
There is no need to hype up the France vs Morocco Quarter-Final Match Preview as it does the job for itself. The top-ranked team in the world will face the sixth-placed side on Thursday at Boston Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, for a repeat of the memorable 2022 semi-final. Four years ago, France came to an end to Morocco's historic bid for the final four. Atlas Lions have returned to the final eight for the second consecutive World Cup, and they're not underdogs with a hope of a fairy tale this time, they're one of the genuine threats to the final.
The main narrative leading up to the opening of the season is easily summarized and difficult to resolve: can Morocco's defense finally check Kylian Mbappé? The victor will advance to the semis and face a shot at July 19 in the MetLife Stadium final - and, for Morocco, more than just a Fifa World Cup bracket advance. It would be a measure of revenge, and proof that their 2022 breakthrough was no one-off.
| Detail | Info |
| Tournament | FIFA World Cup 2026 |
| Stage | Quarter-Final |
| Date | Thursday, July 9, 2026 |
| Venue | Boston Stadium (Gillette Stadium), Foxborough, Massachusetts |
| Bracket Context | Winner advances to the semi-finals, one step from the July 19 Final at MetLife Stadium |
France has been the most complete team of the tournament so far. Group winners Les Bleus defeated Senegal, Iraq and Norway to set up their Round of 32 victory over Sweden, which they eventually sealed with a penalty from Mbappé against a resolute opposition, but were forced to scorch Paraguay 3-0 in the Round of 16 after a hard fought match. That was the sixth consecutive victory for France; the only other team left in the game who can say that. For Didier Deschamps' side, it's the third straight appearance in the semi-finals, and the first time a side has made the final four in three consecutive tournaments.
Strongest point: An attack that has lots of match-winners. Mbappé has already netted seven goals in the tournament, and is tied for top Golden Boot honours with Lionel Messi and Erling Haaland, while reigning Ballon d'Or winner Ousmane Dembele has also provided plenty of creativity.
Morocco swept through Group play to draw Brazil and comfortably beat Haiti and Scotland, sending Canada home 3-0 in the Round of 16. Since this year's Africa Cup of Nations, with new head coach Mohamed Ouahbi replacing Walid Regragui, Morocco have changed their style, removing the classic goalscorer from their midfield and opting to use a false nine with Ismael Saibari the dominant player. It is something Ouahbi has been proud of as the Atlas Lions bcame the first African team to make it to the quarter-finals in back-to-back World Cups.
Biggest worry: Centre-half-forward Saibari has limited availability after picking up a hamstring ailment against Canada, and is a question mark for Thursday.
France vs England last played together in the second semi-final of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, in which France lost 2-0 upstairs. Theo Hernández opened the scoring inside five minutes and substitute Randal Kolo Muani was able to put the game away late on with an assist for Mbappé, who was much involved in the game's build-up to both goals. Morocco dominated possession for a long time after the break, building a golden opportunity with an overhead kick off the crossbar from the hands of Jawad El Yamiq, but they failed to convert. Morocco's injuries in the warm up (Nayef Aguerd) and at half time (captain Romain Saïss) costled them against a clinical French side.
What France got right: They struck first, took the lead patiently and played with Mbappé in tempo to provide the game sealing opportunity.
What Morocco got right: Was equal with France in possession and got in on set-pieces to put them on the scoreboard – they could prove a real threat to the eventual runners-up on the ground.
The two countries have held just a few high-level football games and France won their last major game against them in the 2022 semi final. The two federations don't have much history against one another to call on, and Thursday's game comes without a lot of baggage in the mix — so it's all happening right now.
France usually play in a system with a double pivot that screens the back four, and pace is thrown up on both sides, including a free left foot for Mbappé. They don't press the ball in the traditional way, but rather at key moments, and they don't sit on the ball for too long; this is how they managed to score against Paraguay. It's also been a quiet strength with Theo Hernández's goal against Morocco in 2022 coming from a well-coordinated set piece.
The defensive compactness and patience is the principle of Morocco's organization under Ouahbi. The double pivot are a workhorse to protect the backline and the false nine for Saibari (or his replacement) is meant to connect midfield and attack without over extending the defensive line. Morocco need to be disciplined at tracking players beyond the ball and long sitting with faith in their counter attacking options, especially down the right, to put France under pressure in transition.
