Some football matches take an hour to find their story. This one needed barely more than a minute. Morocco beat Scotland 1-0 at Gillette Stadium on Friday night, and the entire night was decided before most fans had even settled into their seats. One blistering strike from Ismael Saibari, and just like that, the Atlas Lions had Boston — and the rest of the football world — wide-eyed in disbelief.
A Goal Before You Could Blink

Seventy seconds. That’s all it took. Scotland kicked off, lost the ball almost instantly, and watched in horror as Brahim Díaz spotted the gap behind a shaky defensive line. He threaded a perfectly weighted ball into the right channel, Saibari got the run on Grant Hanley, took one touch to settle it, and absolutely detonated a shot into the top corner past a helpless Angus Gunn.

There was no celebration delay, no second-guessing — it was pure, clinical brutality. The fastest goal of the entire 2026 World Cup so far, and the quickest Morocco have ever scored at a World Cup. The Tartan Army, who had traveled in their thousands expecting a famous night, were stunned into silence before the stadium DJ had even finished the walkout music.
Saibari, Again

If the name feels familiar, it should. This was Saibari’s second goal in as many World Cup matches, after he also found the net in Morocco’s opening 1-1 draw with Brazil. That feat put him in seriously elite company — he’s now only the second African player ever to score in each of his first two World Cup appearances, joining a list that includes none other than Mohamed Salah. Not bad company to keep at all.

And the kicker? Saibari is reportedly closing in on a big-money move to Bayern Munich. If this performance was an audition, he passed with flying colors.
Scotland Search, But Find Nothing

To their credit, Scotland didn’t fold. Steve Clarke’s side huffed and puffed for the rest of the match, with Andy Robertson whipping in dangerous balls and John McGinn agonizingly unable to turn one home in first-half stoppage time. Scott McTominay went down in the box late on and screamed for a penalty after a coming-together with Neil El Aynaoui — but referee Ilgiz Tantashev waved it away without so much as a VAR check, and Scotland’s frustration boiled over.

Here’s the brutal stat line, though: Scotland failed to register a single shot on target the entire match. The last time that happened to them at a World Cup was 1986. Forty years of history, repeated on the worst possible night.

Morocco, meanwhile, looked composed and dangerous in spells, with Bilal El Khannouss denied by Gunn not once but twice, and Saibari himself rattling the crossbar after the break. They strung together 601 passes on the night — the most by any African nation in a World Cup match since 1966 — a stat that says everything about how comfortably they controlled the game once the early shock had worn off.
A Heavy Heart, A Proud Tribute

Amid all the football, there was a moment of real human emotion. In the 76th minute, the stadium fell quiet for a minute’s applause in memory of Donny Strathie, a 76-year-old Scotland fan who sadly passed away in Boston just days before the match. Win, lose, or draw, that’s what following your national team is truly about — community, loyalty, and love for the badge, through it all.
What It Means

Morocco now sit firmly in the driver’s seat in Group C.

While Scotland’s dream of finally escaping the group stage for the first time in their history hangs in the balance heading into a do-or-die finale against Brazil. It’s heartbreak for the Tartan Army tonight — but this tournament has a way of writing new chapters fast. Buckle up.
Man of the Match: Saibari













