
Undefeated Netherlands and Morocco Face Off in World Cup Knockout Rematch
Both teams progressed through the group stage without defeat, rekindling a World Cup rivalry last seen in 1994 at the Estadio Monterrey.
The 2026 World Cup knockout phase opened on Monday with a pairing that bridged three decades of football history: the Netherlands against Morocco in the round of 32. Both sides arrived at the Estadio Monterrey unbeaten from the group stage, the Dutch topping Group F with seven points and Morocco finishing runners-up to Brazil on goal difference in Group C after matching that same tally. Coaches Ronald Koeman and Walid Regragui, each seeking to steer their nation beyond a track record of near misses and recent breakthroughs, prepared for a match that bookmakers and data models across Latin America rated as narrowly in favour of the European side.
The Netherlands’ group campaign was a mix of resilience and firepower. They opened with a 2-2 draw against Japan, then dismantled Sweden 5-1 before a controlled 3-1 victory over Tunisia. Morocco, meanwhile, held Brazil to a 1-1 draw, edged Scotland 1-0, and overwhelmed Haiti 4-2. Predictive models published by Peruvian outlets projected a 48% chance of a Dutch win, with a 27% likelihood of a draw after full time. The most probable scoreline was 2-1 to the Netherlands, while Cody Gakpo was tipped as the most likely scorer and Frenkie de Jong the potential man of the match.
The fixture carried historical weight. The only previous World Cup meeting came in the 1994 group stage, a 2-1 Dutch victory that helped eliminate Morocco. Since then, the Oranje have maintained an unblemished record against African sides at the tournament, while Morocco arrive fortified by their trailblazing run to the semi-finals in Qatar 2022 – the first by an African and Arab team. For the Netherlands, three lost finals (1974, 1978, 2010) remain a source of generational frustration, making any knockout tie a test of nerve. Koeman’s squad, featuring established names alongside emerging talent, sought to avoid an early upset in a stadium packed with Mexican fans and global television audiences.
The winner of this last-32 encounter will face South Africa or Canada in the last sixteen, a path that could open further should the Netherlands’ favoured status hold. Across Latin America, broadcasters from Argentina’s DSports to Mexico’s ViX Premium carried the match live, with kick-off staggered from early evening in Central American time zones to late night in Buenos Aires. For Morocco, the match offered another chance to dismantle European assumptions; for the Dutch, it was a first step toward a title that has long evaded one of football’s perennial contenders.
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