Morocco Predictions
AI-powered match predictions, accuracy tracking, and bookmaker consensus comparisons.
📅 Upcoming Fixtures
📊 Past Predictions (latest 9)
Netherlands and Morocco played out a 1-1 draw in a tightly contested World Cup knockout clash. Cody Gakpo gave the Netherlands the lead in the 72nd minute with an assist from Cody Summerville, but Morocco refused to fold. Ilias Diop levelled things up in the 90+1st minute, fed by Cheikh Talbi, to secure a dramatic late equaliser and force extra time.
Our model had tipped a 2-1 Netherlands win before kickoff, giving the draw just a 26% chance. That was a lean among plausible outcomes rather than a confident call, but it still underestimated Morocco's resolve. The pre-match analysis flagged the Netherlands' prolific recent form and their elite attacking threat at this level, while noting Morocco's strong defensive record but more conservative scoring pattern. The match broadly reflected those expectations — the Netherlands did dominate possession and chances — yet Morocco's ability to stay compact and strike late proved the key variable our model had underweighted. The low-scoring outcome also defied the over 2.5 goals expectation that flowed from the projected scoreline. It's a clean reminder that even when the underlying shape of a game tracks as expected, the final margin can shift decisively in the closing moments.
Morocco swept past Haiti with a commanding 4-2 victory in what turned out to be a more open contest than our pre-match model had anticipated. An own goal from Bono inside the opening ten minutes set the tone early, before Hakimi doubled the lead on 39 minutes. Haiti pulled one back through Isidor just before the break, but Morocco reasserted control decisively. Saibari restored the two-goal buffer in first-half stoppage time with an assist from Hakimi, then Rahimi added the fourth on 78 minutes off a pass from Riad. Yassine rounded things off late on with a finish created by Rahimi.
Our prediction of a 3-0 scoreline with Morocco winning at 82% gave us the result direction spot on, but we underestimated Haiti's capacity to trouble the Moroccan defence. The model had weighted a clean sheet heavily, when in reality Haiti's dogged approach and moments of quality—particularly Isidor's finish and the build-up play that set it up—showed enough to register twice. That said, the pre-match expectation of Morocco's dominance and their ability to score multiple goals proved accurate; they simply weren't quite as watertight at the back as expected.
The shape of the match held broadly to what we'd flagged beforehand. Morocco's attacking intent was unmistakable from the start, and Haiti's challenge was always going to lean on opportunism rather than sustained control. Missing the exact scoreline is a fair miss—this wasn't a curveball, just a reminder that World Cup football's unpredictability means even strong leans can play out with different margins and defensive frailties than the numbers suggest.
Morocco's early strike proved decisive in this World Cup group-stage encounter. Saibari opened the scoring in the second minute, assisted by Diaz, and that single goal remained the difference as Scotland pressed without finding an equalizer. The match unfolded as a competitive contest between two sides with contrasting needs—Morocco seeking knockout-stage qualification, Scotland fighting for survival in the group—but Morocco's efficiency in front of goal and defensive discipline secured the win.
The model had assigned Morocco a 44% win probability before kickoff, the most likely single outcome among three plausible scenarios. However, this was a lean rather than a confident forecast; the prediction of a 1–2 scoreline suggested a tighter, higher-scoring affair. The actual 1–0 result fell outside our expected range, indicating the model had weighted both teams' attacking potential more heavily than events justified. Pre-match analysis flagged both sides as capable of scoring—Scotland's home record showed vulnerability, but their xG generation remained respectable—yet Morocco's clinical approach and defensive resilience proved more decisive than the underlying metrics suggested.
The narrow margin masks Scotland's inability to capitalize on their opportunities, while Morocco's defensive organization limited the hosts' clearest chances. For a model that builds on statistical patterns and form data, this serves as a reminder that tournament football compresses outcomes; occasionally, one-goal margins emerge from matches where the expected shot volume and quality point elsewhere. Morocco advance with three points; Scotland's group campaign enters a critical phase.
Brazil and Morocco played out a tight, evenly contested draw that defied our pre-match expectation of a Brazilian victory. Morocco struck first through Saibari in the 21st minute, assisted by Diaz, catching Brazil cold in the early stages. Brazil responded swiftly, equalizing through Vinicius Junior just eleven minutes later with the help of a Bruno Guimaraes assist. Neither side found a winner thereafter, and the match finished 1-1.
Our model predicted a 2-1 scoreline favoring Brazil, assigning draw probability at just 19 percent—a clear lean toward a home win. The expectation rested on Brazil's strong domestic form and Morocco's relative uncertainty in away fixtures, combined with a defensive solidity that suggested a low-conceding performance. The match, however, unfolded differently. Both sides demonstrated attacking intent and defensive vulnerability in equal measure, with neither team able to establish the kind of control our pre-match analysis had suggested Brazil might impose. Morocco's early goal was a genuine threat realized, while Brazil's inability to convert pressure into a second goal left the result balanced.
This outcome sits comfortably within the range of plausible opening-stage scenarios—early group matches often produce tighter contests than form lines suggest—but it was not the most probable path our model identified. The draw remains a tournament outcome, neither side disadvantaged by the point, and both advancing with realistic paths to progression despite neither team's preferred result.