Morocco A' national football team explained

Morocco local football team
Badge Size:165px
Fifa Trigramme:MAR
Nickname:The Atlas Lions
Association:FRMF (Morocco)
Confederation:CAF (Africa)
Coach:Hussein Ammouta
Most Caps:Abdelilah Hafidi (25)
Top Scorer:Ayoub El Kaabi (14)
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Regional Name:African Nations Championship
Regional Cup Apps:5
Regional Cup First:2014
Regional Cup Best:Champions (2018, 2020)

The Morocco A' national football team (Arabic: منتخب المغرب لكرة القدم للمحليين) is the local national football team of Morocco and is open only to domestic league players.[1] It has won the African Nations Championship twice (2018 and 2020).

The primary men's Morocco national football team contains expatriate players and represents Morocco at the Africa Cup of Nations.

History

The Local Atlas Lions were eliminated in the qualifiers for the first two editions of the African Nations Championship (CHAN) in 2009 and 2011, before qualifying for the first time to the CHAN in the 2014 edition, which was hosted in South Africa instead of Libya, who were initially supposed to organize the only continental national competition for local players.

During their first participation in the competition, the Moroccans, led by coach Hassan Benaabicha (who, in replacement of Rachid Taoussi, was asked to manage the team just a few days before the start of the final tournament), did not make it past the second round. Rachid Taoussi had been behind the qualification of the Moroccans to the competition, but did not have the chance to go further than that, as he was replaced by Benaabicha, who had done well in various regional and international competitions at the time with other lower categories Moroccan national teams.

The first two matches for the Moroccans in the tournament were 0–0 and 1–1 draws against Zimbabwe and Burkina Faso, respectively. It was only after the third match that the Local Atlas Lions could ensure qualification to the second round, after beating Uganda 3–1. In the quarter-finals, Morocco were beaten surprisingly by Nigeria 3–4, after leading 3–0 in the first half.

In 2016, it was another Moroccan coach, with the famous name of Mohamed “El General” Fakhir, who led the Moroccans to qualification for the second consecutive time at the CHAN, which was organized in Rwanda. However, this was even worse than their previous tournament run, with the Atlas Lions eliminated in the first round after finishing third in their group.

The team's final match, an astonishing 4–1 win against host country Rwanda, could not prevent the Moroccans' elimination; they had already suffered a scoreless draw against Gabon and a 0–1 defeat against the Ivory Coast in their first two matches.[2]

However, Moroccan fans could enjoy not only the hosting of the CHAN in the kingdom two years later in 2018,[3] but also a tournament victory for their local national team, which became the third North African country to win the competition's title, after Tunisia, winners in 2011, and Libya in 2014.[4] The road was not easy for Moroccan players, who were coached by Jamal Sellami in 2018, as they had to face strong, experienced African National teams, especially in the semi-final and final matches. In the group phase, the path was easier, with a 4–0 victory against Mauritania followed by a second 3–1 win against Guinea, before a scoreless draw against Sudan in the final group match. The Local Atlas Lions finished top of their group with 7 points out of 9 to advance to the quarter-finals, where they beat Namibia 2–0 in Casablanca.[5] [6]

On 31 January 2018, Al Mountakhab made history, as they qualified for the final match of the CHAN for the first time in their history after beating 2014 title winners Libya 3–1 at the Mohamed V stadium in Casablanca.[7] The final match was a flurry of Moroccan goals. Four in total were scored, by Zakaria Hadraf in both the 44th and 61st minutes, Walid El Karti in the 64th minute, as well as Ayoub El Kaabi (top scorer of the competition) in the 73rd minute, to win a first CHAN title for the kingdom.[8] [9]

In February 2021, Morocco won their second title after a 2–0 win over Mali in the final in Cameroon.[10]

African Nations Championship record

African Nations Championship recordAfrican Nations Championship qualification record
YearRoundPosition
2009Did not qualify412156
2011202033
2014Quarter-finals8th412176211010
2016Group stage10th3111424310113
2018Champions1st6510162211042
2020Champions1st6510153211030
2022Withdrew
2024To be determinedTo be determined
Total2 Titles4/71912524213167812714

Recent results and forthcoming fixtures

2022

Current team status

2020 African Nations Championship

See main article: 2020 African Nations Championship.

Group C

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Final

See main article: 2020 African Nations Championship Final.

Honours and awards

Honours

African Nations Championship

FIFA Arab Cup

Awards

African Nations Championship Best player

African Nations Championship Top scorer

African Nations Championship Best goalkeeper

Arab Cup Best player

Arab Cup Top scorer

Squad

The following players were called up for the 2020 African Nations Championship in Cameroon.

Caps and goals only in the current competition, as of 7 February 2021 after the match against Mali.

Manager: Hussein Ammouta

Previous squads

African Nations Championship squads:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Morocco A' National football Team official page.
  2. Web site: Morocco Results . 2024-01-14 . ESPN . en.
  3. News: Morocco replace Kenya as CHAN hosts . 2024-01-14 . BBC Sport . en-GB.
  4. Web site: 2017-10-15 . Morocco to host 2018 African Nations Championship amid Kenya's problems . 2024-01-14 . MARCA in English . en.
  5. News: Bencharki caps dream CHAN start for Morocco . 2024-01-14 . BBC Sport . en-GB.
  6. Web site: Mumbere . Daniel . 2018-01-18 . CHAN 2018: Morocco, Sudan qualify for the quarter finals . 2024-01-14 . Africanews . en.
  7. News: Hosts Morocco through to CHAN final . 2024-01-14 . BBC Sport . en-GB.
  8. Web site: CHAN : CAN AMMOUTA BRING HOME TITLE N°2 ?.
  9. News: Hosts Morocco crowned CHAN champions . 2024-01-14 . BBC Sport . en-GB.
  10. News: 2021-02-07 . CHAN: Morocco sink Mali to become first team to retain title . 2024-01-14 . BBC Sport . en-GB.