For 45 minutes on Saturday night, it looked like Canada might author the biggest shock of this World Cup. By the final whistle, it was Morocco reminding everyone why they carry the pedigree of 2022 semifinalists, dismantling the co-hosts 3-0 to book a quarterfinal date with the winner of France and Paraguay.
The result ends Canada’s remarkable run and, with it, the co-hosts’ collective interest in the tournament, but it does nothing to diminish what Jesse Marsch’s side accomplished simply by being here, in a knockout game, on home soil, in front of a raucous, red-and-white-flecked crowd of 68,777 inside the climate-controlled comfort of Houston Stadium.
The opening 45 minutes belonged, improbably, to the hosts. Tani Oluwaseyi gave an early warning with a slick turn and a shot that Yassine Bounou, Morocco’s own goalkeeper, born just up the road in Montreal, had to scramble to keep out.
Alistair Johnston then wasted a gilt-edged header from a corner that, on another night, might have sent the stadium into delirium. Morocco, so measured in earlier rounds, looked unsettled by the occasion and the opposition’s energy.
Mohamed Ouahbi’s night was complicated further when Ismael Saibari, the tournament’s form player with three goals to his name and a move to Bayern Munich reportedly in the works, was forced off with an injury after just 20 minutes.
His replacement, Soufiane Rahimi, took time to find rhythm, his first involvement a speculative effort from range arriving only as Morocco’s first shot on target with the half already a quarter gone.
What the first period lacked in quality, it made up for in temperature. Referee Michael Oliver reached for his cards six times, four of them for Moroccan players, as niggling fouls repeatedly halted any Canadian momentum.
The half’s most heated moment came just before the break, when Morocco captain Achraf Hakimi and Canada’s Richie Laryea exchanged shoves that earned both men yellow cards, a flashpoint that summed up a half short on scoring chances but long on friction.
Whatever words passed between Ouahbi and his players at the interval, they worked. Morocco emerged for the second half a different team entirely. Just five minutes after the restart, Hakimi curled a low free kick to an unmarked Azzedine Ounahi on the edge of the box, and the midfielder swept it home first time, helped, in truth, by a deflection off Hakimi’s legs and a Canadian back line that left goalkeeper Maxime Crepeau screened and helpless.
The goal punctured Canada’s belief. They pushed for a leveler that never looked likely to arrive, and Morocco, on the same side that had eliminated the Canadians at the group stage back in Qatar in 2022, made them pay for their ambition.
Ounahi struck again on 82 minutes, arriving unmarked once more to finish first-time on the counter, before Rahimi, so quiet for long spells, stole in with the last kick of stoppage time to complete the scoreline and put a gloss on a performance that was, for 45 minutes at least, far from convincing.
For Morocco, the reward is a quarterfinal against whichever of France or Paraguay emerges from the tournament’s other heavyweight tie a test that will tell us whether their 2022 heroics were a high-water mark or a floor.
For Canada, there is only reflection: a first World Cup knockout win, a first appearance in the last 16, and now an exit that, while painful, closes the book on a tournament co-hosted on home soil that few outside the dressing room expected them to survive this long in.
Houston’s World Cup, meanwhile, packs up after seven matches, its final act arriving on the same weekend the United States marked its 250th birthday, a coincidence of history that felt, however briefly, bigger than the football itself.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Canada’s World Cup dream ends in Houston, undone not by a lack of heart they were the better side for 45 minutes but by Morocco’s clinical second-half turnaround, inspired by Azzedine Ounahi’s two goals.
The co-hosts exit with pride intact after a historic run to the last 16; Morocco advances to face France or Paraguay, still carrying the momentum of their 2022 semi-final pedigree.













