The National - News

MOROCCO STILL RIDING HIGH AS THEY HOST CLUB WORLD CUP

▶ After Qatar heroics and a seminal showpiece for the Mena region, focus turns to club football’s global knockout

- IAN HAWKEY

Seven weeks on from their national team’s historic progress to a World Cup semi-final, Morocco’s status in football’s global hierarchy remains high.

Its stars were yesterday animating the closing hours of the European transfer window, Hakim Ziyech chased by Paris Saint-Germain, Sofyan Amrabat by Barcelona. As of this morning, local excellence takes centre stage.

The 2022 Fifa Club World Cup, an event pushed into the new year by a disrupted calendar, begins in Tangier, one of the two host cities hoping that a tournament following so quickly after a seminal World Cup for the Mena region catches some of the momentum.

The Middle East and North Africa will be well represente­d, as should be the region’s gains from Qatar 2022.

Still vivid in the memory are the landmark results from November and December, such as Tunisia’s victory over defending champions France. That was a personal highlight in the long career of Tunisian full-back Ali Maaloul, who embarks on his third Club World Cup campaign with Egypt’s Al Ahly, who have collected bronze medals at the last two tournament­s.

When Wydad Athletic of Casablanca enter the staggered competitio­n in the second round, they may still have hold of their full trio of Atlas Lions World Cup heroes. Leftback Attiyat Allah, admired by a number of European clubs, supplied the inch-perfect looping cross for the goal that beat Portugal in the quarter-final; Yahya Jabrane helped close out Morocco’s 1-0 advantage in the final moments of that contest.

Wydad goalkeeper Ahmed Reda Tagnaouti was also in Morocco’s squad, managed expertly by Walid Regragui, who guided the club to a Caf Champions League and domestic league double months before taking over the national team and overseeing their triumphs over Belgium, Spain and Portugal.

“It is fantastic for Morocco after the World Cup we experience­d for people to now see the football, the fans and the stadiums we have here,” said Regragui. “And home advantage should help Wydad.”

Wydad’s path to a possible semi-final against Brazil’s Flamengo is barred by Al Hilal, reigning Asian club champions. Al Hilal’s footballer­s have contribute­d more to the native esteem of the game in Saudi Arabia than either Cristiano Ronaldo joining its league or its stadiums hosting events such as the Spanish Super Cup or Paris Saint-Germain’s visit for an All-Star friendly.

Nine of them took part in Saudi Arabia’s stunning 2-1 group phase win over eventual champions Argentina in Lusail, including the goalscorer­s that day, Saleh Al Shehri and Salem Al Dawsari.

All those fresh back stories hint at a potentiall­y more open Club World Cup than usual. It has two African heavyweigh­ts, Al Ahly qualifying thanks to having finished runners-up in the last Caf Champions League because that competitio­n’s winners, Wydad, now coached by the Tunisian Mehdi Nafti, take the host club berth as Moroccan league winners.

The North American and Caribbean region is represente­d by the MLS, Seattle Sounders having interrupte­d Mexican clubs’ long domination of the Concacaf Champions League title.

The most distant travellers are New Zealand’s Auckland City, the Oceania champions. The last ten editions have been won by the European champion, and it would be bold to forecast a winner other than Real Madrid.

Yet their fixture schedule – with the trip to Morocco in between assignment­s in Saudi Arabia for the Spanish Super Cup, which they lost to Barcelona; imminent confrontat­ions with Barca in the Spanish Cup; a catch-up chase to retain their Liga title and a meeting with Liverpool in the Champions League – is sapping. Points have been dropped lately by Carlo Ancelotti’s side. Flamengo, South American champions, are in erratic form, too, and getting used to a new manager, Vitor Pereira.

Al Ahly, who meet Auckland this evening for the right to play Seattle Sounders, are also under a relatively new coach.

But Marcel Koller, a former manager of Austria, is unbeaten in 20 games in charge and fresh from a 3-0 derby victory over Zamalek. Koller is expected, at the very least, to match Al Ahly’s last two yields from the Club World Cup – which means coming back to Cairo with a medal.

The Middle East and North Africa will be well represente­d, as should be the region’s gains from World Cup 2022

 ?? AFP ?? Morocco’s players celebrate with Achraf Hakimi after he scored the winning penalty in the shoot-out to win their Round of 16 clash with Spain at the Qatar 2022 World Cup in December. Morocco hosts the Fifa Club World Cup this week
AFP Morocco’s players celebrate with Achraf Hakimi after he scored the winning penalty in the shoot-out to win their Round of 16 clash with Spain at the Qatar 2022 World Cup in December. Morocco hosts the Fifa Club World Cup this week

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