 100-Day Countdown to AFCON 2025

BY KUNLE SOLAJA, who just returned from Morocco.
The Confederation of African Football (CAF) and host nation Morocco today are expected to officially launched the 100-day countdown to the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON), a tournament that carries the dreams and passions of an entire continent.
The 35th edition of Africa’s premier football competition will be historic in many ways. For the first time, the event will be staged in December, with the opening whistle on 21 December 2025, and the final to be played on 18 January 2026 — the first AFCON to straddle two calendar years.
It is also the first year-ending AFCON tournament.
Morocco’s Big Stage
Far from treating AFCON as a routine tournament, Morocco is positioning it as a continental festival of football and culture.
Stadiums in Rabat, Casablanca, Marrakech, Tangier, Agadir and Fes have undergone significant makeovers, with some described as “elegant and regal” in readiness to host the 24 qualified nations.
The massively upgraded Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium
Virtually every sector of the kingdom has keyed into the tournament. The Moroccan National Tourist Office (MNTO) has rolled out aggressive global campaigns, spotlighting the country as a vibrant hub for African tourism.
The efforts appear to be paying off: global travel platform Kayak recently ranked Morocco 6th among the world’s best countries to visit in 2025 — a recognition expected to grow as AFCON nears.
Beyond Football
For Morocco, the Africa Cup of Nations is not just about goals and glory. Authorities see it as a catalyst for economic growth, tourism, and international reputation. CAF President Patrice Motsepe has repeatedly described Morocco as a “reliable partner” in showcasing Africa’s capacity to host world-class sporting events.
The tournament also arrives at a symbolic moment, with African football enjoying renewed global visibility following Morocco’s trailblazing semi-final run at the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar.
A Continental Invitation
For African fans, the 100-day countdown is more than a date circled on the calendar. It is an invitation to dream, to hope, and to rally behind nations seeking continental supremacy.
For some players, AFCON 2025 will represent a final chance to etch their names into history; for nations, it will be an opportunity to unify their people under the banner of the beautiful game.
As the clock ticks down, all eyes turn to Morocco — to see whether AFCON 2025 can deliver not only thrilling football, but also a legacy of progress for the continent.
The Host Cities at a Glance
- Rabat – Opening match, one semi-final, and the final at the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium.
- Casablanca – Home to Mohammed V Stadium, one of Africa’s most iconic football venues.
- Marrakech – Known for its tourist appeal, ready to merge culture with football fever.
- Tangier – Northern gateway city with a modern stadium overlooking the Mediterranean.
- Agadir – A coastal resort city offering fans sun, beaches, and football.
- Fes – Morocco’s historic city adds cultural weight to the AFCON spectacle.
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AFCON
Where Legends Live Forever: Inside Morocco’s New Football Museum

By KUNLE SOLAJA, Rabat, Morocco
In Maâmoura, just outside Rabat, the spirit of Moroccan football now has a permanent home.
Nestled within the same grounds that host FIFA’s Regional Office for Africa and the state-of-the-art Mohammed VI Football Complex, the Royal Moroccan Football Federation (FRMF) has unveiled a national museum.
The experience at the Moroccan Football Museum is captivating.
It feels less like a building and more like a living, breathing chronicle of the game.
Stepping inside is like opening a storybook written in green, red, and white. These are the colours of a kingdom.
This kingdom has always seen football as more than just a pastime.
Here, history is not simply preserved, it is staged with drama and reverence, each exhibit designed to remind visitors that Morocco’s passion for the game has shaped its identity for more than a century.
The museum, inaugurated in March 2024 after three years of meticulous work, is the brainchild of the FRMF president Fouzi Lekjaa. Beyond football, he is Morocco’s Minister Delegate for the Budget.
Fouzi Lekjaa whose brainchild is the football museum
To bring his vision of a football museum to life, Lekjaa assembled a scientific committee of 22 renowned researchers and journalists, ensuring that the narrative of Moroccan football would be told with both precision and poetry.
“It is a project for generations,” explained deputy curator Oumay Walid, her voice carrying equal parts pride and responsibility as she guided guests past glittering trophies and fragile black-and-white photographs.

