World Cup 2018: Morocco’s Glimpse of the Possible
For Morocco, this World Cup began with defeat. We were favored to win our first match, against Iran, but in a turn of fate, with the game tied nil-all and minutes before the end, one of the Moroccan players scored an own-goal. That 1-0 loss crushed our slim hopes to shine and to advance from a challenging group. Sure enough, in our second game, against Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal, we proceeded to lose—despite dominating the match. On Monday, against Spain, we had little left to play for—except, perhaps, some honor. But in an amazing game that twice saw Morocco go ahead against one of the world’s top teams, we earned a 2-2 draw that left Moroccans proud of the national team despite its not making it to the next round.
This was the first time in twenty years
that Morocco—a country where soccer is hugely popular—has competed on
the game’s biggest stage. A good many Moroccans traveled to Russia to
cheer on the team. What they’ve seen there—a pair of defeats and a tie that have again deferred our dream of becoming a great soccer nation—has, despite that upbeat final match, been a disappointment.
The downcast
feeling of this World Cup for Moroccans has much to do with
circumstances beyond the pitch. Political and economic difficulties back
home have cast a pall on the campaign of a national team that mainly
comprises players drawn from the Moroccan diaspora in Europe. Since
October 2016, political unrest has shaken northern parts of the kingdom,
with protesters demanding more jobs and less corruption. The Moroccan
authorities met these demonstrations with repression and mass jailings.
Citizen groups recently organized an economic boycott of gas, milk, and
water companies in an effort to force them to lower their prices.
Popular resentment is palpable. The cost of living is too high and
people are fed up with a government that has been preoccupied with
promoting Morocco’s bid to host the World Cup in 2026.
The day before this year’s tournament kicked off in Moscow, FIFA chose a rival bid
for 2026 from the United States, Mexico, and Canada. This was Morocco’s
fifth attempt to win the right to host the tournament. But many of us
Moroccans were relieved at the news of this loss since it prevented what
would surely have been an economic catastrophe for this nation of 35
million that suffers from endemic unemployment and poverty. Although its
backers pointed to FIFA’s promises, if the bid were successful, to
provide assistance in building new roads and hospitals, the main
expenditure on a World Cup would probably have gone to erecting nine new
stadiums the country doesn’t need.
What the country does need, certainly, is
a positive event—and that’s what lay behind the government’s efforts in
recent years to persuade Morocco’s rising bi-national
soccer stars living in Europe to play for their parents’ homeland. Of
the twenty-three players who represented us in Russia, seventeen were
born outside Morocco. The captain, Medhi Benatia, was born in France and
plays for Juventus in Italy. Soccer is hugely popular in the
working-class, immigrant-dominated neighborhoods on the peripheries of
European capitals where many Moroccans live—and from where many talented
football players have emerged.
Back in the 1980s, as the country was
going through the “bread protests” prompted by hikes in food prices,
King Hassan II pushed for the development of sports. Moroccan stars
emerged on the field, rallying the country behind a strong sense of
patriotic pride. Through the 1990s, sportsmen and sportswomen
representing Morocco won gold medals in Olympic games, competed in
international tennis tournaments, and qualified for top soccer
championships. But that has changed. King Mohammed VI, in power since
his father Hassan’s death in 1999, seems less interested in sports.
Efforts to produce winning teams have
often prioritized recruiting Moroccans from the diaspora over supporting
sports at home. This approach helped us qualify for Russia, but now
that we’re there, it has also predictably been blamed for the struggles
of a team on which many players don’t speak Arabic. Communication among
them was said to be complicated, with a degree of confusion about
whether the coach, the Frenchman Hervé Renard, should address his
players in French or English.
Many people back home today shared the
sentiments of fans like Amine Lahbabi, who lives in Casablanca. “I don’t
feel represented by this team,” he told me before the Cup began. “To
me, this World Cup will be a chance to see beautiful games and
incidentally support this squad, but nothing further.” The artist Réda
Allali, one of the most committed Moroccan soccer fans I know, felt
similarly. “Back in the day, the players used to live in our
neighborhoods,” he said. “Sometimes, we’d run into them in cafés. Some
were students, others had a day job at the bank, they felt accessible.
Now, with globalization, much of this has changed.”
Much also hasn’t. Throughout Morocco, men
fill cafés to watch games—local and international—while exchanging
strong opinions about the teams and coaches’ strategies. Boys and young
men, often dressed in knock-off jerseys of their favorite players, play
soccer in the streets or on the beach. The screams of ecstatic fans fill
the air when a favorite star like Lionel Messi scores a goal.
I myself grew up in a household where we
watched every one of the national team’s games that we could. My father
once served as the treasurer of the main club in his hometown, Fes, and
my brother Mehdi—who has an excellent memory—can talk for hours about
the players he idolizes, his favorite goals, and classic soccer moments
over the years.
After the 1986 World Cup in Mexico,
people raved for years about how Morocco was the first African squad
ever to make it to the second round. Although the team then lost to
Germany, it received a hero’s welcome when it returned to Morocco. And
in 1998, even if we didn’t pass the tournament’s first round, the
national team was celebrated and welcomed with cheers and love from
their fans for an honorable performance. There was some magic in
watching our Moroccan boys sharing the field with huge stars like
Ronaldo of Brazil.
Before this World Cup, though, we were jaded, and Morocco’s fans were apathetic. Even so, I
was surprised when Mehdi told me he had no plans to go to Russia.
Perhaps I shouldn’t have been. These days, Moroccans are more excited
about the Egyptian striker Mohamed Salah than they are about their own
players. I am currently in the Dominican Republic on assignment—a
country where people love baseball, but soccer not so much. I tried to
watch the first Moroccan game in a bar, but the bartender couldn’t find a
network that broadcast it. So I watched a poorly-streamed version on my
iPad. I wanted to be with other Moroccans, and when we lost, I didn’t
think about any larger issues, I just felt sad.
No matter how disillusioned you are with
your country’s team or how frustrated with your country’s government, it
still hurts to see a squad of players, dressed in the national colors,
not succeed. But as that strong final game
reminded me, it’s hard not to feel proud when they do. Between that
opening loss to Iran and the second half against Spain, something
changed. Maybe it happened sixteen minutes into the Portugal game, when
our ebullient winger Nordin Amrabat, who had received a head injury in
the game against Iran, tossed away his protective headgear and urged the
team on. That won Moroccans’ hearts.
You can read the story on the New York Review of Books' website.
You can read the story on the New York Review of Books' website.