TL;DR: In a relentlessly physical Round of 32 clash at the 2026 World Cup, Morocco advanced past the Netherlands 3-2 on penalties following a dramatic 1-1 draw through extra time. Cody Gakpo opened the scoring for the Dutch in the 72nd minute, but a 91st-minute equalizer from Issa Diop forced extra time, setting up Ismael Saibari to smash home the winning penalty.
If you were looking for beautiful, fluid football in Monterrey, you tuned into the wrong game. This wasn’t a tactical chess match; it was a 120-minute street fight. Two international heavyweights—ranked sixth and seventh in the world—collided with their tournament lives on the line, and neither side gave an inch.
From the first whistle, the tone was set. The tackles were heavy, the aerial duels left players bloodied (Jan Paul van Hecke spent a solid chunk of the first half getting patched up after a massive collision), and the tension was thick enough to cut with a knife.
The Breakdown
- The Breakthrough: After a scoreless, bruising first half, Cody Gakpo broke the deadlock in the 72nd minute. Emotion spilled over as the Dutch bench swarmed the forward, who looked to have sent the Netherlands straight into the Round of 16.
- The Last-Gasp Miracle: Morocco refused to stay down. Pushing bodies forward in stoppage time, Chemsdine Talbi floated a desperate ball into the box. Center-back Issa Diop rose above the crowd, completely twisting mid-air to power home a header in the 91st minute. It was his first-ever international goal, and it sent the stadium into absolute pandemonium
- The War of Attrition: Extra time was a display of heavy legs and raw survival instinct. Both teams had flashes—including a massive 1-on-1 stop by Dutch keeper Bart Verbruggen against Soufiane Rahimi—but fatigue took over, and a penalty shootout became inevitable.
Drama from the Spot
Shootouts are cruel, but this one felt like a fitting end to a chaotic night. Both teams struggled to find their rhythm under the immense pressure:
- Netherlands: Teun Koopmeiners and Wout Weghorst converted, but high-profile misses from Justin Kluivert, Quinten Timber, and Crysencio Summerville doomed the Dutch.
- Morocco: Soufiane Rahimi and Chemsdine Talbi buried theirs. Despite misses from Neil El Aynaoui and star man Achraf Hakimi, Ismael Saibari stepped up to the spot and calmly smashed the decisive penalty into the net to win it 3-2.
The Atlas Lions prove once again that their historic 2022 run was no fluke. They advance to face Canada on July 4th, while the Netherlands head home left to wonder what might have been if they could have survived just two more minutes of stoppage time











