The rock of the Greens’ defense in the 86th World Cup, Fodil Magharia, to Al-Shorouk:
The Algerian national team is making its historic return to the 2026 World Cup finals after an absence of twelve full years from the most expensive global forum. This World Cup return, which represents the fifth participation in the history of the Desert Warriors, comes loaded with high hopes and great challenges, especially after the draw placed the national squad in the iron third group, alongside the defending champion and world leader, the Argentine national team, the Austria national team, which is burdened with memories of a shared history with Germany, and the brotherly Jordanian national team.
There is no fear for the Greens’ den in the presence of Luca Zidane
The rock of the national team’s defense in the 1980s, former international Fadil Magharia, provides, via Al-Shorouk Daily, a comprehensive technical reading and optimistic expectations for the Greens’ career, considering that the current generation possesses all the ingredients to go to the furthest possible point in this major global forum and create a new football spring equal to the size of the aspirations placed on it.
Fadil Magharia begins his technical reading by emphasizing that presence in the 2026 World Cup is the natural place for Algerian football after years of World Cup confusion. He believes that the absence of captain Riyad Mahrez’s teammates from the Russia 2018 and Qatar 2022 editions was like a passing setback, especially if we return to the bitter and tragic scenario of elimination against Cameroon in the final seconds of the last World Cup qualifiers. However, the new World Cup system, which includes forty-eight teams and gives the African continent nine direct seats, did justice to African football and gave Algeria the opportunity to prove its historical right among the world’s top players.
The late timing of the Argentina match will only affect Algerians’ sleep!
Magharia points out that the historical memory of Algerians in the World Cup has always been linked to resounding surprises and strong beginnings. Recalling the famous epic of Gijon in 1982 and the historic victory over West Germany with two goals to one, through Mexico’s 1986 draw against Northern Ireland, all the way to South Africa’s 2010 steadfastness against England, and the great historical achievement in Brazil 2014 by reaching the quarter-finals and exiting with great difficulty against the champion of the edition. All these milestones and epics constitute a huge moral reserve for the current generation to repeat and surpass those glories with intelligence and determination.
Amora, Guiri and Maza… Petkovic’s World Cup weapons
Regarding the technical and physical readiness of the national battalion under the leadership of the national team, Vladimir Petkovic, the former player for the Tunisian Club Africain expresses his great satisfaction with the current human composition and the strategy followed by the technical staff. The national team today has an ideal combination between the cunning of experience and the energy of youth. The squad is led by veteran elements seeking to end their international career in the best possible way, led by captain Riyad Mahrez and solid defender Issa Mandi, who have given a lot to Algerian football. On the other hand, the native of Chlef praises the new blood that the technical staff has recently pumped into the team, highlighting the rising talent Ibrahim Maza as the youngest player in the group and one of the future solutions, and the brilliant striker Amine Goueiri. However, the biggest bet for Magharia lies in striker Mohamed El Amin Amoura, the top scorer in the qualifiers with ten full goals, who is expected to be the pleasant surprise of the World Cup and to regain his high scoring sense, starting from the difficult first match against the Tango team.
In his analysis of the fiery opening confrontation against the Argentine national team, Magharia acknowledges the difficulty of the task facing the companions of the legend Lionel Messi, who is competing in the last World Cup in his career and has an overwhelming ambition to maintain the world crown. Maghariya believes that the key to achieving a positive result lies in high tactical discipline, by completely closing the outlets, and not leaving any spaces for movement in the back lines, while relying on quick counter-attacks that depend on the speed and depth of Amora and Ghawiri. The former international draws his optimism from the recent digital indicators of the national team, which demonstrated a terrifying defensive and offensive readiness during the preparatory matches and the qualifiers, as the front line scored twelve goals in its last matches without conceding any goals, achieving a wide victory over Bolivia by 4-0, and presenting a high-level tactical performance in the recent Netherlands friendly, which motivates the players to play with enthusiasm and strength.
One of the most reassuring points for Fodil Magharia is the great stability witnessed in the goalkeeping position after the era of legendary goalkeeper Rais Wahab Mbolhi. Magharia highlights the remarkable brilliance of goalkeeper Luca Zidane, who he considered to be the undisputed man in the friendly match against the Netherlands, citing the widespread praise he received from world football stars such as the Dutchman Rafael van der Vaart, who has 109 international caps. He believes that having a goalkeeper of this size and level gives complete confidence to the back line and secures the Greens’ den for years to come, ending the security crisis that the squad suffered from in previous transitional periods.
As for the timing of the match, which will be played at 2 a.m. Algeria time, Magharia sarcastically believes that the effect will only be on the sleep of the Algerian viewer, who will stay up to support his country, while this night time helps the professional players provide better physical effort away from the heat of the day. But the real fear for him lies in the humidity and high temperature factors in some North American stadiums, which will often force the referees to stop play every twenty-two minutes to give the players the opportunity to drink water and avoid fatigue, which requires smart management of the physical effort from the technical staff over the course of the ninety minutes.
In his general assessment of the Arab participation, Magharia expresses great optimism about the results and initial features after Qatar scored a valuable point against Switzerland and Morocco had a positive draw with Brazil, stressing that friendlies are not a criterion for judging teams like Tunisia, which is expected to revolt on official dates, hoping for Egypt’s victory over Belgium, and certainly a historic victory for Algeria at the expense of Argentina. At the end of his reading, Fadil Magharia sends a strong and direct message to his teammates and the Algerian fans. Stressing that this generation carries the hopes and pains of more than forty-four million Algerians who love national colors. He stresses that the ceiling of ambitions must rise; Qualifying to the second round is no longer a sufficient achievement for modern Algerian football. Rather, Petkovic’s cubs must play with determination and perseverance to reach the third round, which is the quarter-finals, and write an unprecedented history worthy of the desert warriors.















