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France national football team

The France national football team (French: Équipe de France de football) represents France in men's international football matches. It is governed by the French Football Federation (FFF; Fédération française de football), the governing body for football in France. It is a member of UEFA in Europe and FIFA in global competitions. The team's colors and imagery reference two national symbols: the French red-white-blue tricolour and Gallic rooster (coq gaulois). The team is colloquially known as Les Bleus (The Blues). They play home matches at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis and train at INF Clairefontaine in Clairefontaine-en-Yvelines.

France
Nickname(s)Les Bleus (The Blues)
AssociationFédération Française de Football (FFF)
ConfederationUEFA (Europe)
Head coachDidier Deschamps
CaptainHugo Lloris
Most capsHugo Lloris (145)
Top scorerOlivier Giroud (53)
Home stadiumStade de France
FIFA codeFRA
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current 3 1 (22 December 2022)[1]
Highest1 (May 2001 – May 2002, August – September 2018)
Lowest26 (September 2010)
Elo ranking
Current 3 1 (18 December 2022)[2]
Highest1 (1984–1985, 1986, 1998–1999, 2000–2002, 2003–2004, 2006, 2007, 2018)
Lowest40 (March–July 1930)
First international
 Belgium 3–3 France 
(Uccle, Belgium; 1 May 1904)
Biggest win
 France 11–0 Greece 
(Paris, France; 26 June 1919)
Biggest defeat
 Denmark 17–1 France 
(London, England; 22 October 1908)
World Cup
Appearances16 (first in 1930)
Best resultChampions (1998, 2018)
European Championship
Appearances10 (first in 1960)
Best resultChampions (1984, 2000)
Nations League Finals
Appearances1 (first in 2021)
Best resultChampions (2021)
CONMEBOL–UEFA Cup of Champions
Appearances1 (first in 1985)
Best resultChampions (1985)
FIFA Confederations Cup
Appearances2 (first in 2001)
Best resultChampions (2001, 2003)
Websitefff.fr

Founded in 1904, the team has won two FIFA World Cups, two UEFA European Championships, two FIFA Confederations Cups, one CONMEBOL–UEFA Cup of Champions, and one UEFA Nations League title. France was one of the four European teams that participated in the first World Cup in 1930. Twenty-eight years later, the team, led by Raymond Kopa and Just Fontaine, finished in third place at the 1958 World Cup. France experienced much of its success in three different eras: in the 1980s, from the 1990s to early 2000s, and during the late 2010s. In 1984, under the leadership of the three-time Ballon d'Or winner Michel Platini, France won Euro 1984 (its first official title), a CONMEBOL–UEFA Cup (1985), and reached two World Cup semi-finals (1982 and 1986).

During the captaincy of Didier Deschamps, with Zinedine Zidane on the pitch, Les Bleus won the 1998 World Cup and Euro 2000. They also won the Confederations Cup in 2001 and 2003. Three years later, France made it to the final of the 2006 World Cup, losing 5–3 on penalties to Italy.

A decade later, the team reached the final of Euro 2016, where they lost 1–0 to Portugal in extra time. Two years after that, France won the 2018 World Cup, its second title in that competition. After winning the 2021 Nations League, they became the first European national team to have won every senior FIFA and UEFA competition.[3][4]

France has footballing rivalries with Belgium,[5] Brazil,[6] Croatia,[7] England,[8] Germany,[9] Italy,[10] Portugal,[11] and Spain.[12]

History

 
USFSA France team (or Club Français) at 1900 Summer Olympics

The France national football team was created in 1904, around the time of FIFA's foundation.[13] The team competed in its first official international match on 1 May 1904 against Belgium in Brussels, ending in a 3–3 draw.[14] The following year, on 12 February 1905, France contested their first-ever home match against Switzerland. The match was played at the Parc des Princes in front of 500 supporters. France won the match 1–0 with the only goal coming from Gaston Cyprès. Due to disagreements between FIFA and the Union des Sociétés Françaises de Sports Athlétiques (USFSA), the country's sports union, France struggled to establish an identity. On 9 May 1908, the French Interfederal Committee (CFI), a rival organization to the USFSA, ruled that FIFA would now be responsible for the club's appearances in forthcoming Olympic Games and not the USFSA. In 1919, the CFI transformed themselves into the French Football Federation (FFF). In 1921, the USFSA finally merged with the FFF.

In July 1930, France appeared in the inaugural FIFA World Cup, held in Uruguay. In their first-ever World Cup match, France defeated Mexico 4–1 at the Estadio Pocitos in Montevideo. Lucien Laurent became notable in the match as he scored not only France's first World Cup goal, but the first goal in World Cup history. Conversely, France also became the first team to not score in a World Cup match after losing 1–0 to group stage opponents Argentina. Another loss to Chile resulted in the team bowing out in the group stage. The following year saw the first selection of a black player to the national team. Raoul Diagne, who was of Senegalese descent, earned his first cap on 15 February in a 2–1 defeat to Czechoslovakia. Diagne later played with the team at the 1938 World Cup, alongside Larbi Benbarek, who was one of the first players of North African origin to play for the national team. At the 1934 World Cup, France suffered elimination in the opening round, losing 3–2 to Austria. On the team's return to Paris, they were greeted as heroes by a crowd of over 4,000 supporters. France hosted the 1938 World Cup and reached the quarterfinals, losing 3–1 to defending champions (and eventual 1938 winners) Italy.

France's first 'Golden Generation' in the late 1950s comprised players such as Just Fontaine, Raymond Kopa, Jean Vincent, Robert Jonquet, Maryan Wisnieski, Thadée Cisowski, and Armand Penverne. At the 1958 World Cup, France reached the semi-finals losing to Brazil. In the third-place match, France defeated West Germany 6–3 with Fontaine recording four goals, which brought his goal tally in the competition to 13, a World Cup record. The record still stands today. France hosted the inaugural UEFA European Football Championship in 1960. For the second straight international tournament, the team reached the semi-finals, but were defeated 5–4 by Yugoslavia despite being up 4–2 heading into the 75th minute. In the third-place match, France was defeated 2–0 by Czechoslovakia.

The 1960s and 70s saw France decline significantly playing under several managers and failing to qualify for numerous international tournaments. On 25 April 1964, Henri Guérin was officially installed as the team's first manager. Under Guérin, France failed to qualify for the 1962 World Cup and the 1964 European Nations' Cup. The team returned to major international play with qualification for the 1966 World Cup, but did not make it past the group stage phase of the tournament. Guérin was fired following the World Cup. He was replaced by José Arribas and Jean Snella, who worked as caretaker managers in dual roles. The two only lasted four matches and were replaced by former international Just Fontaine, who in turn was only in charge for two matches. Louis Dugauguez succeeded Fontaine and following his early struggles in qualification for the 1970 World Cup, was fired and replaced by Georges Boulogne, who could not get the team to the competition. Boulogne was later fired following his failure to qualify for the 1974 World Cup and was replaced by the Romanian Ștefan Kovács, who became the only international manager to ever manage the national team. Under the management of Kovács, France failed to qualify for UEFA Euro 1976. After two years in charge, he was sacked and replaced with Michel Hidalgo.

