From AFCON to World Cup 2026: How Morocco became a football powerhouse
In a couple of decades, Morocco went from being regularly eliminated in the group stages of the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) and failing to qualify for several successive World Cups to sitting inside the top 10 of the FIFA menโs rankings, reaching the semifinals at the Qatar Wor
In a couple of decades, Morocco went from being regularly eliminated in the group stages of the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) and failing to qualify for several successive World Cups to sitting inside the top 10 of the FIFA menโs rankings, reaching the semifinals at the Qatar World Cup in 2022 and being considered credible contenders for the sportโs biggest tournament this summer.
Even more impressive is that the Atlas Lionsโ success is not limited to the senior menโs national team but has been spread across every age group and category.
Morocco are currently the 2025 AFCON champions, albeit after Senegal were stripped of the title . They were also 2025 Womenโs Africa Cup of Nations (WAFCON) finalists, 2025 FIFA Arab Cup champions, 2025 African Nations Championship (CHAN) champions, 2025 U-20 FIFA World Cup champions, 2025 U-17 AFCON champions, 2024 Olympic menโs bronze medallists and 2024 Futsal AFCON champions.
There is no magic formula behind the success. A source close to the Royal Moroccan Football Federation who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak with the media explained that the countryโs success rests on three pillars: good governance, financial investment and competent human resources.
โKing Mohammed VI laid out this strategy during the Skhirat Sports Conference in 2008, which marked the beginning of a long-term national project for football development,โ he said.
โThe first pillar was governance reform, including the creation of a national department for financial control, which helped clean up and professionalise the financial structure of Moroccan football.
โThis was followed by massive investment in infrastructure at every level of the game. For instance, through cooperation with the Royal Moroccan Football Federation and the Moroccan government, we built thousands of local football pitches called โproximity fieldsโ. These are open and accessible to everyone, serving mass participation across the country.โ
In addition to that public infrastructure, Morocco built the Mohammed VI complex and academy in Maamoura, just outside Rabat. Replete with perfectly manicured pitches, the latest physical therapy equipment and an on-site hotel, the complex has been compared to the finest technical centres in world football, including Franceโs Clairefontaine.

