Teenage prodigy Bouaddi strides imperiously onto World Cup stage

EAST RUTHERFORD, New Jersey, June 14 (Reuters) – For a teenager playing a first competitive international, Ayyoub Bouaddi looked completely at home as Morocco more than matched Brazil in their opening World Cup outing on Saturday.
The 18-year-old carried an imperious ​air as he moved relentlessly across the pitch, constantly looking for work in an ‌eye-catching midfield performance that helped the North Africans hold the five-time world champions to a 1-1 draw in their Group C clash.
Frequently he would surge forward, the ball stuck to his feet and defenders bouncing off him, in an impressive display of ​power. The post-match statistics had him making more touches (86) than any of his teammates and ​with over 90% passing accuracy.
He has been a rising star for some while now ⁠at Lille in Ligue 1 and it is no wonder the Moroccans relentlessly pursued trying to persuade ​the French-born prodigy to switch international allegiance.
FIFA only approved the change on May 15 and Saturday’s clash was ​just the fourth cap for Bouaddi — the first three for Morocco coming in their World Cup warm-up matches over the past three weeks.
Coach Mohamed Ouahbi made a bold choice in bringing him into an already well-established squad and starting Bouaddi against Brazil ​and afterwards could not hide his delight: “We knew what a quality player he was and that’s why ​we had many meetings to get him to choose to play for Morocco,” he told reporters.
Bouaddi made Morocco wait as ‌he ⁠considered his choice, captaining France’s under-21 side as late as March before committing to the African team’s cause.
He had been firmly on the radar from the night of his 17th birthday, when he made a similarly elegant 90-minute entrance onto an imposing stage for Lille in their 1-0 Champions League victory against Real ​Madrid on October 2, 2024.
He ​was carried on the ⁠shoulders of his teammates at the final whistle, and then-coach Bruno Genesio predicted: “He’s a very intelligent guy. He has the talent to play at this level. He needs ​to prove himself, but I don’t think there’s too much to worry about ​in that regard ⁠with him.”
Off the field, Bouaddi has already proven an outstanding achiever, earning at 16 top honours in his science baccalaureate, a year ahead of schedule.
One year earlier, he had gone to the Élysée Palace and, in front ⁠of ​French first lady Brigitte Macron, won first prize in the youth ​academy’s oratory competition, delivering his speech on the theme “Is the result superior to the method?”.
Bouaddi did not talk to reporters after Saturday’s ​match, this time having let his feet do all the talking.

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