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France vs Spain: World Cup semi-final preview

AI News July 14, 2026 02:42 AM
France vs Spain: World Cup semi-final preview

And so there were four. As it happens, the four still standing at this World Cup are the same quartet who sit atop FIFA's international food chain. A semi-final line-up for the ages. Aren't we lucky?

Perhaps this was the inevitable outcome when the draw was seeded in a way that made it impossible for the top-rated nations to meet one another before this stage. But let's not dig into politics. Not now anyway. Two tantalising ties are the upshot, starting with France vs Spain on Tuesday.

France are vying to become the third team to reach three successive World Cup finals, after Germany and Brazil, while European champions Spain prepare for just their second ever appearance in the last four. By official ranking, it's first vs third.

But this European powerhouse affair is a particularly familiar one. Much like England-Argentina, it's a fixture with a charmed history. Enough to captivate most football-loving neutrals because, well, it also contains a high percentage of the world's best technicians and torturers. This cast are primetime viewing.

The question the world has been asking since before this tournament commenced 33 days ago concerns how France might be toppled. How do you deny a freewheeling front four spearheaded by Kylian Mbappe and supported by Ousmane Dembele, Michael Olise and Desire Doue? Most don't.

But Spain have special license. One that allows them to control and coerce unlike any other. Their style starves opposition teams, able to boast an average possession share that remains unmatched at this tournament.

Spain's patient build-up has not always dazzled but its purpose has dual intentions. They come alive in the final third, the only nation to surpass 1,000 plus passes in the figurative 'end zone', with an unwavering accuracy of 83.9 per cent. And because they rarely give up possession, their defensive record is exemplary too. Defence by proxy.

Leaning into both specialisms is how Spain contain France while carefully curating moments in which to hurt them. They are better set up than any other survivor to ruin the narrative about France's inevitability. Nothing about such a high-stakes tie between European giants should be billed as a forgone conclusion.

But there are caveats. Spain's artistic expression has only been seen in flashes at this tournament. For a side packed with los artistas, their creative edge is yet to take full form, relying on rescue acts from substitute Mikel Merino to battle unconvincingly past Portugal and Belgium in the last two rounds.

Lamine Yamal has been quiet, injury-stifled winger Nico Williams only able to play a bit-part, while Mikel Oyarzabal's four goals (scored against Saudi Arabia and Austria) have come against significantly weaker opposition. He has failed to make an impact since the group stage.

Creatively, France are streets ahead. They are the tournament's second-highest scorers, posting the most shots on target and greatest xG value. Captain and leading scorer Mbappe is unsurprisingly tied with Lionel Messi in the Golden Boot stakes. And they have no issue sharing scorers and variety of goals around the team, either.

If Mbappe is blocked - only Norway have prevented him scoring this summer - then France also have a a dizzying array of attacking talent just as capable. Didier Deschamps' side were the first team since Brazil in 2002 to have two players reach five tournament goals in one edition, before England's dangermen replicated the same feat.

Chances are, France's aces have plenty more tricks up their sleeve. Such compelling evidence suggests Spain will have to suffer in moments. But nor should they deviate from the tactical plan which makes them so complete.

It's a blueprint that renders them just as likely to progress to their first final since winning their only World Cup back in 2010. Spain, in fact, arguably have the most balanced blend of tactical supremacy and technical mastery at this tournament. It's what they are famed for, with former youth team coach Luis de la Fuente offering clarity and consistency with a point of difference.

While Spain historically relied purely on ball retention, the modern iteration of such style is more dynamic. Rodri and Lamine Yamal are two of the best in their disciplines and have made this progression possible. Quicker vertical transitions mean Spain's dangerous wingers can isolate defenders in 1v1 situations more often. The Barcelona teen sensation thrives on it. You can count on Rodri to find him.

In midfield is where Spain's upper hand will be most obvious. France will be outnumbered. Rodri and Pedri set the tone, the tournament's most effective final-third passers, with the highly versatile Dani Olmo for support. Rodri is also used as the carrier, shifting the ball upfield to Lamine Yamal, who has amassed the most shot-ending carries of any forward (12).

By comparison, France's two-man midfield, likely to be Manu Kone and Adrien Rabiot, are less mobile. Of course there is the argument that the options and movement ahead of them are good enough to make even the most average midfield appear elite. And these two aren't average, but they will be outmanned in their mission to assist the fearsome front four.

Spain's controllers have the ability to manage that service. In hot and sticky conditions in Dallas, their counter-press will be one of their greatest allies. If they are positionally smart the structure will do a lot of the work for them. Spain's coordination will have to be picked apart because it's unlikely to unravel on its own.

Despite that, plenty will still consider France a shoo-in for Sunday's final. In many respects, momentum is with them. The fixture even falls on Bastille Day, a national holiday of celebration. But Spain are a unique proposition in their own right. Shift into flow state and they have the potential to foil 'France the favourites'.

The recent past tells us how often it has happened. Don't be surprised to see history repeating itself on Tuesday.

Follow live coverage of France vs Spain across Sky Sports' digital platforms from 6pm on Tuesday; kick-off 8pm