Achraf Hakimi and football's growing issue: playing time
September 29, 2025
The international football player union FIFPRO reviewed how much players are playing, releasing its finidings in a report published on Monday.
Moroccan star Achraf Hakimi, as a result of his treble-winning season with PSG and his commitments with the national team, has been under extreme physical strain.
Last season, Hakimi, 26, played 69 matches, accumulating 6,371 minutes. This was a noticeable increase from his previous season, when he played 53 games and 4,869 minutes for club and country.
Hakimi was not alone in playing 69 games in the last campaign. Bayern Munich's Joshua Kimmich played the same number of matches and almost the same number of minutes, and every member of the top 10 on the FIFPRO list easily surpassed the recommended limit of 55 matches per season.
Hakimi's 2024-25 season started in Paris, representing his country at the Olympics (July 24 to August 8, 2024), and ended with the Club World Cup (June 15 to July 13, 2025). This meant his season lasted nearly an entire year, and his offseason was just 22 days.
The medical consensus regarding rest periods and season breaks is that players should be guaranteed four weeks between seasons with no commitments. There should also be a minimum four-week retraining period after an offseason break before starting with competition. Sadly, the two are less and less common at the highest level of modern football.
Even more games ahead
This season, Hakimi is on course, should PSG advance to the knockouts of the Champions League and Morocco do well at both the African Cup of Nations and the 2026 World Cup, to play 74 matches, which is nearly 7,000 minutes.
"People need to understand we're not machines. To deliver the level of play fans want — intense, competitive matches — we also need time to rest," Barcelona and France defender Jules Kounde said.
Hakimi's situation isn't new either. Earlier in the year, Bayern Munich's Kim Min-jae was also the subject of interest after his schedule became untenable.
Hakimi has been pushing the limits of his capacity even before he turned 21. In the FIFPRO report, one of the major fears is the lack of protection currently around young players. Constant competition demands make young players more susceptible to long-term risks than older players, highlighting the real need for safeguards.
The number of minutes Moroccan players have played before turning 21 has risen dramatically in recent years. Before Hakimi turned 21, he had played over 10,000 minutes for club and country. Hakim Ziyech, Hakimi's national team teammate from 2016 to 2024, hadn't even played for Morocco and had played just over 3,000 minutes at club level before turning 21. Bilal El Khannouss, who plays in the Bundesliga for Stuttgart, accumulated even more playing time before turning 21, reaching 10,628 minutes for club and country.
Morocco clearly has many exciting young footballers, but managing their playing load will be key to their longevity in the game.
Hope for more action as legal battle begins
In the modern football calendar, players continue to be pushed not just to their limit but beyond it. Hakimi is one of the stars of the modern game and a leading player not just for the country of Morocco but also for the continent of Africa. If his form starts to dip or injuries start to become regular, then Hakimi's playing load will be one of the places to look.
Failure to better manage player workload is costing every stakeholder in football. FIFPRO have launched legal action against FIFA over the schedule, but if nothing changes soon then those who make the "beautiful game" possible will remain at risk.
Edited by: Chuck Penfold