Morocco 3-0 Canada: Atlas Lions Crush CanMNT’s World Cup Dream as Ounahi Brace & Rahimi Stoppage-Time Strike Seal Historic Quarter-Final Berth
HOUSTON, TX — Canada’s historic FIFA World Cup 2026 run came to a devastating end on Saturday afternoon at NRG Stadium, as Morocco produced a masterclass performance to defeat the CanMNT 3-0 and advance to the quarter-finals. Azzedine Ounahi’s clinical brace and Soufiane Rahimi’s stoppage-time dagger extinguished the hopes of 72,000 Canadian fans and sent the Atlas Lions charging toward a second consecutive World Cup quarter-final appearance.
For Jesse Marsch’s side, the defeat was cruel but instructive. They had already rewritten Canadian soccer history by becoming the first men’s team to ever reach the knockout stage. But against a Moroccan side that has now established itself as Africa’s dominant footballing force, the gap between ambition and execution was laid bare.
Match Report: Morocco’s Quality Overwhelms Canada
FT: Morocco 3-0 Canada
| Goalscorer |
Time |
Notes |
| Azzedine Ounahi |
50′ |
Opened scoring after halftime |
| Azzedine Ounahi |
82′ |
Brace sealed the result |
| Soufiane Rahimi |
90+8′ |
Deep into stoppage time |
Man of the Match: Azzedine Ounahi (Morocco) — Two goals of breathtaking quality from the Girona midfielder.
Venue: NRG Stadium, Houston, Texas
Attendance: 72,220
Referee: Michael Oliver (England)
How the Match Unfolded
The first half was a tactical chess match that Morocco largely controlled. The Atlas Lions, who had already eliminated the Netherlands on penalties in the Round of 32 after a dramatic 1-1 draw, arrived in Houston with momentum and pedigree.
Canada, still riding the euphoria of Stephen Eustáquio’s late winner against South Africa, started with belief but quickly found themselves pinned back by Morocco’s suffocating press. Achraf Hakimi and Noussair Mazraoui dominated the flanks, while Sofyan Amrabat and Azzedine Ounahi controlled the midfield battle.
The breakthrough came five minutes after halftime.
Azzedine Ounahi, the 26-year-old Girona midfielder who had been one of the breakout stars of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, received the ball on the edge of the box, took one touch to set himself, and curled a precise shot past Maxime Crépeau into the far corner.
Canada pushed for an equalizer, with Jonathan David and Cyle Larin both forcing saves from Yassine Bounou. But as the match wore on, Morocco’s defensive organization — the same discipline that carried them to the 2022 semi-finals — frustrated every Canadian attack.
With eight minutes remaining, Ounahi struck again. A swift counter-attack saw
Brahim Díaz slip the ball through to Ounahi, who calmly slotted past Crépeau to make it 2-0 and effectively end the contest.
Deep into stoppage time — the
90+8th minute — substitute
Soufiane Rahimi added the final flourish. The Al Ain striker, who had already scored his first World Cup goal in Morocco’s 4-2 group-stage victory over Haiti, latched onto a loose ball in the box and fired home to complete the rout.
The Bigger Picture: Morocco’s Continued Ascent, Canada’s Bitter Lesson
This result was no fluke. Morocco has become the most formidable African national team in World Cup history.
Their credentials are staggering:
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2022 World Cup: First African and Arab nation to reach the semi-finals, finishing fourth after defeating Belgium, Spain, and Portugal before falling to France and Croatia.
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2025 Africa Cup of Nations: Crowned champions after a controversial final against Senegal that was awarded to Morocco by forfeit.
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World Record: In October 2025, Morocco broke the world record for the longest winning streak in international football, surpassing Spain’s previous mark of 15 consecutive victories. The streak ultimately reached 19 straight wins.
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Head-to-Head vs Canada: Morocco has now won three of four meetings against Canada, with one draw. The Atlas Lions have scored 10 goals to Canada’s 4 in those encounters.
