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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
Sport
Ella Brockway

Morocco 4-2 Haiti: World Cup 2026 – as it happened

Soufiane Rahimi celebrates with teammates after Morocco win a thriller in Atlanta against Haiti.
Soufiane Rahimi celebrates with teammates after Morocco win a thriller in Atlanta against Haiti. Photograph: Ronald Wittek/EPA

Here’s Reuters with the report on Haiti’s historic goals and Morocco’s impressive fight-back in Atlanta.

Are you enjoying these six-game (yes, six-game) matchdays yet? There’s plenty more to come. At the top of the hour, we’ve got Czechia v Mexico (updates via Alex Abnos) and South Africa v South Korea (via Beau Dure) to round out Group A. Morocco and Brazil fans will sleep comfortably tonight. The Tartan Army, on the other hand …

Thanks for following along! Enjoy the rest of the action.

Achraf Hakimi (one goal and one assist) was named the official Man of the Match.

Interactive

Reader Richard was a fan of Haiti.

“They are keener than mustard. Their motto: ‘every ball is mine’. Sadly they keep it too long, run into a wall and lose it. Not bad for a team that can’t play in their own country.”

And an update for Kevin, who joked about Own Goal contending in the Golden Boot race: we’re now at 11 own goals this tournament. The record is 12!

Updated

A word for Haiti goalkeeper Johny Placide. Two of the goals he conceded came off unfortunate errors, but he otherwise had an impressive game with eight saves. The 38-year-old has said he will be finishing his Haiti career after this game, and his double-save in the 30th minute was a highlight.

Maybe there’s something about Atlanta Stadium that brings the best out of veteran keepers? After all, this was also the site of Vozinha’s standout performance for Cape Verde against Spain.

Morocco will be pleased with the energy of their attack, especially in the second half. They finished with 22 shots and 11 on target, their most this tournament. Five came from Achraf Hakimi, a standout on the day with a goal and an assist. Much of their creative success in the second half came off of corners – they had nine to Haiti’s one.

It’s all over in Miami as well, where Brazil have beat Scotland 3-0. So:

  • Brazil win Group C and will face the Group F runner-up

  • Morocco finish second in Group C and will face the Group F winner

  • Scotland wait to see their third-place fate

  • Haiti are eliminated

Updated

Full-time: Morocco 4-2 Haiti

Morocco are through to the knockout rounds after an entertaining Group C finale in Atlanta. Their attack came to life in the final minutes of the first half, and they were composed and collected to double their lead in the second half.

Haiti will exit the tournament frustrated to not have come up with more, but their goals – particularly that Isidor strike, which surely will be in early contention for goal of the tournament – will live long in their country’s sporting memory.

Updated

90+8 min Amrabat walks off the pitch, and Morocco will finish out with 10 men.

90+4 min Haiti nearly made found a third goal with a free kick by Nazon, nicely saved by Bounou, and then a corner. Play has stopped after Amrabat took a ball to the face.

90+4 min We’re into five minutes of stoppage time in Atlanta.

89 min An impressive job by Rahimi to keep the ball in-bounds at the end line and send a cross into Yassine, who was in position waiting in front of an empty net. Both of Morocco’s second-half goals have come via substitutes.

Reader Stephen wasn’t a fan of the VAR decision: “That was out! Criminal var.”

Updated

GOAL! Morocco 4-2 Haiti (89' Yassine)

The VAR review is complete and the goal stands.

Updated

Morocco seem to double their lead. Rahimi appears to keep the ball ever so slightly in bounds and squares a cross to Yassine, who taps it into an empty net. Was the ball in or out? Will it stand? VAR is doing a check.

Updated

87 min Morocco tried to make it four, picking off another Haiti pass in the midfield and pushing forward but couldn’t get a shot off. The patience and composure of the Atlas Lions in this second half have paid off.

Updated

85 min Kevin Teeling chimes in via email:

“Re: the only two players to score a goal in each group game - if things go as before, the USMNT will have their favorite opening scorer, ‘Own Goal’, join that group.”

Own Goal entering the race for Golden Boot – a World Cup tradition unlike any other!

Updated

83 min Final round of substitutions. Morocco: El Mourabet on for El Aynaoui, Mazraoui on for Salah-Eddine. Haiti: Pierrot on for Joseph.

