• Latest
  • Trending
World Cup 2022: Could Morocco win to fulfil Pele’s prediction?

World Cup 2022: Could Morocco win to fulfil Pele’s prediction?

December 10, 2022
Kufuor Questions Snub at Key National Council Meeting

Kufuor Questions snub at Key National Council Meeting

July 13, 2025
NPP plans legal action over Ablekuma North re-run defeat

NPP plans legal action over Ablekuma North re-run defeat

July 13, 2025
GES sets September 2 as start date for 2025/2026 basic school academic year

GES sets September 2 as start date for 2025/2026 basic school academic year

July 13, 2025
New Governing Board and CEO inaugurated for National Ambulance Service

New Governing Board and CEO inaugurated for National Ambulance Service

July 13, 2025
Presidency to launch the Government Accountability Series on Monday

Presidency to launch the Government Accountability Series on Monday

July 13, 2025
Oil funds for 'Big Push' will be efficiently used - Prez Mahama to PIAC.

Oil funds for ‘Big Push’ will be efficiently used – Prez Mahama to PIAC

July 13, 2025
Finance Minister to present 2024 Mid-Year Budget Review on July 24

Finance Minister to present 2024 Mid-Year Budget Review on July 24

July 13, 2025
Peace Council speaks on Ablekuma North election violence

Peace Council speaks on Ablekuma North election violence

July 13, 2025
Veep inaugurates entrance University of Health Sciences

Veep inaugurates entrance University of Health Sciences

July 13, 2025
Ghanaian sports journalist Joseph Adamafio becomes licensed FIFA football agent

Ghanaian sports journalist Joseph Adamafio becomes licensed FIFA football agent

July 12, 2025
BREAKING: Ewurabena Aubynn declared MP elect of Ablekuma-North constituency

BREAKING: Ewurabena Aubynn declared MP elect of Ablekuma-North constituency

July 11, 2025
President Mahama directs GSA, Finance, and Transport Ministries to resolve freight forwarders’ challenges and restore order at the ports

President Mahama directs GSA, Finance, and Transport Ministries to resolve freight forwarders’ challenges and restore order at the ports

July 11, 2025
Happy Ghana
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
    • International Sports
    • Afcon2017
    • Afcon2019
    • Corporate Knockout
    • U17 World Cup
    • World Cup 2018
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Bizarre
  • Feature
  • More
    • Technology
    • Opinion
    • Lifestyle
  • Listen Live
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
    • International Sports
    • Afcon2017
    • Afcon2019
    • Corporate Knockout
    • U17 World Cup
    • World Cup 2018
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Bizarre
  • Feature
  • More
    • Technology
    • Opinion
    • Lifestyle
  • Listen Live
No Result
View All Result
Happy Ghana
No Result
View All Result
Home Sports

World Cup 2022: Could Morocco win to fulfil Pele’s prediction?

in Sports
World Cup 2022: Could Morocco win to fulfil Pele’s prediction?
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

The world’s biggest party took place at Education City stadium in Doha on Tuesday night when Morocco upset Spain in the 2022 Fifa World Cup round of 16.

The vast majority of the 44,000-strong crowd was overwhelmed by emotion after Morocco defender Achraf Hakimi sealed victory with a cheeky panenka penalty kick.

Moroccans poured out into the streets of Casablanca, Rabat, Marrakesh, and practically every capital city in Western Europe to celebrate.

Even King Mohamed VI joined the jubilant crowds.

After the team danced, hugged and cried in the dressing room, coach Walid Regragui made an extremely important declaration in his post-match press conference.

“At some point in Africa, we have to be ambitious and why not win the World Cup, even if it’s going to be hard,” he said.

The declaration was a sign of a paradigm shift in how African nations approach the World Cup, and it is fitting that it came from Regragui, who represents a paradigm-shift in African coaching.

Not only did he cut his teeth on the continent, spending his formative years coaching domestic football in Morocco, he is also part of the inaugural Caf Pro Licence class of 2018 – the very first group of coaches who secured football’s highest coaching diploma entirely on the continent.

He represents everything that is right in African football: He’s young, competent, cosmopolitan, fearless and a pan-Africanist at heart.