 
Michel Platini captained France to victory at UEFA Euro 1984.

Under Hidalgo, France flourished, mainly due to the accolades of great players like defenders Marius Trésor and Maxime Bossis, striker Dominique Rocheteau and midfielder Michel Platini, who, alongside Jean Tigana, Alain Giresse and Luis Fernández formed the "carré magique" ("Magic Square"), which would haunt opposing defenses beginning at the 1982 World Cup, where France reached the semi-finals losing on penalties to rivals West Germany. The semi-final match-up is considered one of the greatest matches in World Cup history and was marked by controversy.[15] France finished fourth overall, losing the third-place playoff 3–2 to Poland. France earned their first major international honor two years later, winning Euro 1984, which they hosted. Under the leadership of Platini, who scored a tournament-high nine goals, France defeated Spain 2–0 in the final. Platini and Bruno Bellone scored the goals. Following the Euro triumph, Hidalgo departed the team and was replaced by former international Henri Michel. France subsequently won gold at the 1984 Summer Olympics football tournament and, a year later, defeated Uruguay 2–0 to win the Artemio Franchi Trophy, an early precursor to the FIFA Confederations Cup. Dominique Rocheteau and José Touré scored the goals. In a span of a year, France were holders of three of the four major international trophies. At the 1986 World Cup, France were among the favorites to win the competition. For the second consecutive World Cup, they reached the semi-finals and faced West Germany. Again, they were defeated by Germany but achieved third place with a 4–2 victory over Belgium.

In 1988, the FFF opened the Clairefontaine National Football Institute. Its opening ceremony was attended by then-President of France, François Mitterrand. Five months after Clairefontaine's opening, manager Henri Michel was fired and was replaced by Michel Platini, who failed to get the team to the 1990 World Cup. Platini did lead the team to Euro 1992 and, despite going on a 19-match unbeaten streak prior to the competition, suffered elimination in the group stage. A week after the completion of the tournament, Platini stepped down as manager and was replaced by his assistant Gérard Houllier. Under Houllier, France and its supporters experienced a major disappointment in failing to qualify for the 1994 World Cup. With two matches to play, qualification had been all but secured with matches remaining against last-placed Israel and in-contention Bulgaria. However, France was upset at home by Israel 3–2 after leading 2–1 late in the match and, against Bulgaria, conceded a 90th-minute goal for a 2–1 defeat.[16] The subsequent blame and public outcry led to the firing of Houllier and departure of several players from the national team fold. Houllier's assistant Aimé Jacquet was appointed as manager.

France starting line-up against Brazil at the 1998 FIFA World Cup Final, a match they won 3–0.

Under Jacquet, the national team achieved multiple successes. The squad comprised some experienced players from the group that had failed to reach the 1994 FIFA World Cup as well as some talented younger players, such as Zinedine Zidane. The team reached the semi-finals of Euro 1996, where they lost 6–5 on penalties to the Czech Republic. The team's next major tournament was the 1998 World Cup, which France hosted. France went through the tournament undefeated and became the seventh nation to win the World Cup, defeating Brazil 3–0 in the final at the Stade de France in Paris. Jacquet stepped down after the country's World Cup triumph and was succeeded by assistant Roger Lemerre who guided them through Euro 2000. Led by FIFA World Player of the Year Zidane, France defeated Italy 2–1 in the final. David Trezeguet scored the golden goal in extra time. The victory gave the team the distinction of holding both the World Cup and Euro titles, a feat first achieved by West Germany in 1974; this was also the first time that a reigning World Cup winner went on to capture the Euro. Following the result, the France national team was accorded the number one spot in the FIFA World Rankings. In the following year, the team won the 2001 FIFA Confederations Cup.

 
Zinedine Zidane captaining France at the 2006 FIFA World Cup

After this period of achievement, France were much less successful in subsequent tournaments, and failed to make it past the group stage at the 2002 World Cup. One of the greatest shocks in World Cup history saw France defeated 1–0 by debutantes Senegal in the opening game of the tournament. France became only the second nation to be eliminated in the first-round as World Cup holders, the first being Brazil in 1966. After the 2010, 2014, and 2018 World Cups, Italy, Spain, and Germany were also added to this list.[17] After France finished bottom of the group, Lemerre was dismissed and was replaced by Jacques Santini. A full-strength team started out strongly at Euro 2004, but they were upset in the quarter-finals by the eventual winners Greece. Santini resigned as coach and Raymond Domenech was picked as his replacement. France struggled in the early qualifiers for the 2006 World Cup. This prompted Domenech to persuade several past members out of international retirement to help the national team qualify, which they accomplished following a convincing 4–0 win over Cyprus on the final day of qualifying. In the 2006 World Cup final stages, France finished undefeated in the group stage portion and advanced to the final, defeating Spain, Brazil, and Portugal in the knockout matches. France played Italy in the final. The match finished 1–1 after extra time, with Italy winning 5–3 on penalties to be crowned World Cup champions. The match featured a notable incident during extra time that led to captain Zinedine Zidane being sent off.

 
The French team in front of fans in 2006.

France started its qualifying round for Euro 2008 strong and qualified for the tournament, despite two defeats to Scotland. France bowed out during the group stage portion of the tournament after having been placed in the group of death (which included Netherlands and Italy).[18][19] Just like the team's previous World Cup qualifying campaign, the 2010 campaign got off to a disappointing start with France suffering disastrous losses and earning uninspired victories. France eventually finished second in the group and earned a spot in the UEFA play-offs against the Republic of Ireland for a place in South Africa. In the first leg, France defeated the Irish 1–0 and in the second leg procured a 1–1 draw, via controversial circumstances, to qualify for the World Cup.[20]

In the 2010 World Cup final stages, the team continued to perform under expectations and were eliminated in the group stage, while the negative publicity the national team received during the competition led to further repercussions back in France. Midway through the competition, striker Nicolas Anelka was dismissed from the national team after reportedly having a dispute, in which obscenities were passed, with team manager Raymond Domenech during half-time of the team's loss to Mexico.[21][22] The resulting disagreement over Anelka's expulsion between the players, the coaching staff and FFF officials resulted in the players boycotting training before their third game.[23][24][25] In response to the training boycott, Sports Minister Roselyne Bachelot lectured the players and "reduced France's disgraced World Cup stars to tears with an emotional speech on the eve of their final group A match".[26] France then lost their final game 2–1 to the hosts South Africa and failed to advance to the knockout stage. The day after the team's elimination, it was reported by numerous media outlets that then President of France Nicolas Sarkozy would meet with team captain Thierry Henry to discuss the issues associated with the team's meltdown at the World Cup, at Henry's request.[27] Following the completion of the World Cup tournament, Federation President Jean-Pierre Escalettes resigned from his position.