83 min An amusing moment upon watching the replay of the Rahimi goal: he ran to the corner flag, slid and then went to take his jersey off, but then appeared to stop about halfway through doing so. Perhaps he remembered in the heat of the moment that that’s a yellow-card offense?

80 min More substitutions from Haiti: Duverne off for Arcus and Jean Jacques off for Simon. Duzon was given a yellow card around the same time.

78 min Morocco have been patiently waiting for their moment this half, and it came via substitute Soufiane Rahimi. He picked up the ball after a corner, settled it with a cautious touch and fired it into the top corner. It looked like it may have taken a deflection on the way in, but they’ll be happy to get the goal no matter what way.

GOAL! Morocco 3-2 Haiti (78’ Rahimi)

Morocco have their first lead, and it’s substitute Rahimi who puts them ahead!

Updated

77 min Haiti have looked sharp in their moments on the counterattack, but too often in this second half they’ve run straight into Morocco defenders. This time, it was Amrabat standing in the way and halting a breakaway.

76 min Over 68,000 in attendance at Atlanta Stadium, per the in-house announcer.

Updated

75 min Hakimi takes the free kick from 26 yards out and fires the initial shot into the wall. The ball bounces off the Haiti defenders, but Hakimi’s follow-up attempt has the same result.

74 min Morocco had a free kick right out of the hydration break, but Halhal was caught offside. We haven’t seen a return to the fast-paced tempo of the end of the first half, but both of these sides are still playing for a win. Another free kick coming for Morocco.

70 min Morocco make some changes of their own. Saibari, one of their goalscorers, is off for Rahimi. Ounahi is on for Diaz and Yassine for El Kaabi.

69 min “Country Roads” has become the song of this World Cup, and not just for the US men’s national team, it seems. The Fox broadcast panned around to Haiti and Morocco fans in the crowd singing along to the John Denver hit during the break.

Updated

68 min Hydration break! Match break! Advert break! Call it whatever you like.

Here’s your trivia fact for your watch parties later tonight/tomorrow/your work water cooler. Only two players at this World Cup so far have scored in all three of their team’s group-stage matches: Morocco’s Ismael Saibari and Brazil’s Vinícius Júnior.

67 min Haiti make their first changes. Isidor, the goalscorer, and Providence are off. Deedson and Nazon – the country’s leading goalscorer who had not yet played at this tournament while working back from a hamstring injury – are on.

66 min If results stand with Brazil having gone up 3-0 in Miami, Brazil would win the group and Morocco would finish second.

65 min Bellegarde’s free kick ricochets right off the Morocco wall, and the Atlas Lions go on the break. Haiti very nearly score an own goal when trying to get under control and track back, but Ade’s deflection flies well above Placide.

64 min Providence is taken down on the edge of the box and wins a free kick in a dangerous area. Can they make something of it here?

Updated

62 min Haiti win the ball back and Joseph breaks free on the counter, but he’s too indecisive on the ball and Morocco win it back. It’s turning into a bit of a scramble in Atlanta, with both sides making a lot of loose touches and not being able to hold on to possession for very long.

59 min Another good chance for Morocco and another big save by Placide on a strike from distance by El Khannouss.

56 min Morocco nearly made it three, but the offside flag was up anyways. Saibari made a good run into the box to get on the end of a cross from El Kaabi but his sliding shot went wide.

Updated

54 min Play is stopped after Casimir takes a hit to the head after jumping for a header. He’s going to the sideline for some treatment.

52 min Morocco have gone for short-corner plays several times tonight. Nothing comes of their latest opportunity, but it seems that patience was Mohamed Ouahbi’s message at the half-time break.

50 min Much slower pace to start this second half after all of the energy and freneticism of the first.

A few emails at the break:

Richard from NZ: “And then change from that agony to total ecstacy for Morocco. Goal 2 for Haiti total disbelief with goal of the tournie contender. And back to agony for Morocco. Where else can you get such contrasting in such a short time.”

I sense we may have a few more agony/ecstasy swings left in this one …

Kári Tulinius: “It isn’t the worst change Fifa have made for this World Cup, but think of how much more exciting this match would be if goal difference was the primary tie breaker, and not head to head results. Haiti would be just a two-goal swing from third. Oh well, no one said we could have nice things.”

Good point, Kári. I’m sure there will be interesting arguments to be made if Haiti manage to win here and the Scotland v Brazil result holds.

