Africa finally has a team in the World Cup semifinals, and so does the Arab world.
Morocco delivered a seminal moment in the
nearly 100-year history of soccer’s biggest tournament, beating Cristiano
Ronaldo and his Portugal team 1-0 Saturday in the another shocking result in
the first World Cup staged in the Middle East.
While a tearful Ronaldo headed right down
the tunnel — and maybe into international retirement — after the final whistle,
Morocco’s players tossed their coach in the air and waved their country’s flag
as they linked arms in front of celebrating fans.
“Pinch me, I’m dreaming,” Morocco
goalkeeper Yassine Bounou said. “Morocco is ready to face anyone in the world.
We have changed the mentality of the generation coming after us. They’ll know
Moroccan players can create miracles.”
Youssef En-Nesyri scored the winning goal
in the 42nd minute to continue an improbable run that has generated an
outpouring of pride in the Arab world, inspiring displays in Arab identity from
fans in different countries.
Africa is also rejoicing at finally having
a nation advancing to the levels typically only reached by European or South
American teams. Cameroon (1990), Senegal (2002) and Ghana (2010) all reached
the quarterfinals but got no further.
Morocco has broken through, setting up a
semifinal match against either France or England.
The 37-year-old Ronaldo, one of soccer’s
greatest players but now a fading force, didn’t start for the second straight
game and came on as a substitute in the 51st minute. He missed his only chance
to equalize in stoppage time.
The five-time world player of the year is
set to finish his career without capturing the World Cup or ever getting to the
final. He walked right off the field after the final whistle, only briefly
stopped by two Morocco players wishing to shake his hand and a spectator who
confronted him near the entrance to the tunnel, and was crying as he headed to
the locker room.
If this is the end for Ronaldo at
international level, he’ll finish with 118 goals — a record in men’s soccer —
and a European Championship title but not soccer’s biggest prize. He only got
as far as the semifinals in the World Cup, in 2006.
“Our players are distressed,” said Portugal
coach Fernando Santos, who shrugged off questions about his own future and
added that he didn’t regret not starting Ronaldo. “Cristiano is a great player
and he came on when we thought it was necessary. But no, no regrets.”
There’s no reason why this Morocco squad —
coached by French-born Walid Regragui and containing 14 players born abroad —
cannot go all the way to the title. They topped a group that included
second-ranked Belgium and fellow semifinalist Croatia and have now taken down
two of Europe’s heavyweights in Spain — after a penalty shootout in the round
of 16 — and Portugal in the quarterfinals.
“We have gone into the history books,”
Regragui said. “We have made the continent and our people happy and proud.”
Morocco’s defense has yet to concede a goal
by an opposition player at this year’s World Cup — the only one it has allowed
was an own-goal — and it stifled a Portugal team which beat Switzerland 6-1 in
the last 16 to thrust itself among the favorites.
In a game played to the backdrop of
non-stop whistles and jeers by Morocco’s passionate fans, the team relied
almost exclusively on counterattacks and scored from one of them.
A cross was swung in from the left and
En-Nesyri leapt between Portugal goalkeeper Diogo Costa and defender Ruben Dias
to head into the empty net.
Ronaldo, who will be 41 by the time of the
2026 World Cup in the United States, Mexico and Canada, barely got a touch of the
ball until stoppage time when he got in behind Morocco’s defense off a long
ball forward. His low shot was saved by Bounou, who hadn’t had too much to do
before that point.
Substitute Walid Cheddira was shown a red
card for Morocco early in stoppage time for collecting a second yellow card in
as many minutes.
After Portugal center back Pepe headed wide
from inside the six-yard box in the sixth minute of added time, Ronaldo fell to
his knees in dejection.
While Lionel Messi will be in the
semifinals with Argentina, the other soccer great of this generation won’t be.
-AP