Morocco's Incredible World Cup Run Is a Victory for Open Borders
The first African team to make the World Cup semifinals wouldn't be there without help from foreign-born players.

The biggest story of this year's World Cup has been the incredible underdog run by Morocco, which will be the first African team to ever play in the semifinals of the globe's biggest sporting event when the Atlas Lions kick off this afternoon against the defending champions from France.
"We are the Rocky Balboa of this World Cup," Walid Regragui, the team's French-born head coach, said after Morocco's stunning upset of Portugal in the quarterfinals.
Even though events like the World Cup and the Olympics are often thought of as quirky celebrations of nationalism, Morocco's run through this World Cup highlights the essential role that immigration plays in building strong nations—and strong national football teams.
In fact, more than half of the players on Morocco's roster for the World Cup were born in other countries. That's the highest percentage among all 32 teams that kicked off the tournament in Qatar last month, according to a breakdown by Quartz.
Without the contributions of those immigrants, it's a near certainty that Morocco wouldn't still be playing. Indeed, it was Achraf Hakimi who scored the game-winning penalty kick in Morocco's shoot-out win against Spain; Hakimi was born in Madrid. Hakim Ziyech, whose outstanding play in the midfield was key to Morocco's upsets against Portugal and Belgium (and who scored another penalty kick against Spain), was born in the Netherlands.
Did those foreign stars take football-playing jobs from native-born Moroccans? Sure. And is the country doing better as a result? Absolutely. And there's probably a lesson there that goes beyond the soccer field.
Morocco might be ahead of the curve when it comes to relying on foreign-born talent for footballing success, but it is hardly alone. An analysis by Vox found that 16.5 percent of the players in this World Cup are representing countries other than where they were born—the largest percentage in the tournament's history.
Talent flows in all directions. European-born players are making their mark for Morocco and other African teams—there are 59 French-born players at the World Cup, and 56 percent of them are playing for African teams, according to Quartz—while African immigrants and their descendants are now leading top European teams. Breel Embolo, who was born in Cameroon but plays for Switzerland, scored against his birth country in their first-round match (and refused to celebrate the occasion). Kylian Mbappé, the 23-year-old superstar who has already scored five goals for France during the tournament, is the son of Cameroonian immigrants.
National teams are able to recruit players from beyond their own borders because FIFA's rules don't require citizenship as the sole qualification. Instead, players are eligible to represent the nation where they were born, any nation where they have become naturalized citizens, or any nation of their parents' or grandparents' birth. Though players might be eligible to play for a variety of national teams, they cannot switch mid-career: once you play a game for one national team, you're locked into that choice (unless the nation breaks up, like Yugoslavia did in the 1990s).
It's not the full-on open borders of libertarian dreams, of course. But as displays of nationalism go, the World Cup operates under an immigration policy that's pretty fantastic.
And one that yields thrilling results on the field. For example, Canada's first-ever World Cup goal was scored last month by Alphonso Davies, who was born in a refugee camp in Ghana after his parents fled civil war in Liberia. Stricter immigration policies (by Canada or FIFA) would have denied Davies the opportunity to excel, denied Canada a chance to field its best player ever, and denied fans the thrill of watching it all happen.
The contributions of immigrants are usually far less obvious and less celebrated than they are at the World Cup, but that doesn't make them any less important. Immigrants are more likely to start businesses and create jobs than native-born Americans, for example. On a per-capita basis, immigrants consume less welfare and entitlement benefits than native-born Americans.
Nevertheless, nationalists who hold significant sway within the so-called "New Right" want to limit immigration because they see immigrants as unwanted competition for native-born Americans' jobs and welfare. Or they worry about how immigration will change the existing culture. But the World Cup demonstrates that immigrants contribute to national pride, not ruin it. Are any Moroccans going to be upset if Spanish-born Hakimi scores today? Would French football fans rather see Mbappé playing for Cameroon? Of course not.
It might also be worth noting that Hungary, which nationalists idealize in part because of President Viktor Orban's strict immigration policies, didn't come close to qualifying for the World Cup.
On the stage of international football, national borders will always matter. But the liberalized rules that increase competition for the best players and create new opportunities for skilled immigrants could serve as a model for how to think about immigration in other contexts. Nations should behave more like welcoming brands who want to recruit the best available talent, and less like gatekeepers.