Updated

46 min Under way for the second half in Atlanta. No changes from either side.

Elsewhere in Group C, Brazil are up 2-0 on Scotland in Miami:

I’m using the half-time break to watch that Wilson Isidor goal again. The fact that he was able to get so much power on the ball with his right foot while keeping his left foot on the ground the entire time is remarkable stuff.

A reminder: Haiti have not played a true home match since 2021 because of conflicts and strife in their country. It is remarkable that this team is here – Sébastien Migné has yet to step foot in the country since taking over in 2024 – and even more remarkable to watch them (and their fans) savor these moments on the sport’s biggest stage.

Half-time: Morocco 2-2 Haiti

An entertaining first half in Atlanta. Haiti were the better team for much of the first 45 minutes and will be displeased to go into the break all even, with the momentum on Morocco’s side. The Atlas Lions looked much sharper in the final 15 minutes plus stoppage time. The majority of their 15 shots came in that span. A good second half on tap.

45+3 min Brahim Diaz nearly made it three for Morocco as the half-time whistle nears.

45 +1 min Haiti’s lead did not last long. Saibari benefits from an excellent dummy move by Diaz to find an open space in the box, pick up a low cross from Hakimi and fire a right-footed shot for his third goal of the World Cup.

Updated

GOAL! Morocco 2-2 Haiti (45+1' Saibari)

It’s a goalfest in Atlanta. Saibari evens it for Morocco!

Updated

43 min That is one of the goals of the tournament. Haiti win the ball back after some back-and-forth possession, Wilson Isidor takes a single touch, and fires an absolutely stunning strike from 31 yards out into the top left corner of the net. Superb from the Sunderland man. The Haiti fans are going wild in Atlanta.

Updated

GOAL 43’ Morocco 1-2 Haiti (43' Isidor)

Isidor scores! Haiti lead again!

Updated

39 min Achraf Hakimi is the one to find Morocco’s equaliser. Placide knocked a cross on to the goalline, and Hakimi – caught in between a jump and a slide and a fall – tapped it over the line amid a whole bunch of congestion.

Updated

GOAL! Morocco 1-1 Haiti (39' Hakimi)

A sliding Hakimi gets on the end of a ball to find Morocco’s equaliser. Haiti players calling for offside, but it seems it’ll stand.

Updated

37 min Morocco broke away on the counter, with Haiti calling for a foul after Amrabat took the ball off Joseph. Nothing came off their break. Some broken play for Morocco right now – Saibari sent a pass to an open Diaz straight out of bounds.

Updated

34 min Joseph – perhaps having sensed Haiti’s goal is no longer credited to him – tried for another. He beat a pair of defenders for a shot from distance that flew well over the crossbar.

Updated

34 min According to the Fox broadcast, Lenny Joseph’s 10th-minute goal has been changed to an own goal off Morocco keeper Yassine Bounou.

30 min A chaotic string of play produced Morocco’s best chances – and Haiti keeper Johny Placide’s finest moments so far. Hakimi got forward and shot straight at a sliding Placide, who stabbed it away with his foot. Placide hopped up to his feet as El Kaabi got a shot on the rebound, and then he saved it with his left hand on the dive.

Updated

27 min Morocco have come into the second quarter with a jolt of energy courtesy of their leading goalscorer Saibari. He made an aggressive run into the box before colliding with a pair of Haiti defenders and going down. Replay looks like their feet got the ball on his fall.

An email from Richard:

“I’m watching it in NZ.

The images of the Haiti and the Morocco fans.

Agony and ecstasy.

It’s like watching Wigan”

You speak the truth, good sir.

25 min It’s time for the first hydration break of the match. (Even though Atlanta Stadium is in fact domed and has air conditioning. But I digress.)

In other Group C news, Brazil are leading Scotland 1-0.

Updated

23 min Saibari gets a shot off from the top of the box in a tight space, but it’s handled by Placide. Hydration break time!

Updated

21 min There’s been a frenetic pace to the first 20 minutes in Atlanta. Morocco are trying to send long balls over the top to El Kaabi on the right flank to get behind Haiti’s backline, but so far their two attempts (the latest from Amrabat) have gone too far and rolled out.