Morocco's head coach Walid Regragui is thrown in the air as Morocco players celebrate after winning the penalty shootout during a round 16 soccer game against Spain, at the Education City Stadium during the FIFA World Cup 2022, on Tuesday, Dec. 06, 2022 in Doha, Qatar
Image caption,Morocco’s head coach Walid Regragui has been a huge inspiration to his team

Senegal’s Aliou Cissé, Algeria’s Djamel Belmadi, Tunisia’s Radhi Jaidi and South Africa’s Benni McCarthy are other examples of the new African coaching prototype.

It is no coincidence that the 2022 World Cup was the first time all five African nations had African coaches to lead them.

But is Regragui right? Should Africa be asking itself if it can win a World Cup?

As an African football journalist, I often dread the week ahead of World Cups because, without fail, at least one Western media outlet will ask me about Pele’s apocryphal mid-1970s prediction that an African team would win the tournament before the year 2000.

In the past, I mostly offered a cursory shrug of the shoulders, and replied that Pele said a lot of things that did not necessarily mean much, and left it at that.

This year, however, I re-considered my dismissive response.

In November, Cameroon football federation president Samuel Eto’o Fils declared that he was expecting Cameroon to beat Morocco in an all-African final.

He was immediately ridiculed online, mostly by his own compatriots, but his statement elicited a different response from me – it piqued my curiosity.

“What stopped an African team from winning a World Cup in years past?” I asked myself.

It begins with the colonisation of the continent.

The unfortunate reality is that throughout the seven World Cups that took place from 1930 to 1962, Egypt in 1934 was the continent’s sole representative.

That is partly down to the brutal colonisation of the continent by Western European nations, and partly down to Fifa’s former bosses refusing to grant Africa an automatic place at the tournament, even for countries that had gained independence.

Opening ceremony of 2010 World Cup in Johannesburg
Image caption,Africa has hosted the World Cup only once – in South Africa in 2010

In 1966, the African continent boycotted the World Cup in England to send a message to Fifa that it demanded a guaranteed place at the tournament, which it then secured in 1970.

Over the next three decades, African teams managed brilliant upsets, including Algeria defeating West Germany, Morocco dispatching Portugal, and Cameroon bludgeoning Argentina (in more ways than one).

Despite this, Fifa continued to drag its feet, awarding African nations only two places in 1982, three in 1994, and then five in 1998.

So one reason Africa is yet to win a World Cup is that it has barely been participating.

Some might point to poor results in the last 12 years, but who is to say that increased participation would not have led to increased competition and improvement?

The prize money for simply participating in the World Cup could have been injected into grassroots football around the continent, significantly improving the quality of play.

Nearly a century after the inaugural World Cup was hosted in Uruguay, Africa will finally be awarded a more equitable number of places, when we will have 9.5 places in 2026 – inching us a bit closer to global parity.

The 2022 World Cup has also shown us that a lack of representation, not only in the form of qualification slots, but also in the form of hosting rights, can be extremely influential.

South Korea made the semi-finals in 2002 when they co-hosted the tournament, while the Black Stars of Ghana were a penalty-kick away from the semi-finals in 2010 in Africa’s first World Cup in South Africa.

Is it merely a coincidence that Africa and Asia’s best ever finishes came the only time the continents have hosted the tournaments?

The 2022 World Cup has shown us that the answer is: probably not.

Three Asian sides qualified for the knockout stages this year, and the Qatar World Cup has been, by far, the most successful tournament ever on the pitch for African countries.

The 24 cumulative points out of their 15 group stage matches smashed a previous record of 15 points set in the 2002 tournament.

Source: BBC

Subscribe to receive notification everytime a new post is published. We promise to be discrete.

Unsubscribe
Previous Post

NDC Decides: Party warns against camping of delegates

Next Post

Decent toilets are a human right

Next Post
Decent toilets are a human right

Decent toilets are a human right

Search

No Result
View All Result

Listen Live

BBC Match of the Day Africa

Happy Ghana

Recent News

  • Kufuor Questions snub at Key National Council Meeting
  • NPP plans legal action over Ablekuma North re-run defeat
  • GES sets September 2 as start date for 2025/2026 basic school academic year
  • About
  • advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Happy FM – Powered by Ghana’s leading radio network. Designed with passion by Global Media Alliance.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
    • International Sports
    • Afcon2017
    • Afcon2019
    • Corporate Knockout
    • U17 World Cup
    • World Cup 2018
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Bizarre
  • Feature
  • More
    • Technology
    • Opinion
    • Lifestyle
  • Listen Live

© 2025 Happy FM – Powered by Ghana’s leading radio network. Designed with passion by Global Media Alliance.