Morocco probably won't win the World Cup, but they've provided a powerful lesson in how to build a stronger nation: let other people in.
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The whole article reads like one long OBL skit.
Its not a victory for open borders. Its a victory for Morocco recruiting players who just happen to have some kind of nebulous tie to Morocco.
A victory for open borders would be some rando from Nigeria showing up one day to practice and making the team.
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It would require 100k randos to show up and build the auditorium on time, under budget and have the neighbors glowing about the people and their behavior. It would also require the health, schooling and welfare systems to be less overburdened than before their arrival.
LOL
Ya, no.
Open borders is not a necessary step in getting to their team composition.
This is reasoning backwards from your retarded desired end point. It would be like saying "Morocco is a victory for UBI and giving everyone 1,000 per month because it allowed the soccer players to get better cleats and eat healthier".
It looks like something a middle schooler would come up with for an essay.
Jesus man, up your game. This is embarrassing.
Congrats Reason, you've managed to reach Washington Post levels of hilarious cognitive dissonance in pursuit of your agenda.
it really read like a Salon headline
Weak, Eric. Weak.
In fact, more than half of the players on Morocco's roster for the World Cup were born in other countries.
Thus defeating the point of a national team.
Yeah, that point crossed my mind, as well. I mean, if you're a Moroccan soccer player, I'm not so sure it's a great gift that your national team is picking up players from other countries. And saying the country is doing better as a result, meh, that sounds pretty tangential. Maybe it's good for hypocritical bragging rights (like everyone doesn't know it's foreign talent), but that's about it.
But they "identify" as Moroccan...
" the so-called "New Right" want to limit immigration because they see immigrants as unwanted competition for native-born Americans' jobs and welfare."
What a dumb comment. Most people, even "New Right," agree with LEGAL immigration. We understand their contribution. Considering the stress ILLEGAL immigration is putting on the welfare systems of large cities (NYC is whining about an infinitesimal number of illegals sent from the mass numbers in Texas), maybe you should put your woke agenda away for the time being.
"Did those foreign stars take football-playing jobs from native-born Moroccans? Sure. And is the country doing better as a result? Absolutely. And there's probably a lesson there that goes beyond the soccer field."
The lesson is that if you want to Make [insert country] Great Again, you should import talent from other countries? Um...ok I guess?
But why? Why is Morocco winning a WC title somehow a laudable goal? As near as I can tell, under any other circumstance, a libertarian would state that "National" teams are an exercise in jingoist, nativist sentimentality- the sort of stuff that is always two skips and a hop away from comparisons to National Socialism.
This is the type of tone-deaf argument that leaves me perpetually shaking my head at the Reason writers. They don't understand WHY someone would want the "National" team to win a cup. It is because they share a cultural identity with the team, and see it as a shared accomplishment. Sure, they didn't win the cup themselves, but (in their minds) it was their culture that produced the foundation on which that team's success was built.
It takes incredible hubris to cheapen that connection by suggesting people just want the W, even if it means importing mercenaries to play on their behalf with the treasure taxed by the royal elites in their government.
I do think there is something special about a melting pot culture. But that is not the same as importing labor to do our bidding. It is complex and fraught with conflict. And waving it away is a mistake that will forever make people like Boehm fail to connect with half the country.
"As near as I can tell, under any other circumstance, a libertarian would state that “National” teams are an exercise in jingoist, nativist sentimentality- the sort of stuff that is always two skips and a hop away from comparisons to National Socialism."
Congratulations, this is as moronic and childish as the article. Impressive!
I've got a very long, rambling philosophical post floating around in my head about how L(l)ibertarianism is, for the most part, a uniquely American (and to some degree, British) phenomenon. Therefore, there should be some interest in L(l)ibertarians wanting to maintain the American experiment, and keep the American political empire intact. Because no America, no L(l)ibertarianism.
But that's for another day.
ya idk about the premise here, but an African nation in the WC semis was unthinkable w/i most of our lifetimes. from Cameroon shocking the world in 1990 by winning a game against Italy to now is pretty cool ... for a nerd like me of course, nobody else has to give a shit about soccer that's cool
You missed Ghana's run a couple years ago?
not at all, Senegal and Nigeria have had some good times too.
