Morocco thump Egypt 6-0 to win bronze in men's football at Paris Olympics
Morocco claimed the bronze medal in the Paris Olympic men's soccer tournament with a crushing 6-0 win over Egypt thanks to Soufiane Rahimi's double and goals from Abde Ezzalzouli, Bilal El Khannouss, Akram Nakach and Achraf Hakimi in Nantes on Thursday, August 8.
Morocco, who lost 2-1 to Spain in the semi-finals, bounced back with the biggest win of the tournament so far to reach an Olympic podium for the first time. The bronze is also the country's first medal in a team sport.
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Ezzalzouli opened the scoring with a superb shot into the top corner after 23 minutes, before tournament top scorer Rahimi doubled the lead three minutes later with a fine header from Ezzalzouli's cross.
El Khannouss got on the scoresheet six minutes into the second half with a great low finish after a solo run off Ezzalzouli's second assist and Rahimi netted his eighth Olympic goal to make it 4-0.
The 28-year-old Rahimi became the first player to score in six consecutive Olympic games, while his scoring record is the best since 2004 when Argentina's Carlos Tevez also had eight.
Defender Nakach tapped in from Rahimi's pass and captain Hakimi completed the rout with a terrific free kick three minutes from time.
"We are proud of winning this medal, we worked very hard and sacrificed a lot," Hakimi said. "We wanted the gold, unfortunately we didn't make it to the final but we showed character and we were able to win an historic medal for Morocco.
"As captain, I would like to thank our fans that were here and in Morocco.
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The podium finish was key for Morocco to confirm their rise in football, coach Sektioui said, after the country reached the 2022 World Cup semi-finals and finished fourth after knocking out heavyweights Spain and Portugal in the knockout rounds.
"It shows Moroccan football is in a good path and we are making good progress. We had to succeed after the World Cup we had," he said.
Hakimi added that it was not only Morocco that was growing in world football, but the whole continent.
"We had opened a lot of doors not only in our country but for African football," Hakimi, 25, added. "Today there were two African countries fighting for a third and fourth place. Everyone saw the quality we have."
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