For Canada, this was a harsh introduction to the unforgiving nature of knockout football. The CanMNT had made history by reaching this stage — their first-ever World Cup knockout appearance — but Morocco demonstrated the gap between being a good team and being a great one.
Canada’s Historic World Cup 2026: A Campaign to Remember
Despite the defeat, Canada’s tournament will be remembered as the moment the men’s program crossed into legitimacy:
| Stage |
Opponent |
Result |
Key Moment |
Historic Significance |
| Group B |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
1-1 |
Larin 78′ equalizer |
First-ever World Cup point |
| Group B |
Qatar |
6-0 |
David hat-trick |
First-ever World Cup win; biggest CONCACAF margin |
| Group B |
Switzerland |
1-2 |
Promise David 76′ |
First-ever knockout qualification |
| Round of 32 |
South Africa |
1-0 |
Eustáquio 87′ |
First-ever knockout win |
| Round of 16 |
Morocco |
0-3 |
— |
First-ever Round of 16 appearance |
Player Focus: The Stars Who Decided It
Azzedine Ounahi (Morocco)
The 26-year-old central midfielder has been one of the most exciting players in international football since his breakout at the 2022 World Cup. Born in Casablanca and developed at the Mohammed VI Football Academy, Ounahi plays for Spanish club Girona and has a market value of €10 million. His two goals against Canada showcased the technical quality and composure that have made him a target for Europe’s biggest clubs.
Soufiane Rahimi (Morocco)
At 30 years old, Rahimi is the veteran finisher who has delivered at every level. The Al Ain striker was top scorer at the 2024 Olympics (8 goals in 6 games — the first player ever to score in all six matches of a single Olympic edition), won the 2023-24 AFC Champions League with Al Ain, and was named 2020 African Nations Championship Player of the Tournament. His stoppage-time goal was his second of the tournament.
Jonathan David (Canada)
Despite the defeat, David leaves the tournament as one of its top scorers with three goals. The Lille OSC striker has proven he belongs on the world stage and will be central to Canada’s 2027 AFCON qualification campaign and beyond.
What’s Next for Both Nations
Morocco advances to the quarter-finals where they will face the winner of Brazil vs Japan (played June 29 in Houston). The Atlas Lions are now serious contenders to match or exceed their 2022 fourth-place finish.
Canada returns home with heads held high. The 2026 World Cup was always about more than results — it was about establishing soccer as a permanent part of Canada’s sporting identity. With co-hosting duties fulfilled, a first-ever knockout win secured, and a generation of young talent blooded, the foundation has been laid for 2027 AFCON qualification and the 2030 World Cup cycle.
By the Numbers: Canada’s World Cup 2026 Legacy
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4 matches played — most ever for Canada at a single World Cup
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8 goals scored — best scoring return in Canadian history
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3 goals — Jonathan David (tied for tournament Golden Boot at time of elimination)
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1 knockout win — first in history
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1 Round of 16 appearance — first in history
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6-0 vs Qatar — still the largest margin of victory by any CONCACAF nation at a World Cup
How the Match Was Won
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50′ — Ounahi’s Opener: The Girona midfielder collected the ball 20 yards out, shifted it onto his left foot, and bent a curling shot beyond Crépeau’s reach.
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82′ — Ounahi’s Brace: A devastating counter-attack exposed Canada’s pushed-forward defense. Brahim Díaz’s through ball was perfectly weighted, and Ounahi’s finish was ice-cold.
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90+8′ — Rahimi’s Exclamation Point: With Canada throwing everything forward, Morocco hit on the break. Rahimi’s poacher’s instinct found the loose ball in the box, and his finish into the roof of the net ended all hope.
The dream is over, but the revolution has only just begun. Canadian soccer will never be the same.
Stay locked to ABNASS Soccer for post-tournament analysis, player profiles, and full coverage of the Canadian Men’s National Team’s next chapter.
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