Was dating a Nigerian girl at the time of Ghana's WC run, so maybe that's why it stands out a bit more to me
sweet. Kanu put Nigerian soccer on the map when he was @Ajax in the early 90s I loved that guy
And if all countries had closed borders, surely the World Cup would have to be disbanded for lack of teams. Just shows there is no liberty in libertarian.
"Canada's first-ever World Cup goal was scored last month by Alphonso Davies, who was born in a refugee camp in Ghana"
Next year: Canadian team suspiciously 100% replaced with Brazilians/Argentinians with 1 week old citizenships.
Maybe the yankees can make a team too? That would be fun
He's lived in Canada for seventeen years, since he was 4 or 5, and is surely a citizen by now. Who else should he play for. The country his parents fled to save his life?
Morocco wouldn't be a thing if there were no borders.
In other news.
It never happened.
Ok, it happened but it's not as bad as you say.
It happened.
Clown article.
This is so silly.
Call g this a victory for open borders is absurd. How many people actually believe a "national" team where half the team was born in other countries is legit?
The answer Eric, is zero.
"We're rooting for laundry!" Jerry Seinfeld
https://twitter.com/Telegraph/status/1602679365594120192?t=gviJTU61t3GmtTTd77AASA&s=19
Migrants will be encouraged to move to rural areas through a special visa to combat depopulation and replenish ageing communities under plans by Government advisers
[Link]
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/newsom-says-california-break-flood-illegal-migrants-title-42-expires?intcmp=tw_fnc
I guess we’re going to overlook that finalist Argentina, and pre-tournament favorite Brazil have zero foreign-born players.
And over half the teams in the World Cup have 2 or fewer foreign-born players.
And all the foreign-born Moroccans were born to Moroccan-born parents.
And (according to Wikipedia) Hungary’s latest national team appearance had 6 foreign-born players on the squad (25%)
Soccer sucks.
Morocco counts nationality based on jus sanguinis. Under the "right of blood", it doesn't matter in the slightest whether or not you were born in the country, what matters is whether your parents were nationals of the country.
Everybody on the Moroccan team is Moroccan by birth under Morocco's constitution. They're no more foreigners or immigrants in Morocco than the Pakistan-born Senator Chris Van Hollen is a foreigner or immigrant in the US.
100%. They are all natural born Moroccans.
The only possible point re migration is that most of the team has gotten their World Cup level football skills by playing on teams around the world and not just in Moroccan league. Which is a really ludicrous argument anyway re open borders because world class athletes, musicians, etc are always a unique visa.
It can be argued then that Moroccan emigres to other countries are not integrating into their new cultures and still think of themselves as primarily Moroccans. Which does not seem to prove what Boehm thinks it does.
"Though players might be eligible to play for a variety of national teams, they cannot switch mid-career: once you play a game for one national team, you're locked into that choice (unless the nation breaks up, like Yugoslavia did in the 1990s)."
This is not wholly accurate. There are conditions under which players can switch to another national team, and several prominent players have done so.
Ask American Indians about the wonderfulness of immigration. Some things are good in moderation but require regulation.
As usual, Reason’s ideological cluelessness about immigration shines through in this laughable article. Meanwhile, Moslems keep creeping up illegally to the US: https://www.meforum.org/63871/tijuana-mosque-and-the-open-road-to-california.
Good to see that after Morocco got all of its domestic problems cleared up, they had enough left over to pay immigrants to play soccer for them.
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So, is it Morocco's immigration policy, or FIFA's country-adjacent policy, or the immigration policies of the several countries (mostly France) that are responsible for this?
Also, how did all those French-born Moroccan immigrants do against France today?
Oh.
Moroccans were rioting in Brussels, Amsterdam, Rotterdam and The Hague after Morocco beat Belgium in group play.
Not a border hawk but there is reason to have concern when you live in a country actively bringing in people that hate you. Immigration is not without it's foibles.
Squad selection has no relation to immigration. These are players that were not good enough for their home country so they chose to play for Morocco. This happens all the time.
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the full-on open borders of libertarian dreams,
No, libertarians understand property rights as a fundamental right and underpinning of freedom.
This is such an embarrassing article.
Open borders lead to disaster: https://mailchi.mp/meforum.org/did-ohio-just-elect-the-next-ilhan-omar-baird-at-federalist?e=91ae6c0d1e
interesting