Updated

18 min Haiti have scored just three goals in their World Cup history. Emmanuel “Manno” Sanon scored twice at West Germany 1974, the country’s only previous appearance. Lenny Joseph wrote himself into the history books with his 10th-minute goal.

15 min We got a glimpse of Haiti’s blistering counterattack in action after they cleared a Hakimi corner. They seem to want a second goal.

Updated

13 min Haiti kept the pressure up after Joseph’s goal, and now it’s Morocco’s turn to respond. After a short corner and a short throw, Saibari skied his chance on a pass from El Kaabi.

Updated

10 min What a memorable first goal for Haiti at this World Cup – and the country’s first at the tournament since 1974. Duverne sent a cross in after an impressive run, and Joseph’s flick past Bounou put his side up 1-0.

GOAL! Morocco 0-1 Haiti (Joseph 10’)

Lenny Joseph has scored Haiti’s first goal at this World Cup!

Updated

7 min Haiti get their first chance with a free kick outside the box. Bellegarde’s shot from 30 yards out went wide left.

6 min Morocco had their first real threatening moment in the box with some nice combination play. Fast-paced start so far.

Updated

3 min Morocco have worked through the midfield and are controlling most of the possession so far. Hakimi’s first long ball into the attacking third was a bit too long for Al Kaabi.

Updated

Kick-off!

1 min Morocco kick off to the back, and they’re under way in Atlanta. (They’re also under way in Miami.) Buckle up for whatever the next two hours have in store!

The teams are walking out at Atlanta Stadium, and the flags are unfurled. The crowd looks pretty, pretty good – this stadium fits 68,239. Fox’s broadcasting crew notes that the Haiti fans have traveled particularly well, despite the fact that their side have already been eliminated.

Updated

Both teams are in their home kits for this one. Morocco are in their red shirts and green shorts.

Haiti are wearing the all-blue version of the kit that was hastily redesigned on the eve of the World Cup.

No region benefited as much from the expansion of the World Cup as Africa. Earlier this week, Jonathan Wilson took a look at how the continent’s 10 teams – including Morocco – are doing:

Thiago Alcântara, in an appearance on Fox’s US prematch show, highlights how Morocco will be looking to remedy some of their recent scoring concerns in this matchup. Across the two games, the Atlas Lions have 26 shots, but just five on target and two goals to show.

Can they use this group-stage finale to unlock Achraf Hakimi (five shots) on the right flank and make even more out of his connection with Brahim Díaz (two assists)?

Updated

If you would like to have as many tabs open as you possibly can during the next 2.5 hours, my colleague Scott Murray is liveblogging Scotland v Brazil here:

Ayyoub Bouaddi will begin today’s match on the bench, but he’s sure to catch your eye if/when he appears. (Not just for his floppy hairstyle!)

Earlier today, David Pleat spotlighted five young stars at this World Cup who could be destined for a jump to the Premier League after the tournament. Bouaddi made his list:

In a Morocco team conditioned to play first-time passes, he sets the tone with his instant decisions. Bouaddi is in essence the deepest of the midfield three and he not only plays quickly but often finds a colleague in a more forward position. Strong on the ball, he can intercept from his central position and looks to continue his involvement after playing a pass. Bouaddi can tackle and shield a ball and finds space naturally. With his height, at 6ft 1in, technique and football intelligence, he will not be a Lille player for much longer.

Bouaddi is one of the most sought-after talents in North America this summer: our Ed Aarons reported last week that Arsenal, PSG, Bayern Munich and Liverpool are among the clubs watching. (He’s also studying for a mathematics and physics degree to “make the most of his free time”, as one does when you’re an 18-year-old phenom footballer.)

Morocco’s Mohamed Ouahbi has opted for some rotation in the group-stage finale. Left-back Noussair Mazraoui (Manchester United), center-back Issa Diop (Fulham) and midfielder Ayyoub Bouaddi (Lille) will begin on the bench. Real Betis’s Sofyan Amrabat makes his first start of the World Cup after being an unused substitute for the first two games.

On the Haiti side, Sébastien Migné makes a few changes to the XI he sent out to face Brazil. Lenny Joseph (Ferencváros) pairs with Frantzdy Pierrot (Caykur Rizespor) up top, hinting at a more attacking shape than the low block we saw deployed against the Brazilians. Of note: Duckens Nazon, Haiti’s all-time leading goalscorer, is listed among the substitutes, but he has yet to play at this tournament while working back from a hamstring injury.