Mbappe is still France's most lethal weapon and for good reason. He's played a major part in a series of France's goals with a combination of top-level pace and one-on-one finishing ability that has kept him in the Golden Boot debate with Messi and Haaland this tournament. His ability to move off the ball and drift into half-channels between full-back and centre-back is usually what gives him the space to convert a half chance into a goal.
Morocco's best chance to contain him is probably not a man-marking individual, but a coordinated effort: a compact back line that will not get cut off in one-on-one duels, full-backs that will play him in to cover, and midfield discipline that will prevent him from having space fed in behind. Now the centre-backs and goalkeeper Yassine Bounou have displayed some quality in this tournament in Morocco, the big question is whether or not they will be able to do that for 90 minutes against a player of Mbappé's quality.
France (4-2-3-1, approx): Maignan; Koundé, Upamecano, Saliba, Theo Hernández; Tchouaméni, Rabiot; Dembélé, Olise, Barcola; Mbappé.
Morocco (approx. 4-2-3-1/4-3-3 hybrid): Bounou, Mazraoui, Diop, Riad, Aguerd/back-line cover, Aynaoui, Bouaddi, Ounahi, Diaz, Khannouss, Saibari (fitness pending) or a like-for-like false-nine deputy.
Both choices are indicative of the forms both teams have found in the knockout stage, but Morocco's premier line is dependent on a key late fitness decision on Saibari.
Morocco will play in a cagey opening phase and will be looking to play tight and deny space in behind, while France will play the game by extension and possession to slowly gain a foothold. France's attacking depth and Morocco's doubts about Saibari's fitness means a tactical advantage for Les Bleus, but it's also a game of discipline and counter-attacking pace, meaning it's more likely to be a low-scoring duel than a rout. Winning by a narrow margin in the 2-1 or 2-0 bracket appears to be the most balanced result considering current form — but Morocco have proven they will play with anyone still in the draw in this tournament.
These should be used as a guide and research point, not promises for responsible bettors.
The victor of this semi-final will now take on the victor of the remaining top-half semi-final series to progress to the July 19 final at MetLife Stadium. Argentina, Spain and other historic powers are also alive in the final eight, so the road to the final is still very open, but France is on a three-game winning streak in the semi-final stage of the tournament, something only achieved by two teams in tournament history.
It is a re-match of a historic semi-final, a true Golden Boot race, a man (Ouahbi) keen to outdo his predecessor and a clash of defensive wills between two different styles. This is arguably the must-watch match of the round with the addition of the upsets potential of a Morocco side who had already carved themselves a place in African football history once.
Four years after France's fairy-tale run in Qatar came to a close in Morocco, the two face off once again with bigger stakes at play. The big question here is whether or not Morocco's defense can finally put a stop to Kylian Mbappé, but Morocco's own attacking ability and defensive self-control makes that unlikely to be a foregone conclusion in this quarter-final. Regardless of how it breaks, this is one of the most memorable ties of the FIFA World Cup 2026 quarter-finals.
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France are the obvious favourite to win given their unbeatable streak, attacking strength and the Moroccans' compact defence could make a surprise possible.
That's a possibility but challenging - Morocco will need co-ordinated defending in the back line and midfield as opposed to one defender alone.
France's Kylian Mbappé and Ousmane Dembélé, Morocco's Achraf Hakimi and Yassine Bounou.
A 4-2-3-1 formation with Mbappé in the lead with Dembele and Barcola/Olise on the wings.
A very small four-two-three-one-four-three hybrid, where the forward position will be based on Ismael Saibari's fitness.
The most popular bets are for France to win, goals markets for a total of 2.5 goals and if Mbappé is an any-time goalscorer.
Kickoff will be at 4 p.m. ET / 8 p.m. GMT on Thursday, July 9, 2026 at Boston Stadium in Foxborough.
The top half quarter-finals remain largely unchanged with the winner of the other top half quarter-final to face the winner, with several traditional powers remaining in the final eight.
Bet responsibly. Odds and lineups may change at any time, please check with official sources before betting.