Domenech, whose contract had expired, was succeeded as head coach by former international Laurent Blanc. On 23 July 2010, at the request of Blanc, the FFF suspended all 23 players in the World Cup squad for the team's friendly match against Norway after the World Cup.[28] On 6 August, five players who were deemed to have played a major role in the training boycott were disciplined for their roles.[29][30]

 
After captaining France intermittently since 2010, goalkeeper Hugo Lloris has been the French captain permanently since February 2012.

At Euro 2012 in Poland and Ukraine, France reached the quarter-finals, where they were beaten by eventual champions Spain.[31][32] Following the tournament, coach Laurent Blanc resigned and was succeeded by Didier Deschamps, who captained France to glory in the 1998 World Cup and Euro 2000.[33][34] His team qualified for the 2014 World Cup by beating Ukraine in the playoffs, and Deschamps then extended his contract until Euro 2016.[35] Missing star midfielder Franck Ribéry through injury,[36] France lost to eventual champions Germany in the quarter-finals courtesy of an early goal by Mats Hummels.[37] Paul Pogba was awarded the Best Young Player award during the tournament.[38]

France automatically qualified as hosts for Euro 2016.[39] Karim Benzema and Hatem Ben Arfa were not in the squad.[40][41] France were drawn in Group A of the tournament alongside Romania, Switzerland and Albania.[42] France won their group with wins over Romania and Albania and a goalless draw against Switzerland and were poised to play the Republic of Ireland in the round of sixteen.[43] Ireland took the lead after just two minutes through a controversially awarded penalty, which was converted by Robbie Brady. A brace from Antoine Griezmann, however, helped France to win the match 2–1 and qualify for the quarter-finals, where they beat a resilient Iceland 5–2 to set up a semi-final clash against world champions and tournament co-favourites Germany.[44][45][46] France won the match 2–0, marking their first win over Germany at a major tournament since 1958.[47][48] France, however, were beaten by Portugal 1–0 in the final courtesy of an extra-time goal by Eder. Griezmann was named the Player of the Tournament and was also awarded the Golden Boot in addition to being named in the Team of the Tournament, alongside Dimitri Payet. The defeat meant that France became the second nation to have lost the final on home soil, after Portugal lost the final to Greece in 2004.[49][50][51][52][53]

France starting line-up against Croatia at the 2018 FIFA World Cup Final, a match they won 4–2.

In 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying, France topped their group with 23 points; winning 7 wins, drawing 2 and losing once,[54] although their two draws were against considerably weaker nations, drawing 0–0 with Belarus in their opening match[55] and against Luxembourg, failing to secure a win against the latter for the first time since 1914, nearly 103 years.[56] Their only defeat of the qualifying phase was against Sweden; losing 2–1 in the last few minutes following an error from goalkeeper Hugo Lloris.[57] France secured qualification to the World Cup finals with a 2–1 win over Belarus after defeating the Netherlands 4–0 at home a few weeks earlier.[58] They were drawn to play Australia, Peru and Denmark in a group in which they were considered heavy favourites.[59][60] Overall, due to the strength and value of their squad, France were tipped by many as one of the favourites for the title.[61][62][63] France, however, had a somewhat disappointing performance in the group stage, only managing a 2–1 win over Australia and a 1–0 win over Peru, followed by a match against Denmark which finished in a 0–0 draw.[64][65][66][67] France beat Argentina 4–3 in the round of sixteen and then Uruguay 2–0 to qualify for the semi-final stage, where they beat Belgium 1–0 courtesy of a goal from defender Samuel Umtiti.[68][69] Belgium had defeated Japan in the second round, coming back from 2–0 down to win 3–2; France adopted a tactical approach to counter the Belgian attack: Les Bleus played a low block to not leave any space to the Belgians and relied mostly on counter-attacking play, this defensive approach proved successful but led to criticism from some Belgian players who felt they were better than France.[70] On 15 July, France beat Croatia in the final 4–2 to win the World Cup for the second time.[71] Didier Deschamps became the third man to win the World Cup as a player and a coach and also became the second man to win the title as a captain and a coach.[72] Kylian Mbappé was awarded the Best Young Player award and Antoine Griezmann was awarded the Bronze Ball and the Silver Boot for their performance during the tournament.[73] Upon scoring in the final, Mbappé became only the second teenager to score in a World Cup Final, the first being Pelé in 1958.

Home stadium

During France's early years, the team's national stadium alternated between the Parc des Princes in Paris and the Stade Olympique Yves-du-Manoir in Colombes. France also hosted matches at the Stade Pershing, Stade de Paris, and the Stade Buffalo, but to a minimal degree. As the years moved forward, France began hosting matches outside the city of Paris at such venues as the Stade Marcel Saupin in Nantes, the Stade Vélodrome in Marseille, the Stade de Gerland in Lyon, and the Stade de la Meinau in Strasbourg.

Following the renovation of the Parc des Princes in 1972, which gave the stadium the largest capacity in Paris, France moved into the venue permanently. The team still hosted friendly matches and minor FIFA World Cup and UEFA European Football Championship qualification matches at other venues. Twice France have played home matches in a French overseas department – in 2005 against Costa Rica in Fort-de-France (Martinique) and in 2010 against China in Saint Pierre (Réunion). Both matches were friendlies.

In 1998, the Stade de France was inaugurated as France's national stadium ahead of the 1998 World Cup. Located in Saint-Denis, a Parisian suburb, the stadium has an all-seater capacity of 81,338. France's first match at the stadium was played on 28 January 1998 against Spain. France won the match 1–0, with Zinedine Zidane scoring the goal. Since that match, France has used the stadium for almost every major home game, including the 1998 World Cup final.

Prior to matches, home or away, the national team trains at the INF Clairefontaine academy in Clairefontaine-en-Yvelines. Clairefontaine is the national association football centre and is among 12 élite academies throughout the country. The centre was inaugurated in 1976 by former FFF president Fernand Sastre and opened in 1988. The center drew media spotlight following its usage as a base camp by the team that won the 1998 World Cup.

In the 20th and 23rd minute of an international friendly on 13 November 2015, against Germany, three groups of terrorists attempted to detonate bomb vests, at three entrances of Stade de France, and two explosions occurred. Play would continue, until the 94th minute, in order to keep the crowd from panicking. Consequently, the stadium was evacuated through the unaffected gates of the stadium away from the players benches. Due to the blocked exits, spectators who could not leave the stadium had to go down to the pitch and wait until it was safer.

