Two days after Morocco’s successful opening against Comoros (2-0) in Rabat, the news surrounding the Atlas Lions is dominated by a single image: Romain Saïss, the captain, forced to leave the pitch before the 20th minute due to a muscle injury. In a stadium filled with celebration, this premature exit dampened the atmosphere and shifted the focus from the result to the condition of a key player, central to the defensive balance.
In the mixed zone, Saïss expressed his frustration and caution: “I didn’t want to take any risks; we need players at 100%. It saddens me because I’ve made a huge effort to come back and to be here.” Recently returned to guide a younger squad, he represents both a reference on the field and a source of calm in a home tournament, where pressure and emotion weigh heavily on every moment. Hoalid Regragui and his staff now face a dual challenge: to maintain the solidity of the defense and to compensate for a leadership that cannot simply be replaced by a name change on the match sheet.
At this stage, the FRMF has not yet officially communicated the exact nature of the injury or the expected duration of absence. However, according to several experts and parts of the international press, the outlook appears unfavorable: a muscle injury of this type, at this point in the tournament, makes the idea of a quick return highly unlikely, to the extent that Romain Saïss’s participation in the CAN is now seen as difficult, if not definitively compromised.