Deputy curator Oumay Walid, explains what the football museum is all about
The architecture itself feels like part of the exhibition. It includes 1,350 square metres of permanent display space and a 310-square-metre gallery for temporary shows. There is also an intimate 42-seat projection hall, VIP lounges, and a documentation centre.
Even the museum store, lined with Moroccan football apparel, speaks to a modern vision where sport and culture are intertwined with commerce.
But it is within the thematic journey of the museum that the soul of Moroccan football truly unfolds. Six distinct zones map out a century of triumphs and trials.
The opening section, The Royal Vision, pays tribute to King Mohammed VI and his predecessors, who elevated football to a pillar of national identity.
From there, The Pioneers transports visitors back to Morocco’s earliest victories and the figures who first carried the Atlas Lions’ roar beyond their borders.

The museum captures the past and presents the present.
The mood shifts in The Land of Excellence, where shimmering displays celebrate national and club successes from the 1950s to the present day.
It is a room heavy with pride, charting the ascent that culminated in Morocco’s historic World Cup semi-final run in Qatar 2022.
The Hall of Fame is a quieter, more intimate space, yet perhaps the most emotional: a gallery of players, coaches, administrators, and even fans whose devotion shaped the narrative of Moroccan football.
Nearby, Prestigious Moments relives the tournaments hosted on Moroccan soil, the international stars who graced its stadiums, and the milestones that confirmed Morocco’s place on the global stage.
Finally, Objects of Memory anchors the entire experience. Behind glass, battered leather footballs, scuffed boots, and sepia-toned match programmes whisper of sweat-soaked afternoons and nights when an entire nation held its breath.

Past national trophies are well preserved in encased glass shelves.
Enormous audiovisual screens loom above, replaying goals that once made the streets erupt in song.
What makes the museum compelling is not only what it displays but what it represents. Since 1906, football in Morocco has been more than a game; it has been a mirror of society, a theatre of dreams, and a unifier across generations.
By curating this legacy with such care, Morocco positions itself as Africa’s custodian of football heritage—a country determined to show the continent that football is both memory and future, emotion and enterprise.
As visitors step back into the Rabat sunlight, the symbolism is impossible to miss.
Morocco may be Africa’s top-ranked footballing nation, but here it proclaims something greater: it is a Kingdom of Light, illuminating the way football can inspire, educate, and even fuel economies.
The national museum is not simply a monument to the past—it is a beacon for the continent’s footballing future.
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AFCON
From Fortress to Football Theatre: Marrakech’s Grand Stade Gets a Makeover

BY KUNLE SOLAJA, Marrakech, Morocco.
At the northern entrance of Marrakech, Morocco’s fabled “Red City,” rises a sporting fortress that fuses history, culture, and modern innovation.
The Grand Stade de Marrakech, inaugurated in 2011, is set to host eight matches of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON), including a potentially high-profile semi-final on January 10, 2026.
From a distance, the stadium could be mistaken for an ancient citadel. Its brown, earthy tones echo the city’s centuries-old red walls and the terracotta skyline that has earned Marrakech its evocative nickname of “Red City”.
Four towers, standing at each corner of the structure, are fitted with halogen lamps that cast a golden glow over the lush green pitch at night.
According to stadium officials, the design intentionally mirrors local architecture and fortifications — a subtle blend of tradition and modernity.
The Grand Stade de Marrakech, sits like a fortress at the northern entrance of Marrakech
What makes the Grand Stade truly unique is its rectangular form combined with elliptical athletics tracks — the first of its kind in the world.
Conceived by the Italian firm Gregotti Associati International, the arena comfortably seats 41,000 fans and projects both strength and elegance.
Managed by the state company SONARGES (La Société Nationale de Réalisation et de Gestion des Équipements Sportifs), it has recently undergone significant upgrades to meet CAF standards ahead of the continental showpiece.
Regional director Karaoui Morad explained that renovations have been planned in two phases.
The first, already completed, introduced more comfortable seating, two modern Videomatrix scoreboards, new eco-friendly lighting systems that reduce energy use by 60 per cent, and advanced security cameras.
Regional director of SONARGES, Karaoui Morad (Right) explains the technical aspects of the upgrade of Grand Stade de Marrakech.
The second phase, scheduled after AFCON, will prepare the stadium for the 2030 FIFA World Cup, which Morocco will co-host.
This transformation will see the pitch lowered by 10 metres to expand capacity to 46,000 seats, the removal of the running tracks to bring fans closer to the action, and the addition of a full roof canopy.
For now, though, the stadium is set to write a new chapter in its history. On AFCON’s opening days, South Africa and Angola will christen the arena with its first-ever AFCON match.
From that moment, Marrakech’s desert fortress will not only echo with the chants of football fans but also stand as a symbol of Morocco’s growing stature on the world sporting stage.
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AFCON
Nature Meets Architecture: Grand Stade d’Agadir Prepares for AFCON 2025

