Marrakech – Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) President Samir Xaud has described the Seleçao’s 2026 FIFA World Cup opener against Morocco as “an honor,” tipping the Group C clash for a landmark spectacle at MetLife Stadium on Saturday.
In an exclusive sit-down with Morocco’s state-owned news agency MAP in Brasilia, the CBF chief declared it “an honor to kick off the World Cup against a squad that has conquered the world through its organization, courage, and playing identity.”
He forecast “a grand spectacle” pitting two dynamic, passionate footballing schools recognized worldwide, and predicted a duel of elite technical quality fought with intensity, commitment, and deep mutual respect.
“Opening with a fixture of this magnitude reinforces the importance of preparation and concentration. This match will be etched in memory, I am certain,” Xaud told MAP.
The June 13 showdown pits five-time champions Brazil against the Atlas Lions, who delivered a historic semifinal run at Qatar 2022 – the first by an African or Arab nation – and enter the 2026 tournament ranked seventh globally. Scotland and Haiti round out the group.
Xaud, a sports medicine specialist who assumed the CBF presidency in May 2025 on a modernization mandate, offered a measured, clinical reading of both squads.
He identified two distinct trajectories. Morocco, he observed, has consolidated a model whose standout results flow naturally from the continuity of its Qatar 2022 semifinal core.
Brazil, meanwhile, has embarked on a generational reset under Carlo Ancelotti – the first foreign coach to lead the Seleçao in decades – seeking to fuse the nation’s trademark individual brilliance with a renewed collective discipline.
The CBF president credited Morocco’s ascent to strategic investments driven under King Mohammed VI. “Morocco’s long-term vision, its world-class infrastructure, and its priority on youth development have shaped an extremely competitive ecosystem,” he told MAP, adding that the co-hosting of the 2030 FIFA World Cup alongside Spain and Portugal cements that trajectory.
“World football gains when new powers emerge through solid projects, and Morocco is unquestionably part of that. For us, this inspires admiration and respect,” he added.
Morocco arrive buoyed by a flawless qualifying run – eight wins from eight in CAF Group E – and a 2025 AFCON title. Mohamed Ouahbi, who guided the U-20 squad to a historic Youth World Cup triumph, took charge from Walid Regragui in March and has steered the squad toward a more attack-oriented identity.
Xaud acknowledged Morocco’s role in reshaping the ceiling for African football and maintained the kingdom “deserves full recognition.” Yet he cautioned that Brazil’s five World Cup stars must never breed complacency.
“Our responsibility is different: we carry an exceptional legacy, but also the obligation to evolve permanently,” he insisted, warning that modern football is more competitive, more physical, and more strategic than ever.
Contemporary football, he argued, demands more than marquee names – it requires structure, discipline, and flexibility. Those same pillars now guide his own institutional overhaul at the CBF: rigorous financial fair play, national calendar optimization, and a science-driven approach to talent development.
Kick-off is set for 11 p.m. GMT+1 on Saturday at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
Read also: Morocco at World Cup 2026: Fixtures, Squad List, Rising Stars

Join on WhatsApp
Join on Telegram







