Pupil becomes the master! Morocco boss Walid Regragui was on a Zoom call LEARNING how Arsenal beat Man City from Gunners boss Mikel Arteta 12 months ago… now he’s one game from leading his team to the World Cup final
What a difference a year can make.
It has emerged that 12 months ago Morocco manager Walid Regragui was hunched over his laptop screen, taking down notes as part of a Zoom seminar with Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta.
The fascinating revelation has come out with Regragui now 90 minutes away from guiding Morocco to the World Cup final in Qatar, in what would be one of the greatest achievements in the competition’s 92-year history.
Morocco manager Walid Regragui joined a Zoom seminar with Arsenal’s Mikel Arteta last year
Arteta was presenting a tactics seminar on Zoom, using Arsenal’s victory over Manchester City as one of the examples to explain his coaching and tactical philosophies.
Regragui was manager of Moroccan side Wydad AC during this call and was putting in the work away from the spotlight to improve himself as a coach.
Now Regragui is plotting a tactical masterplan for Morocco as they prepare to take on reigning world champions France on Wednesday night.
Now, 12 months on, he is one game away from managing Morocco into a World Cup final
He will need to devise a strategy that can nullify the threat of tournament top scorer Kylian Mbappe, as well as keep Olivier Giroud, the matchwinner against England, from influencing proceedings.
Morocco’s plan in this tournament has been to stay defensively resolute before springing for a goal on the counter attack.
The north Africans have successfully shut out Croatia, one of the other semi-finalists, Belgium, Spain and Portugal en route to the last four.
Responding to critics of his defensive-first style of play, Regragui was definitive that they will not compromise their beliefs in order to win more style points.
‘We’re going to play like we know how,’ he said.
Regragui passionately defended his side against criticism of their defensive style of play
‘Possession is extraordinarily misleading – you can have 70% possession and you only shoot twice.
‘There’s expected goals too: “We should have won, we had four expected goals!” We’re here to win, that’s all.’
No African nation has ever reached a World Cup final and so Regragui, just 12 months on from scribbling down the tactical musings of Arteta, stands on the cusp of even more history.
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