
Former Chelsea star, Hakim Ziyech has joined Moroccan giants, Wydad Casablanca on one year contract.
Ziyech, 32, joins Wydad Casablanca, one of Africa’s most storied clubs after becoming a free agent since last summer
For months, Ziyech had drifted between whispers and waiting. His time in Qatar with Al Duhail ended quietly. Before that, a promising start at Galatasaray fizzled out amid injuries and lost rhythm. Europe called again—Romania’s CFR Cluj nearly sealed the deal—but the negotiations collapsed over wages and fitness fears.
For those who’ve watched him glide across pitches in Amsterdam or Stamford Bridge, Ziyech’s story has always been one of art and emotion. His left foot? A brushstroke. His passes? Poetry. His game? Pure theatre.
But even magicians need to reset. At Wydad, Ziyech seeks not only minutes and match fitness—but meaning. He wants to feel the rhythm again, to hear the crowd’s roar not as an echo from the past but as a pulse of the present.
With the Africa Cup of Nations set to unfold on home soil next year, Ziyech’s return could not have come at a better time. It’s a chance to rebuild form, reconnect with his people, and reclaim his place among the Atlas Lions.
Over 497 professional appearances, Ziyech has woven a career few African players can match: 134 goals, 135 assists, and silverware that glitters across continents.
At Ajax, he became a cult hero—commanding the stage in Europe’s grandest theatres with flair and fearlessness.
In Chelsea, he lifted the UEFA Champions League, Super Cup, and FIFA Club World Cup, sealing his name in history.
With the Atlas Lions of Morocco, 64 caps and 25 goals tell only part of the story. His influence on and off the pitch—the swagger, the vision, the leadership—has made him more than a player. He’s a symbol.
Now, as he prepares to wear Wydad’s red, there’s a sense of something poetic at play: a superstar returning not for fame or fortune, but for renewal.
The magician is home. And Morocco waits, breath held, for his next trick.












