OneFootball
·24 Juni 2026
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·24 Juni 2026
For almost half an hour, Haiti were in front against Morocco. In the 10th minute came Joseph’s shot, which was then turned into an own goal by Bounou, with the 25-year-old Ferencvaros forward having only come on late in the first two matches.
But the credit for the goal goes to Duverne (the 28-year-old from Gent): Haiti’s full-back latched onto a pass out wide and whipped in a low cross that Joseph converted. His shot was fortunate — in fact, it could almost be considered an own goal: the effort came off Bounou’s back after he had rushed out in vain to intercept the cross.

After Hakimi’s equaliser (40'), the unthinkable happened again. Haiti took the lead again at 2-1, and this time with a goal that had nothing to do with rebounds or luck: Duverne (after assisting the first goal) won the ball back and played it to Isidor (the Sunderland forward), who shot from outside the box: a perfect strike into the top corner.
With this goal, Isidor became Haiti’s second-ever World Cup scorer; the first and only one before him was Emmanuel Sanon, who scored twice at the 1974 World Cup against Italy and Argentina. Â
In first-half stoppage time, Morocco made it 2-2 through Saibari from a Hakimi assist: he is the first African player to score in all three group-stage matches.
Morocco attacked throughout the second half, going close to taking the lead several times until Rahimi made it 3-2 in the 78th minute: a shot from a corner routine that flew into the top corner. Late on came Yassine’s 4-2 (he had come on in the second half), finishing the job from a Rahimi assist.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇮🇹 here.
📸 Kevin C. Cox - 2026 Getty Images
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