Updated

Team news

Morocco (poss 4-2-3-1): Bounou; Hakimi, Halhal, Riad, Salah-Eddine; Amrabat, El Aynaoui; Díaz, Saibari, El Khannous; El Kaabi

Subs: Amaimouni-Echghouyab, Belammari, Bouaddi, Diop, El Mourabet, El Ouahdi, Mazraoui, El Kajoui, Ounahi, Rahimi, Saadane, Sbaï, Tagnaouti, Talbi, Yassine

Haiti (4-4-2): Placide; Duverne, Adé, Delcroix, Expérience; Casimir, Jean Jacques, Bellegarde, Providence; Joseph, Isidor

Subs: Arcus, Deedson, Duverger, Etienne, Fortuné, Lacroix, Metusala, Nazon, Paugain, W Pierre, A Pierre, Pierrot, Sainté, Simon, Thermoncy

Referee Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)

Updated

Before the World Cup began, Bryan Armen Graham talked to Jean-Ricner Bellegarde, Ricardo Adé and several other key figures around the Haiti squad about what being back on football’s biggest stage means to their team, who haven’t played a home match in their country since 2021 because of conflict and strife.

Ahead of the Atlas Lions’ opener against Brazil, Leander Schaerlaeckens spoke to Morocco fans who traveled to this World Cup to watch their team. Some spent above the national wage to attend; others spoke of how they are ready for their country to host the “best World Cup in history” in 2030. (They also all agreed that Morocco are the rightful African champions.)

Where do things stand in Group C?

Pos Team P GD Pts
1 Brazil 2 3 4
2 Morocco 2 1 4
3 Scotland 2 0 3
4 Haiti 2 -4 0

If Morocco draw, they are guaranteed a top-two finish in Group C. To top the group, they would need to beat Haiti and then hope Scotland can either draw or beat Brazil.

If Brazil beat Scotland in Miami, Morocco will need to beat Haiti by Brazil’s margin of victory in that game plus three to have a shot at leapfrogging Brazil to first.

Scotland would progress with a win against Brazil. A draw would at best leave them behind Morocco on head-to-head but four points with a level goal difference would mean a good chance of qualifying in third, albeit teams in later-finishing groups would know what they had to beat.

The Group C winner will face the Group F runner-up (likely Japan or the Netherlands) in Houston on 29 June. The Group C runner-up will face the Group F winner (likely the Netherlands or Japan) in Monterrey on 29 June.

Our full look at who needs what is here:

Preamble

Hello, everyone! Welcome to an eventful four hours for Group C.

You’ve got me for the first-ever meeting between Morocco, 2022 World Cup semi-finalists and technical African champions, and Haiti, who are closing out just their second-ever appearance on football’s biggest stage. A mere 700mi down Interstate 75 (in America, that’s mere!) Scotland and Brazil are readying for a simultaneous kick-off in their group-stage finale Miami. Haiti have already been eliminated, but the other three teams still have knockout-stage hopes to play for.

Morocco are second in the group, trailing Brazil on goal difference, with Scotland well situated to get one of the eight third-place spots. A draw or a win in Atlanta would ensure the Atlas Lions reach the knockout stage; an emphatic win plus some help from Scotland in Miami could see them go top of the group.

On paper, Morocco are considerable favourites. They impressed in their opening 1-1 draw with Brazil, but they left some to be desired when winning by just a mere goal against Scotland and have yet to put together a complete 90-minute performance. Both of their goals at this tournament have come from PSV Eindhoven’s Ismael Saibari. With his goal against Scotland, he became the second African player (after Mohamed Salah) to score in his first two World Cup games. Morocco aren’t a high-scoring team, but a solid output today certainly would send them into the last 32 with some more momentum.

Haiti, already eliminated from the knockout stage after two defeats, are mostly playing for pride, but there are a few milestones they could achieve in today’s match. Their only previous World Cup appearance came in 1974, where they lost all three games and conceded 14 goals but scored twice. A goal today would be their first at this World Cup. A point today would be their first ever at a World Cup.

I’ll be back soon with team news and more. In the meantime, you can follow Bosnia and Herzegovina v Qatar and Switzerland v Canada and email any thoughts to ella.brockway@theguardian.com.

Updated

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