DOHA — The
first World Cup in the
Arab world began with a shock, Saudi Arabia upsetting
Argentina in a first-round game, setting off waves of jubilation in a region
lacking in soccer giants.
اضافة اعلان
The tournament in
Qatar is reaching its final stages with another stunner: Morocco upset Portugal
on Saturday to become the first country in Africa and the Arab world to ever
reach the semifinals.
Supporters who
packed cafes in
Rabat, Morocco, poured into the streets after the final whistle
of the 1–0 game. Cries of joy, horns, and fireworks kicked off a party, worthy
of a World Cup final, that spread through the Moroccan capital.
Hundreds of
families — women, men, and children — sang, danced, and played instruments in a
sea of red and green, the colors of the Moroccan flag. Many more people
gathered in front of the parliament building, blocking traffic and greeting one
another with “mabrouk alina” (“congratulations to us”).
Morocco added
Portugal — and its superstar, Cristiano Ronaldo — to the list of major European
nations that it has unexpectedly dumped out of the Cup. Having never previously
been in contention for soccer’s biggest prize, Morocco is just one game from a
place in the final, after dispatching the likes of Belgium, Spain and now
Portugal without allowing them a single goal.
“Pinch me, I think
I’m dreaming,”
Yassine Bounou, the Morocco goalkeeper known as Bono, said after
the game. “These moments are great, but we’re here to change the mentality.
With this feeling of inferiority, we have to get rid of it. The Moroccan player
can face any in the world. The generation coming after us will know we can
create miracles.”
Players from
Africa and the Arab world have long played in soccer’s upper-tier leagues in
Europe and elsewhere, and like many athletes who hold citizenship in more than
one place, many are playing on teams other than the one where they were born.
But national teams in Africa have struggled to make a mark late in the
tournament until now.
Of Morocco’s
26-member team, just 12 were born in Morocco, the lowest ratio in the
competition, according to a tally by
FIFA. The others are of Moroccan heritage
but born in Spain, Canada, France, the Netherlands, and Belgium. Other teams in
Africa have also lured players with familial, if not residential, ties to their
teams.
Still, Morocco’s
storybook run has millions of Arabs, Muslims, and North Africans coalescing
behind a single team in a way that this tournament has not seen.
That fanatical
support was in full display inside the
Al-Thumama Stadium, which for 90 minutes
(plus eight minutes of heart-stopping injury time) resembled a corner of
Casablanca, Rabat or Marrakech. Every period of Portuguese possession was met
with ear-piercing whistles, and every Moroccan incursion the other way was
greeted with the type of boisterous cheering that threatened to pull the ball
into the Portuguese net.
Soccer fans crowd onto Steinway Street to celebrate Morocco’s historic win over Portugal at the 2022 World Cup, in Astoria, Queens.
The next step of
Morocco’s magical journey will come against France in a semifinal game
Wednesday, setting the former colony against its former colonizer. But as
Morocco celebrated Saturday’s victory, the result almost certainly meant the
end of another era.
Ronaldo arrived in
Qatar as one of the most famous people in the world, one of the best players to
play soccer in any era. But at age 37, he arrived almost as an awkward tourist.
He no longer played for a professional club, having been dumped by
Manchester United. And his position in Portugal’s starting lineup, which he had gripped
for nearly two decades, was tenuous. By the time Portugal reached the round of
16, he had lost it.
Against
Switzerland, Ronaldo watched as his young replacement, Gonçalo Ramos, announced
himself as an heir apparent, scoring a stunning three goals.
But against
Morocco’s iron-willed defense, Ramos and the Portuguese wilted as the wall of
whistles reached fever pitch and stayed there. Ronaldo entered the stage with
40 minutes left, a platform to produce one more heroic act, a final cinematic
moment in a career filled with cinematic moments.
At the point of an
attack that featured a line of four forwards in ever more desperate attempts to
break Moroccan resistance, Ronaldo could not bend the
World Cup to his will. He
ran, he chased balls in behind, he leaped to get his head to balls, he tried to
find shooting angles, everything and anything to break the redshirted Moroccan
barrier.
So did his
teammates. But nothing worked. Shots were blocked and tackles were made as
Moroccan numbers seemingly multiplied in the face of incessant waves of
Portuguese attacks.
Portugal simply
could not get the ball to break for it. But in one first-half moment, Morocco
did. In the 42nd minute, Yahia Attiyat Allah sent a hopeful crossing pass in
front of the Portuguese goal. The ball hung in the air for what seemed like an
age, before the tall striker Youssef En-Nesyri, timing his run to perfection,
headed it in a fraction of a second before goalkeeper Diogo Costa could get his
hand on it.
It was in the
aftermath of that goal when Morocco let its guard down for the only time in the
game, allowing the ball to ricochet dangerously close to its goal. Portugal
almost tied the game at that moment, with midfielder Bruno Fernandes hitting a
strike from an improbable angle that came crashing off the bar.
That was as close
as Morocco would let Portugal get.
By the final
minutes of the game, Morocco was reduced to 10 men with substitute Walid
Cheddira collecting two yellow cards in quick succession. But Morocco refused
to be distracted. The final seconds were a blur played against the sound of
whistling that threatened to make ears bleed. And then, came the whistle that
mattered.
While his
teammates sank to their knees, Ronaldo brushed aside the good wishes of two
Moroccan players and headed straight toward the tunnel, wiping away tears with
his jersey. Morocco, swept up by the bedlam, summoned one final reserve of
energy to embark on celebrations that will live long in memory. The team
charged toward its fans massed behind the goal that refused to be breached,
lifting their arms into the air, milking a moment that only the most optimistic
member of its squad could have deemed possible when the journey began last
month.
While one hero
departs soccer’s biggest stage, the World Cup has given birth to a team of
heroes for the Arab world. Morocco is not ready to say goodbye.
In Rabat, the
party continued through the night. “I am happy and proud to see men and women
shoulder to shoulder supporting and lifting the national team,” said Loubna
Taleb, 34, a political adviser at an embassy in the capital. “They have
exceeded all expectations and made all of us believe in more than football.”
She added: “Every Moroccan
feels invincible and capable of doing and succeeding in anything even against
the odds. And for that I am eternally grateful to them for healing a nation
from colonial scars.”
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