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World Cup 2026: France break Paraguay down and set up a fiery quarter-final with Morocco

Les Bleus dodged the trap

It was not pretty. It was not fluid. There were long stretches that were no fun to watch at all. But this was exactly the kind of night France needed to survive at a World Cup: a scrappy, tense round-of-16 tie against a Paraguay side ready to defend every blade of grass like it was a trench.

At Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, in suffocating heat, Les Bleus found a way. A Kylian Mbappe penalty in the 69th minute settled it, 1-0. Narrow, messy, priceless. France march on to a quarter-final against Morocco, who had already sent Canada home.

Germany walked into the Paraguay trap and never walked out. France did.

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Eighty percent of the ball, and nowhere to put it

France went looking for the early goal from the first whistle. Kounde surged down the right, Dembele hunted for Mbappe, and the message was clear: strike first, kill the belief before it grows.

Paraguay had built the wall in advance. A compact, combative 5-4-1, living on the edge at times, Enciso stranded up front on his own, one job above everything else. Break the game up. Slow it down. Choke the middle and turn every duel into a scrap.

France had the ball. Endless amounts of it, 80.5% at the break. And for long spells they had no idea what to do with it. Kone tried his luck from range. So did Rabiot. Dembele delivered cross after cross into empty spaces. Mbappe fed on scraps, or on nothing.

Paraguay hardly crossed the halfway line. They defended like the tournament depended on it.

Paraguay got under France’s skin

The low block was only half of it. The rest was the needle wrapped around it. The little shoves, the late contact, the fouls timed to snap the rhythm, the endless chatter. Paraguay figured out early that France might lose their heads before they lost the tie.

Barcola was booked in the 19th minute. Olise stewed over the constant fouling. Saliba met fire with a bit too much fire of his own. Even Mbappe got the treatment, pushed and prodded and wound up.

France did not take the bait. They kept coming.

Doue comes on, and the lock breaks

It came off the bench. In the 61st minute Desire Doue replaced Bradley Barcola, and within a few touches the Golden Boy handed France the thing they had been missing all night: someone willing to run at a defender and make something happen.

Four minutes later he drove into the box, cut inside Gomez and drew the contact. Play waved on. Then VAR. Penalty, and the right one.

A game bolted shut needed a moment of nerve to prise it open. Doue supplied it.

Mbappe does not blink

Kylian Mbappe was well short of his best. Loose touches, a heavy first touch after a superb Maignan clearance in the 51st minute, a handful of scruffy moments. But the biggest names get judged on the one instant that counts.

In the 69th minute the captain stepped up and buried it. Stone cold. 1-0. Goal number seven of the tournament.

He nearly grabbed a second late on, but Gill stood tall, two strong saves including one deep in stoppage time. No matter. Mbappe had already done the decisive thing, and he had done it on a night built to make him lose his cool.

Kone and Upamecano held the line

On a night this bruising, Manu Kone stepped up. With Aurelien Tchouameni missing, France needed a midfielder happy to take the punishment and shoulder the load. Kone did all of it. He carried the ball forward, won it back, had a go, and stung Gill into a fierce save in the 54th minute.

Behind him, Upamecano was a monster. Enciso wanted space, transitions, chaos. He got a brick wall. The Bayern man bossed his duels, ate up the ground and smothered Paraguay’s one real outlet.

Maignan was a spectator for most of it, yet calm on every cross and set piece. Concentration without a save to make still counts for something on nights like this.

Morocco is waiting already

The final whistle had barely gone before Mbappe’s mind jumped ahead. France meet Morocco in the last eight, and the poster is already writing itself: the France captain against Achraf Hakimi.

“We need to recover and focus on Morocco. Hakimi? I think he has already messaged me. We are happy to play them. They are a very good team,” Mbappe said.

The stage is set.

France did not dazzle. They got through. And deep in a World Cup, nights like this are not about pleasing the crowd. They are about not going home.

Les Bleus are still standing. Morocco is next.

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