Team image

Media coverage

The national team has a broadcasting agreement with TF1 Group, who the Federal Council of the FFF agreed to extend its exclusive broadcasting agreement with the channel. The new deal grants the channel exclusive broadcast rights for the matches of national team, which include friendlies and international games for the next four seasons beginning in August 2010 and ending in June 2014. TF1 will also have extended rights, notably on the Internet, and may also broadcast images of the national team in its weekly program, Téléfoot.[74] The FFF will receive €45 million a season, a €10 million decrease from the €55 million they received from the previous agreement reached in 2006.[75]

After France won their second World Cup in 2018, M6 together with TF1 broadcast all international fixtures featuring France respectively until 2022.[76]

Kits and crest

 
France team that played its first international v Belgium in 1904, wearing the white shirt with the rings emblem

The France national team utilizes a three colour system composed of blue, white, and red. The team's three colours originate from the national flag of France, known as the tricolore. Nevertheless, the first France shirt (as seen in their first official international match against Belgium in 1904) was white, with the two interlinked rings emblem of USFSA –the body that controlled sport in France by then–[77] on the left.[78]

France normally wear blue shirts, white shorts, and red socks at home (similar setup to Japan), while, when on the road, the team utilizes an all-white combination or wear red shirts, blue shorts, and blue socks with the former being the most current. Between 1909 and 1914, France wore a white shirt with blue stripes, white shorts, and red socks. In a 1978 World Cup match against Hungary in Mar del Plata, both teams arrived at Estadio José María Minella with white kits, so France played in green-and-white striped shirts borrowed from Club Atlético Kimberley.[79]

 
France's Zinedine Zidane number 10 home shirt, as made by Adidas

Beginning in 1966, France had its shirts made by Le Coq Sportif until 1971. In 1972, France reached an agreement with German sports apparel manufacturer Adidas to be the team's kit provider. Over the next 38 years, the two would maintain a healthy relationship with France winning Euro 1984, the 1998 World Cup and Euro 2000 while wearing Adidas' famous tricolour three stripes. During the 2006 World Cup, France wore an all-white change strip in all four of its knockout matches, including the final.[80] On 22 February 2008, the FFF announced that they were ending their partnership with Adidas and signing with Nike, effective 1 January 2011. The deal was valued at €320 million over seven years (1 January 2011 – 9 July 2018), making France's blue shirt the most expensive sponsorship in the history of football.[81][82]

 
Nike-made France merchandise on display for UEFA Euro 2016

The first France kit worn in a major tournament produced by Nike was the Euro 2012 strip, which was all dark blue and used gold as an accent colour.[83] In February 2013, Nike revealed an all baby blue change strip.

In advance of France's hosting of Euro 2016, Nike unveiled a new, unconventional kit set: blue shirts and shorts with red socks at home, white shirts and shorts and with blue socks away. The away shirt as worn in pre-Euro friendlies and released to the public also featured one blue sleeve and one red sleeve in reference to the "tricolore". However, due to UEFA regulations, France was forced to wear a modified version with the sleeve colours almost desaturated in their Euro 2016 group stage game against Switzerland, which continued to be worn during 2018 World Cup qualifying.[84]

Kit sponsorship

Kit supplier Period Notes
  Allen Sport 1938–1966[85][86]
  Le Coq Sportif 1966–1971
  Adidas 1972–2010
  Nike 2011–present

Kit deals

Kit supplier Period Contract
announcement
Contract
duration
Value Notes
  Nike 2011–present
2008-02-22
2011–2018 (7 years) Total 340.8 million
(42.6 million per year)[87]
2016-12-08
2018–2026 (8 years) Total 450 million
(50 million per year)[88]

Nickname

France is often referred to by the media and supporters as Les Bleus (The Blues), which is the nickname associated with all of France's international sporting teams due to the blue shirts each team incorporates. The team is also referred to as Les Tricolores or L'Equipe Tricolore (The Tri-color Team) due to the team's utilization of the country's national colors: blue, white, and red. During the 1980s, France earned the nickname the "Brazilians of Europe" mainly due to the accolades of the "carré magique" ("Magic Square"), who were anchored by Michel Platini. Led by coach Michel Hidalgo, France exhibited an inspiring, elegant, skillful and technically advanced offensive style of football, which was strikingly similar to their South American counterparts.[89] Despite being offence oriented, France's defence is considered one of the best in world for their aggression and technicality. Their defence played a vital role in winning the 2018 FIFA World Cup and had earned them the title of "Mur de fer" ("The Iron Wall").

Results and fixtures

The following is a list of match results from the previous 12 months, as well as any future matches that have been scheduled.

2022

25 March 2022 Friendly France   2–1   Ivory Coast Marseille, France
CET (UTC+1)
  • Giroud   22'
  • Tchouaméni   90+3'
Report
Stadium: Stade Vélodrome
Referee: Vítor Ferreira (Portugal)
29 March 2022 Friendly France   5–0   South Africa Villeneuve-d'Ascq, France
CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Stade Pierre-Mauroy
Referee: Sandro Schärer (Switzerland)
3 June 2022 Nations League France   1–2   Denmark Saint-Denis, France
20:45 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Stade de France
Attendance: 75,833
Referee: Felix Zwayer (Germany)
6 June 2022 Nations League Croatia   1–1   France Split, Croatia
20:45 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Stadion Poljud
Attendance: 30,000
Referee: Marco Guida (Italy)
10 June 2022 Nations League Austria   1–1   France Vienna, Austria
20:45 CEST (UTC+2)
Report
Stadium: Ernst-Happel-Stadion
Attendance: 44,800
Referee: Anastasios Sidiropoulos (Greece)
13 June 2022 Nations League France   0–1   Croatia Saint-Denis, France
20:45 CEST (UTC+2) Report
Stadium: Stade de France
Attendance: 77,410
Referee: Orel Grinfeld (Israel)
22 September 2022 Nations League France   2–0   Austria Saint-Denis, France
20:45 CEST (UTC+2)
Report Stadium: Stade de France
Attendance: 70,188
Referee: Andreas Ekberg (Sweden)
25 September 2022 Nations League Denmark   2–0   France Copenhagen, Denmark
20:45 CEST (UTC+2)
Report Stadium: Parken Stadium
Attendance: 36,064
Referee: István Kovács (Romania)
22 November 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup France   4–1   Australia Al Wakrah, Qatar
22:00 AST (UTC+3)
Report
Stadium: Al Janoub Stadium
Attendance: 40,875
Referee: Victor Gomes (South Africa)
26 November 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup France   2–1   Denmark Doha, Qatar
19:00 AST (UTC+3)
Report Stadium: Stadium 974
Attendance: 42,860
Referee: Szymon Marciniak (Poland)
30 November 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup Tunisia   1–0   France Al-Rayyan, Qatar
18:00 AST (UTC+3)
Report Stadium: Education City Stadium
Attendance: 43,627
Referee: Matthew Conger (New Zealand)
4 December 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup R16 France   3–1   Poland Doha, Qatar
18:00 AST (UTC+3)
Report
Stadium: Al Thumama Stadium
Attendance: 40,989
Referee: Jesús Valenzuela (Venezuela)
10 December 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup QF England   1–2   France Al Khor, Qatar
22:00 AST (UTC+3)
Report
Stadium: Al Bayt Stadium
Attendance: 68,895
Referee: Wilton Sampaio (Brazil)
14 December 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup SF France   2–0   Morocco Al Khor, Qatar
22:00 AST (UTC+3)
Report Stadium: Al Bayt Stadium
Attendance: 68,294
Referee: César Arturo Ramos (Mexico)
18 December 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup Final Argentina   3–3 (a.e.t.)
(4–2 p)
  France Lusail, Qatar
18:00 AST (UTC+3)
Report
Stadium: Lusail Iconic Stadium
Attendance: 88,966
Referee: Szymon Marciniak (Poland)
Penalties

