Doha, Dec. 16: They may have fallen just short of reaching the World Cup final, but Moroccans on Wednesday hailed their team’s historic run as it ended with a 2-0 defeat to reigning champions France.
“They played a great game but luck wasn’t on our side,” said supporter Oussama Abdouh in Casablanca.“Still, we stood up to the title-holders, that was great. “Beyond the World Cup, this team made us dream until the end and just for that I raise my hat to them.”
But for Hakim Salama, the 2-0 defeat to France was too much. “We missed the opportunity of the century,” he said. Rain lashed the capital Rabat on Wednesday evening and the atmosphere was far from the exhilaration of the historic victories that brought the Lions of the Atlas to within sight of a World Cup final -- the first Arab or African team to ever get so far.
This time, the car horns and the drummers were muted.“The national team has been performing miracles since the start of the World Cup,” said Rachid Sabbiq, a street trader in the working-class Derb Sultan district of Casablanca before the match. “It doesn’t matter whether they win or lose -- they’ve won the respect and admiration of all Moroccans, and that’s priceless,” he said.
Sabbiq had swapped his usual fare of sweets to sell Moroccan flags.‘They make us dream’Derb Sultan was a bastion of resistance against colonial authorities when the North African kingdom was a French protectorate from 1912 until 1956, and gave rise to one of Morocco’s top teams, Raja de Casablanca.
It was also the birthplace of legendary striker Mohamed Jarrir (alias “Houmane”), who in 1970 became the first Moroccan ever to score in the World Cup.“In this neighbourhood, we love football, so of course the national team’s victories make us dream,” said teenager Mohamed Nadifi, a teenager whose idol is winger Sofiane Boufal.
All over Morocco, shops have been selling team jerseys and flags.“Not only have the Lions made us happy but they also allowed us to get business going again” despite rough economic times for many Moroccans, said trader Khalid Alaoui.
Touria Matrougui braved cold and torrential rain to buy jerseys for her four nephews. “They held the Moroccan flag high and for that, we can never than them enough,” she said. (AFP)