
France came into this World Cup semi-final as the team everyone expected to win the whole thing. They left it without a goal, without an answer, and without a path to the final. Spain were simply better — and it wasn't particularly close.
For large stretches of this tournament, France had looked exactly like a team built to go all the way: physical, experienced, and carrying enough individual quality to win games on instinct alone. The semi-final against Spain exposed something different. The structure that had held them together in earlier rounds looked brittle under sustained pressure, and Spain — disciplined, connected, relentless in transition — found the gaps before France could close them.
The 2-0 scoreline tells you something, but the manner of it tells you more. France never really threatened to turn the tie around. Spain's backline held firm, their press suffocated the build-up, and by the time France needed to open up and chase the game, the space simply wasn't there to exploit. According to ESPN FC, the favourites unravelled — and that word feels accurate. This wasn't a smash-and-grab; it was a controlled dismantling.
For the Italian football audience, there's a secondary sting in this result. Several Serie A players were part of the France squad that exited at the semi-final stage, their club-season momentum unable to translate into the knockout-round survival France needed, according to Football Italia. It's a familiar frustration — Serie A quality on paper, a collective that couldn't hold together when Spain turned the screw.
Spain, by contrast, showed the kind of cohesion that tends to define their best tournament sides: a shared understanding of when to press, when to hold shape, and when to punish.
Spain are in a World Cup final. That sentence deserves a moment.
This is a squad that has been building towards something — young in places, experienced where it counts, and now with the scalp of the tournament favourites to carry into the final. The pressure, such as it is, has shifted entirely. France were supposed to be the immovable object. Spain moved them.
France, meanwhile, face the kind of post-tournament reckoning that tends to follow a collapse nobody fully saw coming. They had the squad. They had the pedigree. The semi-final was supposed to be a formality.
It was not a formality.
France came into this World Cup semi-final as the team everyone expected to win the whole thing. They left it without a goal, without an answer, and without a path to the final. Spain were simply better
Bronnen
Football Italia, ESPN FC
Flagside-artikelen zijn originele stukken samengesteld uit meerdere bronnen. We citeren elke outlet die in het stuk verwerkt is.
Hoogtepunten van de nacht, wat de transfermarkt doet, en het ene stuk dat je vandaag moet lezen. Geen ads. Geen tips. Geen operators.
Eenmalig afmelden. We delen je e-mailadres niet.
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
INTPedro Porro has just announced himself on the biggest stage in football. The Tottenham full-back finished past Mike Maignan to make it 2-0 for Spain against France in their 2026 World Cup semi-final —
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
INTPedro Porro has just announced himself on the biggest stage in football. The Tottenham full-back finished past Mike Maignan to make it 2-0 for Spain against France in their 2026 World Cup semi-final —