Ayyoub Bouaddi insisted he harbors no regret about his decision to commit his international career to Morocco rather than France after the Atlas Lions were eliminated from the World Cup in a 2-0 quarterfinal defeat to the country of his birth on Thursday, with goals from two of France’s most prominent forwards ending Morocco’s tournament run in a rematch of the 2022 semifinal they also lost.
The 18-year-old Lille midfielder, born and raised in northern France, formally committed to Morocco in May after representing France at various youth levels and as recently as March captaining the under-21 squad. His decision was one of the most debated nationality switches heading into the tournament, and his emergence as one of the World Cup’s most impressive young players added weight to the conversation about what France had foregone by not securing his long-term allegiance.
A choice from the heart that stands after defeat
Bouaddi was direct and composed in addressing the question of regret after the loss. He described his decision to represent Morocco as one made from genuine emotional commitment rather than strategic calculation, framing it as something he remains proud of regardless of results. His language reflected an 18-year-old who understood the complexity of his situation but had made peace with it before the tournament began and did not require a good result to feel that peace was justified.
He acknowledged that Morocco had hoped to make their people proud by going further in the competition and said the team gave everything in the match against France. The loss, in his framing, was not something that undermined his choice but something that would help the squad identify what they need to develop before the next major tournament.
A revelation despite the exit
Bouaddi had been one of the breakout performers of the tournament before Thursday’s defeat, establishing himself as a first-choice starter for Morocco after an impressive competitive debut against Brazil in the group stage. His ability to influence games at the highest level at 18 was a significant part of why Morocco’s run generated such widespread attention, and it also explains why the conversation about his decision to represent Morocco rather than France became such a prominent pre-match storyline ahead of the quarterfinal.
Against France he struggled to impose himself as Didier Deschamps’ side controlled the match and closed it out with relative comfort. That outcome did not define the overall impression he left across the tournament as a whole, and his composure in the post-match interview reflected a player who processes adversity in a manner that suggests he will be a significant figure in international football for many years.
Morocco’s historic achievement
While the elimination was painful, Morocco leave the tournament having made history for the second time in consecutive World Cups. They became the first African nation to reach back-to-back World Cup quarterfinals and the only African team to advance to the last eight in two separate tournaments. The 2022 run to the semifinals had already been unprecedented for African football, and this edition confirmed that the achievement was not an anomaly.
France advance to the semifinals to face the winner of Friday’s quarterfinal between Spain and Belgium. For Morocco, the exit comes with the knowledge that consecutive deep runs have established them as a genuine force in world football rather than a one-tournament story, and with a generation of young players including Bouaddi at the heart of what comes next.