2023

24 March 2023 (2023-03-24) UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group B France   v   Netherlands Saint-Denis, France
20:45 Report Stadium: Stade de France
27 March 2023 (2023-03-27) UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group B Republic of Ireland   v   France Dublin, Republic of Ireland
20:45 (19:45 UTC+1) Report Stadium: Aviva Stadium
16 June 2023 (2023-06-16) UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group B Gibraltar   v   France Faro/Loulé, Portugal
20:45 Report Stadium: Estádio Algarve
19 June 2023 (2023-06-19) UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group B France   v   Greece
20:45 Report
7 September 2023 (2023-09-07) UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group B France   v   Republic of Ireland
20:45 Report
10 September 2023 Friendly France   v   TBC
13 October 2023 (2023-10-13) UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group B Netherlands   v   France
20:45 Report
16 October 2023 Friendly France   v   TBC
18 November 2023 (2023-11-18) UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group B France   v   Gibraltar
20:45 Report
21 November 2023 (2023-11-21) UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group B Greece   v   France
20:45 (21:45 UTC+2) Report

Coaching staff

 
Didier Deschamps, the current coach of the France national football team.
As of August 2019.[90]
Position Name
Head coach   Didier Deschamps
Assistant coach   Guy Stéphan
Goalkeeper coach   Franck Raviot
Trainer   Cyril Moine
Doctor   Franck Le Gall
Video analysts   Thierry Marszalek
  Eric Dubray
Osteopath   Jean-Yves Vandewalle
Physiotherapists   Christophe Geoffroy
  Denis Morcel
  Alexandre Germain
  Guillaume Vassout
Team Manager   Philippe Brocherieux
Chef   Xavier Rousseau
Security officer   Mohamed Sanhadji
Steward   Bachir Nehar
Media officer   Raphaël Raymond

Coaching history

As of 18 December 2022
Managers in italics were hired as caretakers
Manager France career Pld W D L Win %
  Henri Guérin 1964–1966 15 5 4 6 033.3
  José Arribas
  Jean Snella
1966 4 2 0 2 050.0
  Just Fontaine 1967 2 0 0 2 000.0
  Louis Dugauguez 1967–1968 9 2 3 4 022.2
  Georges Boulogne 1969–1973 31 15 5 11 048.4
  Ștefan Kovács 1973–1975 15 6 4 5 040.0
  Michel Hidalgo 1976–1984 75 41 16 18 054.7
  Henri Michel 1984–1988 36 16 12 8 044.4
  Michel Platini 1988–1992 29 16 8 5 055.2
  Gérard Houllier 1992–1993 12 7 1 4 058.3
  Aimé Jacquet 1993–1998 53 34 16 3 064.2
  Roger Lemerre 1998–2002 53 34 11 8 064.2
  Jacques Santini 2002–2004 28 22 4 2 078.6
  Raymond Domenech 2004–2010 79 41 24 14 051.9
  Laurent Blanc 2010–2012 27 16 7 4 059.3
  Didier Deschamps 2012–present 139 89 28 22 064.0

Players

Current squad

On 9 November 2022, Didier Deschamps named 25 players in the squad for the 2022 FIFA World Cup.[91] On 14 November, Presnel Kimpembe withdrew from the tournament with an injury and was replaced by Axel Disasi; in addition, Marcus Thuram also received a call up, raising the squad to 26 players.[92][93] Christopher Nkunku withdrew injured on 15 November and was replaced by Randal Kolo Muani.[94][95] Karim Benzema withdrew injured on 19 November, however was not excluded from squad list.[96]

Caps and goals as of 18 December 2022, after the match against Argentina.

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 1GK Hugo Lloris (captain) (1986-12-26) 26 December 1986 (age 36) 145 0   Tottenham Hotspur
16 1GK Steve Mandanda (1985-03-28) 28 March 1985 (age 37) 35 0   Rennes
23 1GK Alphonse Areola (1993-02-27) 27 February 1993 (age 29) 5 0   West Ham United

2 2DF Benjamin Pavard (1996-03-28) 28 March 1996 (age 26) 47 2   Bayern Munich
3 2DF Axel Disasi (1998-03-11) 11 March 1998 (age 24) 3 0   Monaco[a]
4 2DF Raphaël Varane (1993-04-25) 25 April 1993 (age 29) 93 5   Manchester United
5 2DF Jules Koundé (1998-11-12) 12 November 1998 (age 24) 18 0   Barcelona
17 2DF William Saliba (2001-03-24) 24 March 2001 (age 21) 8 0   Arsenal
18 2DF Dayot Upamecano (1998-10-27) 27 October 1998 (age 24) 12 1   Bayern Munich
21 2DF Lucas Hernandez (1996-02-14) 14 February 1996 (age 26) 33 0   Bayern Munich
22 2DF Théo Hernandez (1997-10-06) 6 October 1997 (age 25) 13 2   Milan
24 2DF Ibrahima Konaté (1999-05-25) 25 May 1999 (age 23) 6 0   Liverpool

6 3MF Matteo Guendouzi (1999-04-14) 14 April 1999 (age 23) 7 1   Marseille
8 3MF Aurélien Tchouaméni (2000-01-27) 27 January 2000 (age 22) 21 2   Real Madrid
13 3MF Youssouf Fofana (1999-01-10) 10 January 1999 (age 23) 7 0   Monaco
14 3MF Adrien Rabiot (1995-04-03) 3 April 1995 (age 27) 35 3   Juventus
15 3MF Jordan Veretout (1993-03-01) 1 March 1993 (age 29) 6 0   Marseille
25 3MF Eduardo Camavinga (2002-11-10) 10 November 2002 (age 20) 6 1   Real Madrid

7 4FW Antoine Griezmann (1991-03-21) 21 March 1991 (age 31) 117 42   Atlético Madrid
9 4FW Olivier Giroud (1986-09-30) 30 September 1986 (age 36) 120 53   Milan
10 4FW Kylian Mbappé (1998-12-20) 20 December 1998 (age 24) 66 36   Paris Saint-Germain
11 4FW Ousmane Dembélé (1997-05-15) 15 May 1997 (age 25) 35 4   Barcelona
12 4FW Randal Kolo Muani (1998-12-05) 5 December 1998 (age 24) 5 1   Eintracht Frankfurt
20 4FW Kingsley Coman (1996-06-13) 13 June 1996 (age 26) 46 5   Bayern Munich
26 4FW Marcus Thuram (1997-08-06) 6 August 1997 (age 25) 9 0   Borussia Mönchengladbach

Recent call-ups

The following players have been called up within the past twelve months.

Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
GK Alban Lafont (1999-01-23) 23 January 1999 (age 23) 0 0   Nantes v.   Denmark, 25 September 2022
GK Mike Maignan (1995-07-03) 3 July 1995 (age 27) 5 0   Milan v.   Denmark, 25 September 2022 INJ

DF Presnel Kimpembe (1995-08-13) 13 August 1995 (age 27) 28 0   Paris Saint-Germain 2022 FIFA World Cup INJ
DF Ferland Mendy (1995-06-08) 8 June 1995 (age 27) 9 0   Real Madrid v.   Denmark, 25 September 2022
DF Jonathan Clauss (1992-09-25) 25 September 1992 (age 30) 6 0   Marseille v.   Denmark, 25 September 2022
DF Benoît Badiashile (2001-03-26) 26 March 2001 (age 21) 2 0   Chelsea v.   Denmark, 25 September 2022
DF Adrien Truffert (2001-01-20) 20 January 2001 (age 21) 1 0   Rennes v.   Denmark, 25 September 2022
DF Lucas Digne (1993-07-20) 20 July 1993 (age 29) 46 0   Aston Villa v.   Austria, 22 September 2022 INJ

MF Boubacar Kamara (1999-11-23) 23 November 1999 (age 23) 3 0   Aston Villa v.   Austria, 22 September 2022 INJ
MF N'Golo Kanté (1991-03-29) 29 March 1991 (age 31) 53 2   Chelsea v.   Croatia, 13 June 2022 INJ
MF Paul Pogba (1993-03-15) 15 March 1993 (age 29) 91 11   Juventus v.   South Africa, 29 March 2022

FW Karim Benzema (1987-12-19) 19 December 1987 (age 35) 97 37   Real Madrid 2022 FIFA World Cup RET
FW Christopher Nkunku (1997-11-14) 14 November 1997 (age 25) 8 0   RB Leipzig 2022 FIFA World Cup INJ
FW Wissam Ben Yedder (1990-08-12) 12 August 1990 (age 32) 19 3   Monaco[a] v.   Croatia, 13 June 2022
FW Moussa Diaby (1999-07-07) 7 July 1999 (age 23) 8 0   Bayer Leverkusen v.   Croatia, 13 June 2022

INJ Withdrew due to injury
PRE Preliminary squad
RET Retired from the national team
SUS Serving suspension

Player of the Year

Player records

As of 18 December 2022[97]
Players in bold are still active with France.

Most appearances

 
Hugo Lloris is France's most capped player, with 145 caps.
Rank Player Caps Goals Career
1 Hugo Lloris 145 0 2008–present
2 Lilian Thuram 142 2 1994–2008
3 Thierry Henry 123 51 1997–2010
4 Olivier Giroud 120 53 2011–present
5 Antoine Griezmann 117 42 2014–present
6 Marcel Desailly 116 3 1993–2004
7 Zinedine Zidane 108 31 1994–2006
8 Patrick Vieira 107 6 1997–2009
9 Didier Deschamps 103 4 1989–2000
10 Karim Benzema 97 37 2007–2022
Laurent Blanc 16 1989–2000
Bixente Lizarazu 2 1992–2004

Most goals

 
Olivier Giroud is France's top goalscorer, with 53 goals.
Rank Player Goals Caps Average Career
1 Olivier Giroud (list) 53 120 0.44 2011–present
2 Thierry Henry (list) 51 123 0.41 1997–2010
3 Antoine Griezmann 42 117 0.36 2014–present
4 Michel Platini 41 72 0.57 1976–1987
5 Karim Benzema 37 97 0.38 2007–2022
6 Kylian Mbappé 36 66 0.55 2017–present
7 David Trezeguet 34 71 0.48 1998–2008
8 Zinedine Zidane 31 108 0.29 1994–2006
9 Just Fontaine 30 21 1.43 1953–1960
Jean-Pierre Papin 54 0.56 1986–1995

Competitive record

  Champions    Runners-up    Third place     Tournament played on home soil  

FIFA World Cup

France was one of the four European teams that participated at the inaugural World Cup in 1930 and have appeared in 15 FIFA World Cups, tied for sixth-best. The national team is one of eight national teams to have won at least one FIFA World Cup title. The France team won their first World Cup title in 1998. The tournament was played on home soil and France defeated Brazil 3–0 in the final match.

In 2006, France finished as runners-up losing 5–3 on penalties to Italy. The team has also finished in third place on two occasions in 1958 and 1986 and in fourth place once in 1982. The team's worst results in the competition were first-round eliminations in 2002 and 2010. In 2002, the team suffered an unexpected loss to Senegal and departed the tournament without scoring a goal, while in 2010, a French team torn apart by conflict between the players and staff lost two of three matches and drew the other.[98][99]

In 2014, France advanced to the quarterfinal before losing 1–0 to the eventual champion, Germany.

In 2018, France defeated Croatia 4–2 in the final match and won the World Cup for the second time.[100]

In 2022, France finished runners-up to Argentina, losing 4–2 on penalties.

FIFA World Cup finals record Qualification record
Year Round Position Pld W D* L GF GA Squad Pld W D L GF GA Campaign
  1930 Group stage 7th 3 1 0 2 4 3 Squad Qualified as invitees
  1934 Round of 16 9th 1 0 0 1 2 3 Squad 1 1 0 0 6 1 1934
  1938 Quarter-finals 6th 2 1 0 1 4 4 Squad Qualified as hosts 1938
  1950 Originally did not qualify, then invited, later withdrew 3 0 2 1 4 5 1950
  1954 Group stage 11th 2 1 0 1 3 3 Squad 4 4 0 0 20 4 1954
  1958 Third place 3rd 6 4 0 2 23 15 Squad 4 3 1 0 19 4 1958
  1962 Did not qualify 5 3 0 2 10 4 1962
  1966 Group stage 13th 3 0 1 2 2 5 Squad 6 5 0 1 9 2 1966
  1970 Did not qualify 4 2 0 2 6 4 1970
  1974 4 1 1 2 3 5 1974
  1978 Group stage 12th 3 1 0 2 5 5 Squad 4 2 1 1 7 4 1978
  1982 Fourth place 4th 7 3 2 2 16 12 Squad 8 5 0 3 20 8 1982
  1986 Third place 3rd 7 4 2 1 12 6 Squad 8 5 1 2 15 4 1986
  1990 Did not qualify 8 3 3 2 10 7 1990
  1994 10 6 1 3 17 10 1994
  1998 Champions 1st 7 6 1 0 15 2 Squad Qualified as hosts 1998
    2002 Group stage 28th 3 0 1 2 0 3 Squad Qualified as defending champions 2002
  2006 Runners-up 2nd 7 4 3 0 9 3 Squad 10 5 5 0 14 2 2006
  2010 Group stage 29th 3 0 1 2 1 4 Squad 12 7 4 1 20 10 2010
  2014 Quarter-finals 7th 5 3 1 1 10 3 Squad 10 6 2 2 18 8 2014
  2018 Champions 1st 7 6 1 0 16 6 Squad 10 7 2 1 18 6 2018
  2022 Runners-up 2nd 7 5 1 1 16 8 Squad 8 5 3 0 18 3 2022
Total 2 titles 16/22 73 39 14* 20 136 85 N/A 119 70 26 23 234 91 Total
*Knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out are considered a draw.
**Red border indicates tournament was held on home soil.


