Kylian Mbappe raised pointed questions about France’s tactical decisions and midfield setup after Spain eliminated the defending World Cup finalists 2-0 in Arlington, Texas on Tuesday, a defeat that ended France’s attempt to reach a third consecutive World Cup final and left Mbappe reflecting on a game he felt his team failed to approach correctly.
Mbappe was held scoreless for the first time in the tournament and finished the competition with eight goals, the same total accumulated by Lionel Messi across Argentina’s run, leaving the two in a tie at the top of the Golden Boot race heading into the remaining matches. The blank against Spain was his most significant individual disappointment, occurring on the night France most needed him to make the difference.
What Mbappe said about the midfield and the press
Mbappe’s post-match assessment went beyond general disappointment and into specific tactical territory, describing a numerical disadvantage in midfield that he felt gave Spain’s central players too much time and space to operate. He said France had been outnumbered in that area of the pitch, which allowed Spain’s midfield to move the ball comfortably and control the tempo of the match rather than being put under pressure.
He also said France’s pressing plan did not work as intended, suggesting the team should have pressed in a more direct, man-oriented way to force Spain into uncomfortable situations rather than the structure that allowed Spain to pass through the press. Spain’s midfield, powered by Rodri and Fabian Ruiz, was fluid throughout the match and created the platform from which Spain built their control.
France never found a foothold
The defeat was comprehensive rather than close. Spain scored from the penalty spot after a foul by a French defender on Lamine Yamal gave the referee the opportunity to award the spot kick, and the goal gave Spain the momentum they needed to manage the match through its remaining periods. France struggled in possession and without the ball, making technical errors that prevented them from sustaining pressure and repeatedly surrendering the ball in positions from which Spain could hurt them.
Mbappe acknowledged the technical deficiencies directly, noting that first touches were poor and that France gave Spain chances to recover the ball even when the French side managed to win it. He accepted collective and personal responsibility for a performance that he said simply did not put in place enough of what was needed to win a World Cup semifinal. He described the result as reflecting the reality of the performance rather than bad luck.
His frustration boiled over physically in the 86th minute when he collided with the Spanish goalkeeper in a moment that earned him a yellow card, a visual expression of the emotions that had been building throughout a game that never produced the opening he needed.
Spain’s dominance and what comes next
Spain, who won the European Championship two years ago and who have now beaten France three consecutive times in major competition, controlled the match with the kind of confident possession football that their manager said was exactly what the team is built to produce. Rodri was central to the performance, combining defensive discipline with distribution that kept Spain’s attack well-supplied throughout.
Deschamps made multiple substitutions in the second half in an attempt to change the dynamic, including bringing on younger attacking players, but the changes did not produce the shift in momentum the team needed.
France will now play in the third-place match on Saturday in Miami Gardens against the loser of Wednesday’s semifinal between Argentina and England. For a team that had reached the previous two finals, the third-place game represents a significant step down from expectations at the tournament’s outset.

