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World Cup 2026 top eight teams with Morocco as the only Muslim-majority quarter-finalist and Muslim-heritage players across elite nations

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Morocco In The Fifa Top Eight: Which Muslim Nation Reached The World Cup Quarter-Finals And Which Muslim-Heritage Players Progressed With Non-Muslim Teams?

Morocco became the only Muslim-majority nation in the World Cup 2026 top eight as Muslim-heritage players stayed alive across elite teams

The Top Eight And Muslim-World Relevance

Top Eight Team Muslim-Majority Nation? Muslim / Muslim-Heritage Relevance Stage Relevance
Morocco Yes Yassine Bounou, Achraf Hakimi, Sofyan Amrabat, Noussair Mazraoui, Azzedine Ounahi, Soufiane Rahimi Only strict Muslim-majority nation in the top eight
France No Ousmane Dembélé, N’Golo Kanté and other publicly discussed Muslim-background players Strongest non-Muslim-majority Muslim-player pool
Spain No Lamine Yamal Muslim-heritage attacking star with Moroccan family background and visible tournament influence
Belgium No Amadou Onana Publicly self-described Black Muslim immigrant, part of Belgium’s campaign
Switzerland No Granit Xhaka Swiss-Albanian leader from Kosovo Albanian Muslim community
Norway No Mohamed Elyounoussi as Morocco-born heritage relevance Heritage note, but not the central Muslim-player story of Norway’s progression
England No No clearly documented decisive Muslim-background contributor in available top-eight progression reporting No strong claim should be made
Argentina No No clearly documented decisive Muslim-background contributor in available top-eight progression reporting No strong claim should be made

Morocco: The Only Muslim-Majority Nation In The Last Eight

Morocco’s presence in the top eight was the main Muslim-majority national achievement of this stage. Their progression mattered because it placed an entire Muslim-majority football nation inside the final bracket tier where the tournament starts to feel less like participation and more like power.

This was not a token appearance. Morocco reached the last eight after beating Canada 3-0 in the Round of 16, with Al Jazeera’s quarter-final schedule noting Morocco’s victory over Canada as the route into the quarter-final lineup. The Moroccan spine carried familiar names: Yassine Bounou in goal, Achraf Hakimi as the right-sided engine, Sofyan Amrabat as the midfield stabilizer, and a supporting cast that gave Morocco enough structure to keep advancing when more hyped teams had already disappeared.

READ:   [Match Summary World Cup 2023 - Pakistan vs Sri Lanka] The other Pakistan are here

For Pakistani and wider Muslim audiences, this is why Morocco’s run resonated. It was not simply North African pride or Arab football emotion. It was proof that a Muslim-majority country could still push deep into the modern, expanded 48-team World Cup structure, where the road is longer, the match load heavier, and the margin for sentimental football almost nonexistent.

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