
* Some fixtures carry more than 90 minutes—Morocco v Cameroon is one of them in the AfCON Morocco 2025 tonight kicking off 21h00
* Cameroon remain unbeaten against Morocco at the AfCON and the two teams had not met at the AfCON finals since 1992 — a 39-year wait
Maravi Express
A high-tension quarterfinal, in a stadium firmly behind the Atlas Lions, against Indomitable Lions who advance without inhibition — driven by faith, mentality, and a hungry youth — is a fixture between Morocco and Cameroon that carry more than 90 minutes.

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This will be the 4th Morocco-Cameroon meeting in the knockout stages of the AfCON in which in the three previous matches, Cameroonian won twice, the other in a one-draw.
Cameroon remain unbeaten against Morocco at the AfCON and the two teams had not met at the AfCON finals since 1992 — a 39-year wait
At home, Morocco knows what’s at stake. More than a ticket to the last four, it’s about confirmation — confirmation of a status built since the FIFA World Cup 2022: a team that now embraces possession, control, and the pressure that comes with being the favorite.
Coach Walid Regragui has repeated it — here, there’s no change out of fear: “When you change too much, it means you doubt,” he says, true to his playing philosophy. Morocco will stick to its principles, its regained balance down the flanks, an Achraf Hakimi still building momentum, and the conviction that humility remains the best armour.

Walid Regragui
But the treatment room is a reminder that nothing ever aligns perfectly. Hamza Igmane is back at 100%, Romain Saïss is in the return phase, and Sofyan Amrabat is still managing a troublesome ankle.
Nothing alarming — rather the usual background noise of a long tournament, where focus is paramount: “The slightest mistake can be costly,” warns the Moroccan tactician, fully aware that against an opponent of this calibre, every poorly handled ball can turn into a lethal transition.
Because Cameroon arrive without the favourite’s suit, but with inner certainty. That of a team openly rebuilding, yet already solid. David Pagou doesn’t hide it: his group isn’t yet “the perfect team,” but it’s moving forward.
Areas to refine, automatisms to consolidate — but one thing is settled; the mentality. The famous Hemlé, often caricatured, which the coach brings back to its true meaning: courage, personality, and the ability to hold firm when everything is pushing against you.

The Indomitable Lions also have their minor physical concerns. Darlin Yongwa, who went off injured against South Africa, remains under observation. “The medical room is always busy in this kind of tournament,” Pagou relativises. The essential lies elsewhere: psychological management, the ability to play through pain to represent the nation.
In the Cameroonian discourse, one line keeps coming back: the past doesn’t win matches. Historical confrontations, past Moroccan eliminations at home — those belong in the archives.
“The past doesn’t guarantee the future,” insists the coach, who hands the favourite’s tag to Morocco. “World Cup semifinalists,” structured, organised, and playing at home. It’s also a way to free his team, to shift the pressure.
On the pitch, the duel promises a contrast in styles. Morocco, masters of the ball (65% average possession), patient and structured, capable of stretching the opposing block and striking from set pieces—a sector they work on meticulously.

Cameroon, for their part, excel without the ball, with rapid projections and power in transitions. “No team can be strong for 90 minutes,” analyzes the Cameroonian coach. The challenge will be to survive Morocco’s strong phases and strike, without hesitation, in their weak moments.
In midfield, the battle will be as much mental as tactical. Regragui expects more freedom from his key players, especially in the engine room, where pressure can sometimes restrain talent.
Opposite them, Cameroon relies on emerging leaders, such as Bémond, encouraged to impose himself in the locker room as well as on the pitch.
Tonight, there will be no more talk of discourse, symbols, or legacy — just a quarterfinal between two great African nations, two visions of the game, two forms of pressure. Morocco play to confirm — Cameroon to disrupt the established order.
And as often in matches like this, everything could be decided by a detail — a transition, a set piece…or a moment of mental truth.

Christian Kofane (26)
Cameroon forward, sensational teenager Christian Kofane said in a pre-match interview that every player knows pressure: “Playing in the Bundesliga, I’ve faced very intense crowds, like Borussia Dortmund’s, so I know how to perform in that environment.
“We know how Morocco play and we’ve prepared for it. We’ll stay in our bubble and do what we know how to do.”
Morocco coach Regragui said: “I remain confident because we have quality players. We’ve worked a lot with video to identify what wasn’t well implemented, what didn’t work, and the many mistakes to correct. Regardless of which midfield starts, the key thing is the mindset.—Reporting by CAFonline; edited by Maravi Express



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