UEFA European Championship

France is one of the most successful nations at the UEFA European Championship having won two titles in 1984 and 2000. The team is just below Spain and Germany who have won three titles each. France hosted the inaugural competition in 1960 and have appeared in nine UEFA European Championship tournaments, tied for fourth-best. The team won their first title on home soil in 1984 and were led by Ballon d'Or winner Michel Platini. In 2000, the team, led by FIFA World Player of the Year Zinedine Zidane, won its second title in Belgium and the Netherlands. The team's worst result in the competition was a first-round elimination in 1992 and 2008.

UEFA European Championship record Qualifying record
Year Round Position Pld W D* L GF GA Squad Pld W D L GF GA
  1960 Fourth place 4th 2 0 0 2 4 7 Squad 4 3 1 0 17 6 1960
  1964 Did not qualify 6 2 1 3 11 10 1964
  1968 8 4 2 2 16 12 1968
  1972 6 3 1 2 10 8 1972
  1976 6 1 3 2 7 6 1976
  1980 6 4 1 1 13 7 1980
  1984 Champions 1st 5 5 0 0 14 4 Squad Qualified as hosts 1984
  1988 Did not qualify 8 1 4 3 4 7 1988
  1992 Group stage 6th 3 0 2 1 2 3 Squad 8 8 0 0 20 6 1992
  1996 Semi-finals Joint 3rd 5 2 3 0 5 2 Squad 10 5 5 0 22 2 1996
    2000 Champions 1st 6 5 0 1 13 7 Squad 10 6 3 1 17 10 2000
  2004 Quarter-finals 6th 4 2 1 1 7 5 Squad 8 8 0 0 29 2 2004
    2008 Group stage 15th 3 0 1 2 1 6 Squad 12 8 2 2 25 5 2008
    2012 Quarter-finals 8th 4 1 1 2 3 5 Squad 10 6 3 1 15 4 2012
  2016 Runners-up 2nd 7 5 1 1 13 5 Squad Qualified as hosts 2016
  2020 Round of 16 11th 4 1 3 0 7 6 Squad 10 8 1 1 25 6 2020
  2024 To be determined To be determined 2024
Total 2 titles 10/16 43 21 12 10 69 50 112 67 27 18 231 91
*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.

UEFA Nations League

UEFA Nations League record
League phase Finals
Season LG GP Pos Pld W D L GF GA P/R RK Year Pos Pld W D* L GF GA Squad
2018–19 A 1 2nd 4 2 1 1 4 4   6th   2019 Did not qualify
2020–21 A 3 1st 6 5 1 0 12 5   1st   2021 1st 2 2 0 0 5 3 Squad
2022–23 A 1 3rd 6 1 2 3 5 7   12th   2023 Did not qualify
2024–25 A To be determined   2025 To be determined
Total 16 8 4 4 21 16 12th Total 2 2 0 0 5 3
*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.
**Group stage played home and away. Flag shown represents host nation for the finals stage.

FIFA Confederations Cup

France have appeared in two of the eight FIFA Confederations Cups contested and won the competition on both appearances. The team's two titles place in second place only trailing Brazil who have won four. France won their first Confederations Cup in 2001 having appeared in the competition as a result of winning the FIFA World Cup in 1998. The team defeated Japan 1–0 in the final match. In the following Confederations Cup in 2003, France, appearing in the competition as the host country, won the competition beating Cameroon 1–0 after extra time.

FIFA Confederations Cup record
Year Round Position Pld W D* L GF GA Squad
  1992 Did not qualify
  1995
  1997
  1999
    2001 Champions 1st 5 4 0 1 12 2 Squad
  2003 Champions 1st 5 5 0 0 12 3 Squad
  2005 Did not qualify
  2009
  2013
  2017
Total 2 titles 2/10 10 9 0 1 24 5

CONMEBOL–UEFA Cup of Champions

CONMEBOL–UEFA Cup of Champions record
Year Round Position Pld W D* L GF GA
  1985 Champions 1st 1 1 0 0 2 0
  1993 Did not qualify
  2022
Total 1 title 1/3 1 1 0 0 2 0

Honours

 
France celebrating their victory of the 2018 FIFA World Cup
This is a list of honours for the senior France national team
Competition       Total
FIFA World Cup 2 2 2 6
UEFA European Championship 2 1 1 4
FIFA Confederations Cup 2 0 0 2
CONMEBOL–UEFA Cup of Champions 1 0 0 1
UEFA Nations League 1 0 0 1
Total 8 3 3 14

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Monaco is a Monégasque club playing in the French football league system.

