Lille lands a big blow at the Velodrome
LOSC Lille beat Marseille 2-1 in a match that mattered for the Champions League chase. In a charged Velodrome, the visitors showed grit, overturned a shaky start and left with three priceless points.
The win lets Lille regroup straight after their Europa League exit — a tricky blow to take mentally. It drags them back to within two points of the top three and pushes them right back into the hunt as the season heads into the final stretch. More than that, it sends a clear message to rivals: Lille are still a serious contender for European places.

Tense from the first whistle
The game quickly turned electric, with fierce duels and several contentious moments that ramped up tempers. In the opening minutes a rough challenge from Verdonk on Mason Greenwood as he broke through was only a yellow — a call that sparked furious protests.
An electric night at the Velodrome ⚡
🚑 Greenwood forced off with an injury after that foul!#OMLOSC pic.twitter.com/6zfIMPuABI
— L1+ (@ligue1plus) March 22, 2026
Greenwood, hurt by the challenge, had to be substituted and Marseille lost their main attacking outlet. His early exit visibly unsettled their rhythm and their ability to trouble Lille’s defense.
Even so, Marseille were efficient. In a first half that was largely even, they struck just before the break through Ethan Nwaneri, well positioned to finish a swift move. That 42nd-minute strike handed Marseille a valuable lead, earned more by pragmatism than domination.
Timber 🇳🇱 Paixão 🇧🇷 Nwaneri 🏴
The trio that sets the Velodrome alight 😎#OMLOSC pic.twitter.com/no20TnEZeQ
— L1+ (@ligue1plus) March 22, 2026
Lille takes control after the break
After the interval the match flipped. Lille turned up the press, moved the ball crisper and looked far more willing to attack. They gradually took the upper hand.
That pressure paid off early when Thomas Meunier levelled in the 49th minute. Alert and perfectly placed, the Belgian full-back pounced on a scramble in the box to bring Lille back into it. The goal reawoke the visitors, who then dictated the pace against a Marseille side that lost control.
Lille kept carving out dangerous moments, especially on the break, while Marseille struggled to play out and create real chances. The pressure kept building until the late winner. From a perfect Meunier cross, Olivier Giroud, introduced off the bench, used experience to head home an unstoppable winner in the 86th minute.
Meunier the match-winner
Thomas Meunier was the standout. Constantly active down his flank, he posed a threat with every forward run and his technique was spot on. His equaliser reignited his team and his assist for Giroud crowned a complete display.
GIROUUUUDD 😲🫢
France’s record scorer hands Lille a huge statement❗#OMLOSC pic.twitter.com/5Dx58Y80P9
— L1+ (@ligue1plus) March 22, 2026
Beyond the numbers, his overall impact was obvious. Tough in the duels, involved in attacks and solid defensively, he summed up Lille’s second-half intent.
Marseille on the back foot
Marseille showed two very different faces. Efficient and compact in the first half, they lost their grip after the break. The midfield was bypassed, the backline looked shaky and the attack — missing Greenwood — lacked ideas.
Despite a few flashes, notably from Igor Paixão, Marseille couldn’t turn things around. A lack of cutting edge and failure to match Lille’s intensity decided the game.
Effects on the table
The result reopens the fight for European spots. LOSC Lille are now two points off the podium and firmly back in the Champions League race. Marseille stay third but see their cushion shrink dangerously.
Behind them, AS Monaco and Olympique Lyonnais remain close, which makes the run-in unpredictable. Every point will count in what looks like a frantic finish.
Wrap-up
LOSC Lille proved they can respond when it matters and step up against a direct rival. A win like this, won with character, could be a turning point in their campaign.
Marseille, by contrast, let a big chance slip to solidify their place on the podium. With momentum wobbling, they’ll need to regroup fast if they want to keep their challengers at bay.
The run-in for European spots has never looked more wide open.
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