🇨🇦 Canada
2 Wins, 1 Draw, 1 Loss| Round | Match | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Group B | Canada vs Bosnia and Herzegovina | 1-1 D |
| Group B | Canada vs Qatar | 6-0 W |
| Group B | Switzerland vs Canada | 3-1 L |
| Round of 32 | South Africa vs Canada | 0-1 W |

Canada’s World Cup run has already delivered several firsts, but the co-hosts face their toughest test yet when they meet Morocco in Houston. Jesse Marsch’s side advanced after finishing second in Group B, while Morocco finished second in Group C before eliminating the Netherlands on penalties. The Atlas Lions enter as deserved favorites after showing greater experience in tight knockout matches.
I am backing Morocco to win this match, and here is why.

A look at each team’s route to the Round of 16 ahead of Canada vs Morocco.
| Round | Match | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Group B | Canada vs Bosnia and Herzegovina | 1-1 D |
| Group B | Canada vs Qatar | 6-0 W |
| Group B | Switzerland vs Canada | 3-1 L |
| Round of 32 | South Africa vs Canada | 0-1 W |
| Round | Match | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Group C | Brazil vs Morocco | 1-1 D |
| Group C | Scotland vs Morocco | 0-1 W |
| Group C | Morocco vs Haiti | 4-2 W |
| Round of 32 | Netherlands vs Morocco | 1-1 Morocco won 3-2 on penalties W |
Canada have made this tournament memorable. A 1-1 draw with Bosnia and Herzegovina, a 6-0 win over Qatar, and a narrow 2-1 defeat against Switzerland were enough to send them through Group B. They then found a late answer against South Africa, with Stephen Eustaquio scoring in the 92nd minute of a 1-0 victory.
Canada’s offense revolves largely around Jonathan David. He has scored 3 goals at this World Cup and has registered 7 shots on target. Cyle Larin has added 2 goals, while Tajon Buchanan gives Canada a direct option on the right. The Canadians have produced 7 or more shots on target in 3 of their 4 matches, ranking near the top of the tournament in shots on target and attempts from inside the penalty area.
However, don’t be misled by the number of goals. Canada’s attacking numbers need context. Six of their goals came against a Qatar side reduced to 9 men, while Marsch’s team have missed 11 big chances across the tournament. That wastefulness could be costly against a Morocco team that gives opponents little room for error.
Morocco opened Group C with a draw against Brazil before recording wins over Scotland and Haiti. The Atlas Lions then beat the Netherlands after a 1-1 draw and a penalty shootout, a result that showed both their composure and their ability to manage a tense match. They had the better of the underlying play against the Dutch, creating 1.36 expected goals while allowing only 0.24 across 120 minutes.
Ismael Saibari has been Morocco’s standout scorer with 3 goals, while Brahim Diaz has supplied 2 assists. Achraf Hakimi remains the game-breaker from right back, with a goal, an assist, and 4 shots on target in the tournament. His runs will test Canada’s left side, especially if Alphonso Davies starts after making his first appearance of the competition off the bench against South Africa.
Davies being available is a major boost, but Canada will still be without midfielder Ismaël Koné after his broken leg against Qatar. Eustaquio and Nathan Saliba must cover plenty of ground against Morocco’s mobile midfield, and Canada cannot afford to lose control of the central areas for long spells.
Morocco played 120 minutes against the Netherlands, so there is a reasonable case for Canada keeping this close. However, Morocco have the deeper group, more proven players in major international matches, and a goalkeeper in Yassine Bounou who has repeatedly delivered under pressure. Canada should create some moments in transition, but Morocco have the stronger route to a quarterfinal place.
Morocco should control possession and territory, while Canada look to create danger on the counterattack.
Canada predicted XI, 4-4-2:
Crépeau – Johnston, Bombito, Cornelius, Laryea – Buchanan, Saliba, Eustáquio, Millar – Oluwaseyi, David
Morocco predicted XI, 4-2-3-1:
Bono – Hakimi, Diop, Riad, Mazraoui – Bouaddi, El Aynaoui – Díaz, Ounahi, El Khannouss – Saibari
Morocco are not priced as an overwhelming favorite, and that feels fair. Canada have energy, pace, and enough attacking talent to threaten Morocco, especially with Davies available for a larger role. However, Morocco’s midfield quality, defensive structure, and greater experience in these situations make them the more reliable side.
I am backing Morocco to win inside 90 minutes at -125. They are the better side, and the price still offers value despite Morocco entering as favorites.