What is Morocco's next FIFA World Cup 2026 game?
Morocco's next match in the 2026 FIFA World Cup is a Group C game against Scotland. The teams are scheduled to meet during the second week of the tournament's group stage.
Detail | Information |
Opponent | Scotland |
Date | June 19, 2026 |
Kick-off time (local) | 6:00 PM |
Stadium | Gillette Stadium |
City | Foxborough, Massachusetts (Boston area) |
How do I use a VPN to watch FIFA World Cup 2026?
GeminiWho are Morocco's FIFA World Cup 2026 Group C opponents?
Morocco are in Group C alongside Haiti, Brazil, and Scotland. Their group-stage fixtures in GMT (UTC+0) are:
Date (Mon DD) | Opponents | Stadium, City, Country | KO (GMT) |
|---|---|---|---|
Jun 13 | Brazil 🇧🇷 | MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, United States | 00:00 |
Jun 19 | Scotland 🏴 | Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, United States | 23:00 |
Jun 24 | Haiti 🇭🇹 | Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, United States | 22:00 |
Who is showing FIFA World Cup 2026 in Morocco?
In Morocco, the official broadcaster for the 2026 FIFA World Cup is beIN SPORTS, which holds the exclusive rights for the entire MENA region. All 104 matches will be shown through its TV channels and digital platforms.
In addition, Morocco’s national public broadcaster SNRT (Arryadia / Al Aoula) has secured sublicensed rights to show Morocco national team matches free-to-air, meaning Atlas Lions games can be watched without a subscription.
Platform | Coverage |
|---|---|
beIN SPORTS | Full tournament coverage (all 104 matches), live TV + streaming (beIN CONNECT / TOD) |
SNRT (Al Aoula / Arryadia) | Free-to-air coverage of Morocco matches |
beIN CONNECT | Streaming all matches for subscribers |
TOD | Full paid streaming platform with live matches and replays |
beIN SPORTS News | Highlights, updates, and select free content |
Morocco's Road to the 2026 FIFA World Cup
Morocco’s qualification campaign for the 2026 FIFA World Cup was another statement of intent from one of Africa’s most consistently rising football nations. Building on their historic semi-final run in 2022, the Atlas Lions carried that momentum into CAF qualifying and once again proved themselves the dominant force in their group. Under manager Walid Regragui, Morocco delivered a near-perfect campaign, securing early qualification and underlining their status as one of the continent’s elite sides.
Drawn into CAF Group E alongside Zambia, Congo, Tanzania, and Niger, Morocco quickly separated themselves from the chasing pack. They began the campaign in ruthless fashion, combining attacking fluency with defensive control, and regularly overwhelming opponents in both home and away fixtures. Their most decisive moment came with a commanding 5–0 win over Niger in Rabat, a result that effectively sealed their qualification and confirmed them as the first African nation to book a place at the 2026 World Cup.
What stood out most during Morocco’s qualifying run was their balance. The team blended the tactical discipline that has become their hallmark with a growing attacking confidence, led by players such as Achraf Hakimi, Hakim Ziyech, and Youssef En-Nesyri. Regragui’s system remained compact and hard to break down, but Morocco also showed they could dominate possession and break teams down when required - an evolution from their more counter-attacking identity in 2022.
Getty ImagesTheir qualifying dominance was reflected in the wider CAF campaign structure, where only group winners earned direct qualification. Morocco topped their group comfortably, finishing ahead of their nearest challengers and avoiding the uncertainty of the playoff route entirely.
Beyond results, Morocco’s road to the World Cup also reinforced their consistency at the highest level. This will be their third consecutive World Cup appearance and their seventh overall, marking the most stable era in the nation’s football history.
Now heading into the 2026 tournament, Morocco arrive not as underdogs - as they were in 2022 - but as a respected global force. Their challenge in North America will be to turn consistency into another deep knockout run, with expectations significantly higher than in any previous World Cup campaign.

