Morocco enter the FIFA World Cup 2026 with one of Africa’s strongest tournament reputations, but their final squad still needs the right balance of experience, form and tactical clarity before a demanding Group C campaign.
The Atlas Lions have been drawn with Brazil, Scotland and Haiti. It is a group with a blockbuster opener, a physically demanding European test and a final match where Morocco may be expected to take control.

Morocco World Cup 2026 fixtures
| Match | Date | Venue |
|---|---|---|
| Brazil v Morocco | 13 June 2026 | New York New Jersey Stadium |
| Scotland v Morocco | 19 June 2026 | Boston Stadium |
| Morocco v Haiti | 24 June 2026 | Atlanta Stadium |
The fixture order is important. Morocco begin against Brazil, which means they must be ready immediately. There is no gentle opening into the tournament.
Why Brazil is the biggest early test
Brazil will test Morocco’s defensive organisation, concentration and ability to survive pressure without losing ambition. Morocco’s 2022 World Cup run showed that they can frustrate elite teams, but 2026 will ask a different question: can they combine defensive discipline with more controlled attacking output
Against Brazil, Morocco may need to defend compactly, protect central spaces and choose moments to break forward. Full-backs, midfield screening and first passes after regaining possession will all matter.
Scotland could decide the group path
The second match against Scotland may be the one that defines Morocco’s knockout chances. Scotland are likely to make the game physical, direct and competitive across midfield.
Morocco cannot approach that fixture as only a technical contest. They will need second-ball aggression, set-piece concentration and patience. If they leave the Brazil match with a positive result, Scotland becomes a chance to take control of the group. If they lose the opener, it becomes a pressure match.
Haiti and the danger of expectation
Morocco will likely be favourites against Haiti, but that brings its own pressure. World Cup matches against underdogs can become uncomfortable when early chances are missed.
The Atlas Lions need a squad that can handle different types of matches: deep defending, physical battles and games where they must dominate the ball.
Key names for Morocco
Achraf Hakimi remains one of Morocco’s most important players. His pace, experience and attacking output from full-back can change the shape of a match. If selected and fully fit, he gives Morocco an elite outlet on the right side.
Yassine Bounou is another major figure. Tournament football often turns on goalkeeping moments, and Morocco already know the value of having a calm, experienced goalkeeper in high-pressure matches.
Sofyan Amrabat’s midfield role could again be central if selected. Morocco need ball-winning, positioning and emotional control in a group where Brazil and Scotland will test the midfield in very different ways.
Youssef En-Nesyri offers penalty-box presence and aerial threat. Against teams that defend deep or in matches decided by crosses and set pieces, that profile can be vital.
Brahim Diaz, if selected, gives Morocco creativity between the lines. His ability to receive in tight spaces could help the Atlas Lions avoid becoming too predictable in attack.
Ismael Saibari and other emerging names could also matter because Morocco cannot rely only on the 2022 generation. Tournament squads need fresh legs and players capable of changing the rhythm from the bench.
Tactical outlook
Morocco’s tactical challenge is balance. Their 2022 identity was built on defensive organisation, compact lines and ruthless transition moments. That identity still matters, but opponents now respect Morocco differently.
In 2026, teams may prepare more carefully for their counter-attacks. That means Morocco need more variety: controlled possession phases, better final-third combinations and set-piece efficiency.
Wide areas will be important. If Hakimi is involved, Morocco can create overloads on the right. On the opposite side, the team needs reliable defensive cover and enough attacking threat to prevent opponents from tilting their pressure.
What the final squad must provide
Morocco’s final list should ideally include:
- Strong full-back depth
- At least two reliable midfield ball-winners
- Creative players who can break compact blocks
- Aerial threat for set pieces
- Bench pace for late transitions
The Atlas Lions have the reputation and player pool to progress, but Group C leaves little room for slow starts.
Related World Cup coverage
- Morocco World Cup 2026 guide
- African teams at the World Cup
- African teams World Cup fixtures
- World Cup squads tracker
Sources checked: FIFA Morocco team profile and FIFA World Cup 2026 match schedule. Final squad and late injury updates remain subject to official confirmation. Official tournament information is available through FIFA’s World Cup hub.