By KUNLE SOLAJA, Agadir, Morocco.
At the foot of Morocco’s mighty Atlas Mountains, where the country’s national football team—the Atlas Lions—draws their proud name, rises a stadium that mirrors its surroundings.
The Grand Stade d’Agadir, one of the venues for the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations this December, is not just a sports arena; it is a bold attempt to blend nature with architecture.
From afar, the stadium seems carved out of the brown slopes of the mountains. Its steep exterior walls, painted in earthy tones, echo the rugged terrain around it.
Step inside, however, and the scene changes: a sea of green seats blends seamlessly with the lush playing turf, interrupted only by pockets of red in the grand pavilion—a subtle nod to Morocco’s national colours.
On Monday, stadium director Hitcham Allouli revealed that while the current capacity of 42,480 will remain for AFCON, a more ambitious second phase of renovation will follow in preparation for the 2030 FIFA World Cup, which Morocco will co-host.
Grand Stade d’Agadir director, Hitcham Alloul with Sports Village Square’s Kunle Solaja
“The first phase focused on minor upgrades—improving vegetation around the arena, expanding parking space, and adding modern facilities like ticketing and accreditation booths,” Allouli explained. “But the next stage will be transformative.”
That transformation includes lowering the pitch by 10 metres to increase capacity by about 4,000 seats, removing the athletics track to bring fans closer to the action, and extending the upper terrace into a fully covered sports city.
The shape of what Grand Stade de Agadir will look like towards the 20230 World Cup.
The model follows the grandeur of the Grand Stade de Tanger, Morocco’s northern showpiece.
Security has also been modernised, with the introduction of facial recognition cameras, aligning the stadium with international standards.
The locker room at the Grand Stade Agadir
The journey of the Grand Stade d’Agadir reflects Morocco’s long quest for global football recognition.
Originally designed as part of the country’s 2010 World Cup bid, construction began in 2003 but stalled after South Africa won hosting rights.
Work resumed in 2007, and by October 2013, the arena was complete, making its debut on the global stage during the FIFA Club World Cup.
Designed by Moroccan architect Saad Benkirane in collaboration with Gregotti Associati International, the stadium is an architectural ode to its environment.
Its sloped exterior elevations mimic the Atlas foothills, while its interior is tailored for international sport and comfort: a natural grass pitch, a media tribune for 288 journalists, 12 commentary boxes, three VVIP zones (each seating 250 guests), and 12 luxury lounges that can accommodate 300.
Players’ facilities include modern locker rooms, ice baths, and saunas.
As AFCON 2025 draws near, the Grand Stade d’Agadir is set to welcome Africa’s finest footballers while showcasing Morocco’s ability to fuse natural beauty with modern sporting ambition.
Its mountainside silhouette will remind fans and players alike that football here is played under the watchful gaze of the Atlas.
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