By Sachit Subba • Football • Jun 30, 2026 10:05 AM • 61 views
MONTERREY, Mexico — For a generation of Mexican football fans inside the Estadio BBVA, the ghost of 2014 was finally exorcised, not by El Tri, but by a resilient band of Atlas Lions. Surrounded by thousands of local supporters chanting "No era penal," Morocco summoned the spirit of their historic deep tournament runs to eliminate the Netherlands in a breathtaking, emotionally charged Round of 32 clash.
After a gruelling 120 minutes of tactical warfare ended 1-1, Morocco survived a chaotic, nerve-shredding penalty shootout to emerge 3-2 victors. Ismael Saibari became the immediate national hero, ice-veined as he stepped up to smash home the decisive spot-kick after legendary goalkeeper Yassine Bounou denied Crysencio Summerville. The triumph books Walid Regragui’s men a ticket to Houston on Saturday for a mouthwatering last-16 matchup against co-hosts Canada.
Heavyweight Attrition and High-Stakes Friction
From the opening whistle, the Atlas Lions targeted the Dutch defence with precise, deep, overlapping horizontal runs led by the tireless Achraf Hakimi. The North Africans carve open the better openings of a scoreless first half, testing Bart Verbruggen's reflexes early. The Dutch shot-stopper single-handedly kept Ronald Koeman's men level, denying a point-blank header from young starlet Aoub Bouaddi and turning away a ferocious, dipping effort from Neil El Aynaoui.
At the opposing end, Bounou remained largely untroubled, save for an algebraic, full-stretch fingertip save to deflect Micky van de Ven’s speculative, long-range missile.
The second half threatened to devolve into a stalemate until Koeman introduced the physical focal point of Wout Weghorst. The giant striker's impact was instantaneous. Winning a crucial aerial duel, he flicked the ball into the path of Summerville, whose relentless tracking allowed Cody Gakpo to ghost into the area and sweep a clinical, first-time strike past Bounou in the 72nd minute.
It was a moment of profound, raw human emotion. Gakpo, playing just days after he and his partner suffered the tragic loss of their unborn child, collapsed into tears as his teammates mobbed him in a circle of solidarity.

Death-Row Resurgence
With the clock ticking down, the Dutch appeared to have successfully locked down the perimeter. Virgil van Dijk put on a masterclass in defensive positioning, executing a goal-saving challenge on Saibari. But Morocco refused to yield.
Deep into stoppage time, substitute Chemsdine Talbi conjured a moment of magic from the left wing, sending a delicious, looping cross into the heart of the box. Rising higher than the colossal Van Dijk, Issa Diop met the ball with a thunderous header that left Verbruggen stranded, sending the small army of Moroccan expatriates and their newly adopted Mexican allies into complete raptures.

The Fine Line of 12 Yards
Extra time failed to separate the two exhausted sides, leaving the footballing lottery to decide their fates.
What followed was pure theatre. Neil El Aynaoui missed for Morocco, before Justin Kluivert squandered his chance for the Dutch. Soufiane Rahimi's spot-kick was nearly saved by Verbruggen, but the sheer momentum of the strike saw the ball trickle agonisingly under his torso and over the line.
When Quinten Timber dragged his shot wide, and Hakimi uncharacteristically hit the post with a chance to win it, the pressure shifted back to Saibari. The midfielder made no mistake, sending the keeper the wrong way to secure a historic triumph.
"We know this type of game, we know exactly who we are playing against," a triumphant Achraf Hakimi reflected afterwards. "You have to be focused and strong physically, but also mentally. I want to say thank you to Mexico for the incredible support, and to all the Moroccans who travelled here to stand by us."
A dejected Virgil van Dijk could only look at what might have been. "The game plan was working," the Oranje captain admitted. "In the end, in stoppage time, you get pushed back. Then it goes to penalties and then... unfortunately, we’re eliminated. Of course, there are always things that could be better, but that doesn't help us now."
