With a potent attack featuring teenage sensation Kylian Mbappe and
Atletico Madrid hotshot Antoine Griezmann and a midfield stuffed with
talent, France should be among the World Cup favourites.
With a potent attack featuring teenage
sensation Kylian Mbappe and Atletico Madrid hotshot Antoine Griezmann
and a midfield stuffed with talent, France should be among the World Cup
favourites.
With Alexandre Lacazette offering yet another attacking
threat, a top-class goalkeeper in Hugo Lloris and depth at virtually
every position, France coach Didier Deschamps will approach Friday's
draw in Moscow with confidence.
"I think France will be very strong. When you have a trio
like Griezmann, Lacazette and Mbappe, you have a strong team. The
experience that the team has from a generation of veteran players,
backed up by these young players, makes them a candidate to win the
title," Brazil coach told Canal Plus TV ahead of the draw.
Yet Deschamps will recall that since he himself lifted the
trophy after the glorious victory on home soil in 1998, France have
suffered as much World Cup pain as pleasure.
In 2002, Zinedine Zidane limped into South Korea with a
hamstring injury and never looked the player who had inspired the
victory over Brazil four years earlier. France, thoroughly humiliated,
crashed out in the group stage.
Self-destruction
France's
head coach Didier Deschamps (C) oversees a training session in
Clairefontaine en Yevelines on November 12, 2017, as part of the team's
preparation for their friendly match against Germany
(AFP/File)
Zidane was back stronger and fitter four years later though,
driving his team to the final against Italy in Berlin only to
infamously lose his cool with a headbutt to the chest of Marco
Materazzi. He was sent off and France lost.
In South Africa in 2010, France self-destructed amid a players' revolt against idiosyncratic coach Raymond Domenech.
In 2014, eventual winners Germany sent them home after the quarter-finals.
France made heavy work of a relatively lightweight
qualifying group for the 2018 tournament, with a 0-0 draw against tiny
Luxembourg one of the most baffling results.
That is perhaps why Deschamps refuses to make rash predictions -- he just wants his team "to go as far as possible" in Russia.
Midfield livewire Blaise Matuidi said the team realised they
sometimes failed to amount to the sum of their parts, but he predicted
that the big guns would be wary of them.
Speaking after a 2-2 draw in a friendly against Germany on
November 14, Matuidi said: "Of course we can always do better, but we
showed tonight that we are a force to be reckoned with at the World Cup,
and Germany will have taken note of that."
And the talent just comes coming, with that offensive unit
complemented by Nabil Fekir, who has shone for Lyon this season, while
many coaches in the world would like to build their team around midfield
powerhouse N'Golo Kante.
So when Russia 2018 dawns, France's prospects would appear
to largely depend on whether the players are in the right frame of mind.
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