
Forty-two years of tournament history, one previous World Cup meeting, and a place in the World Cup final on the line — France vs Spain on 14 July 2026 is exactly the kind of fixture the draw was made to produce.
When the semi-final bracket shook out, this was the one everyone circled. France and Spain have been trading blows at major tournaments since the 1980s — Euro 84, Euro 2000, Euro 2012 — and yet they have met only once before at a World Cup. That record ends today, with a final berth the prize.
Kickoff is 2pm local time, 8pm BST. The stakes are simple: win and you play for the biggest trophy in football. Lose and you go home.
The two nations know each other well enough to be wary. Spain's Euro 2012 campaign — the peak of the tiki-taka era — included a quarter-final win over France (2–0) that still stings in certain corners of Paris. France, for their part, have their own landmark moments against Spain, including a quarter-final win at Euro 2000 that helped propel them toward that tournament's title.
The pattern across the decades is tight, attritional football until someone finds a moment of individual quality. Both squads in 2026 have that quality in abundance.
For Spain, a World Cup final would be their first since their triumph in South Africa in 2010 — a generation ago. The current group has already won a European Championship and carries the kind of collective confidence that makes them dangerous from the first whistle to the last.
For France, the calculation is different. They reached the final in 2018 and won it. They reached the final in 2022 and lost it on penalties. A third final in four tournaments would cement this generation as one of the great French sides — and a win would make them world champions again.
One of these stories ends here. The other gets one more chapter.
The corner flag has been planted. Now someone has to take it.
Sources: The Guardian live blog; BBC Sport match preview.
Forty-two years of tournament history, one previous World Cup meeting, and a place in the World Cup final on the line — France vs Spain on 14 July 2026 is exactly the kind of fixture the draw was made to produce.
Fontes
The Guardian — Football
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“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
Spain are in the 2026 World Cup final. They got there by dismantling France 2-0 in the semi-final, and their manager Luis de la Fuente didn't waste any time telling the world exactly what he thinks of
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
Spain are in the 2026 World Cup final. They got there by dismantling France 2-0 in the semi-final, and their manager Luis de la Fuente didn't waste any time telling the world exactly what he thinks of