References

  1. ^ "The FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking". FIFA. 22 December 2022. Retrieved 22 December 2022.
  2. ^ Elo rankings change compared to one year ago. "World Football Elo Ratings". eloratings.net. 18 December 2022. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  3. ^ . FIFA. Archived from the original on 3 June 2007. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  4. ^ . FIFA. Archived from the original on 2 June 2007. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  5. ^ "France & Belgium, rivals on top of the world". FIFA. 30 December 2018. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  6. ^ Kay, Oliver. "Messi, Mbappe and an uncomfortable rivalry defined by mutual respect". The Athletic. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  7. ^ Smith, Robert (13 July 2018). "World Cup 2018 : France, Croatia set to rehash rivalry in grand finale". Vanguard News. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  8. ^ Falconer, Diane (10 December 2022). "France fans savour 'brilliant' World Cup win over England". sports.yahoo.com. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  9. ^ Douglas, Steve (3 July 2014). "France, Germany renew rivalry at World Cup". www.gainesvilletimes.com. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  10. ^ (in Italian). fantagazzetta.com. 14 November 2012. Archived from the original on 24 February 2015. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
  11. ^ "Portugal renew rivalry". Eurosport. 3 July 2006. Retrieved 11 December 2022.
  12. ^ Okwonga, Musa (11 October 2021). "France's Win Over Spain Was a Prelude to an Epic Rivalry in the Making". The Ringer. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  13. ^ "Our history". uk.fff.fr. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  14. ^ "France v. Belgium 1904 Match Report". French Football Federation. Retrieved 4 June 2010.
  15. ^ "France v. Germany 1982 Match Report". French Football Federation. Retrieved 4 June 2010.
  16. ^ "The forgotten story of … 17 November 1993 | Rob Smyth". the Guardian. 15 February 2012. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
france, national, football, team, this, article, about, team, women, team, france, women, national, football, team, this, article, require, copy, editing, better, grammar, assist, editing, november, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, french, É. This article is about the men s team For the women s team see France women s national football team This article may require copy editing for better grammar You can assist by editing it November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The France national football team French Equipe de France de football represents France in men s international football matches It is governed by the French Football Federation FFF Federation francaise de football the governing body for football in France It is a member of UEFA in Europe and FIFA in global competitions The team s colors and imagery reference two national symbols the French red white blue tricolour and Gallic rooster coq gaulois The team is colloquially known as Les Bleus The Blues They play home matches at the Stade de France in Saint Denis and train at INF Clairefontaine in Clairefontaine en Yvelines FranceNickname s Les Bleus The Blues AssociationFederation Francaise de Football FFF ConfederationUEFA Europe Head coachDidier DeschampsCaptainHugo LlorisMost capsHugo Lloris 145 Top scorerOlivier Giroud 53 Home stadiumStade de FranceFIFA codeFRAFirst coloursSecond coloursFIFA rankingCurrent3 1 22 December 2022 1 Highest1 May 2001 May 2002 August September 2018 Lowest26 September 2010 Elo rankingCurrent3 1 18 December 2022 2 Highest1 1984 1985 1986 1998 1999 2000 2002 2003 2004 2006 2007 2018 Lowest40 March July 1930 First international Belgium 3 3 France Uccle Belgium 1 May 1904 Biggest win France 11 0 Greece Paris France 26 June 1919 Biggest defeat Denmark 17 1 France London England 22 October 1908 World CupAppearances16 first in 1930 Best resultChampions 1998 2018 European ChampionshipAppearances10 first in 1960 Best resultChampions 1984 2000 Nations League FinalsAppearances1 first in 2021 Best resultChampions 2021 CONMEBOL UEFA Cup of ChampionsAppearances1 first in 1985 Best resultChampions 1985 FIFA Confederations CupAppearances2 first in 2001 Best resultChampions 2001 2003 Medal record Men s footballFIFA World Cup1998 France Team2018 Russia Team2006 Germany Team2022 Qatar Team1958 Sweden Team1986 Mexico TeamUEFA European Championship1984 France Team2000 Belgium Netherlands Team2016 France Team1996 England TeamUEFA Nations League2021 Italy TeamFIFA Confederations Cup2001 South Korea Japan Team2003 France TeamOlympic Games1984 Los Angeles Team1900 Paris TeamWebsitefff frFounded in 1904 the team has won two FIFA World Cups two UEFA European Championships two FIFA Confederations Cups one CONMEBOL UEFA Cup of Champions and one UEFA Nations League title France was one of the four European teams that participated in the first World Cup in 1930 Twenty eight years later the team led by Raymond Kopa and Just Fontaine finished in third place at the 1958 World Cup France experienced much of its success in three different eras in the 1980s from the 1990s to early 2000s and during the late 2010s In 1984 under the leadership of the three time Ballon d Or winner Michel Platini France won Euro 1984 its first official title a CONMEBOL UEFA Cup 1985 and reached two World Cup semi finals 1982 and 1986 During the captaincy of Didier Deschamps with Zinedine Zidane on the pitch Les Bleus won the 1998 World Cup and Euro 2000 They also won the Confederations Cup in 2001 and 2003 Three years later France made it to the final of the 2006 World Cup losing 5 3 on penalties to Italy A decade later the team reached the final of Euro 2016 where they lost 1 0 to Portugal in extra time Two years after that France won the 2018 World Cup its second title in that competition After winning the 2021 Nations League they became the first European national team to have won every senior FIFA and UEFA competition 3 4 France has footballing rivalries with Belgium 5 Brazil 6 Croatia 7 England 8 Germany 9 Italy 10 Portugal 11 and Spain 12 Contents 1 History 2 Home stadium 3 Team image 3 1 Media coverage 3 1 1 Friendlies and qualifiers 3 1 2 Finals tournament 3 2 Kits and crest 3 2 1 Kit sponsorship 3 2 2 Kit deals 3 3 Nickname 4 Results and fixtures 4 1 2022 4 2 2023 5 Coaching staff 5 1 Coaching history 6 Players 6 1 Current squad 6 2 Recent call ups 6 3 Player of the Year 7 Player records 7 1 Most appearances 7 2 Most goals 8 Competitive record 8 1 FIFA World Cup 8 2 UEFA European Championship 8 3 UEFA Nations League 8 4 FIFA Confederations Cup 8 5 CONMEBOL UEFA Cup of Champions 9 Honours 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditMain article History of the France national football team USFSA France team or Club Francais at 1900 Summer Olympics The France national football team was created in 1904 around the time of FIFA s foundation 13 The team competed in its first official international match on 1 May 1904 against Belgium in Brussels ending in a 3 3 draw 14 The following year on 12 February 1905 France contested their first ever home match against Switzerland The match was played at the Parc des Princes in front of 500 supporters France won the match 1 0 with the only goal coming from Gaston Cypres Due to disagreements between FIFA and the Union des Societes Francaises de Sports Athletiques USFSA the country s sports union France struggled to establish an identity On 9 May 1908 the French Interfederal Committee CFI a rival organization to the USFSA ruled that FIFA would now be responsible for the club s appearances in forthcoming Olympic Games and not the USFSA In 1919 the CFI transformed themselves into the French Football Federation FFF In 1921 the USFSA finally merged with the FFF In July 1930 France appeared in the inaugural FIFA World Cup held in Uruguay In their first ever World Cup match France defeated Mexico 4 1 at the Estadio Pocitos in Montevideo Lucien Laurent became notable in the match as he scored not only France s first World Cup goal but the first goal in World Cup history Conversely France also became the first team to not score in a World Cup match after losing 1 0 to group stage opponents Argentina Another loss to Chile resulted in the team bowing out in the group stage The following year saw the first selection of a black player to the national team Raoul Diagne who was of Senegalese descent earned his first cap on 15 February in a 2 1 defeat to Czechoslovakia Diagne later played with the team at the 1938 World Cup alongside Larbi Benbarek who was one of the first players of North African origin to play for the national team At the 1934 World Cup France suffered elimination in the opening round losing 3 2 to Austria On the team s return to Paris they were greeted as heroes by a crowd of over 4 000 supporters France hosted the 1938 World Cup and reached the quarterfinals losing 3 1 to defending champions and eventual 1938 winners Italy France s first Golden Generation in the late 1950s comprised players such as Just Fontaine Raymond Kopa Jean Vincent Robert Jonquet Maryan Wisnieski Thadee Cisowski and Armand Penverne At the 1958 World Cup France reached the semi finals losing to Brazil In the third place match France defeated West Germany 6 3 with Fontaine recording four goals which brought his goal tally in the competition to 13 a World Cup record The record still stands today France hosted the inaugural UEFA European Football Championship in 1960 For the second straight international tournament the team reached the semi finals but were defeated 5 4 by Yugoslavia despite being up 4 2 heading into the 75th minute In the third place match France was defeated 2 0 by Czechoslovakia The 1960s and 70s saw France decline significantly playing under several managers and failing to qualify for numerous international tournaments On 25 April 1964 Henri Guerin was officially installed as the team s first manager Under Guerin France failed to qualify for the 1962 World Cup and the 1964 European Nations Cup The team returned to major international play with qualification for the 1966 World Cup but did not make it past the group stage phase of the tournament Guerin was fired following the World Cup He was replaced by Jose Arribas and Jean Snella who worked as caretaker managers in dual roles The two only lasted four matches and were replaced by former international Just Fontaine who in turn was only in charge for two matches Louis Dugauguez succeeded Fontaine and following his early struggles in qualification for the 1970 World Cup was fired and replaced by Georges Boulogne who could not get the team to the competition Boulogne was later fired following his failure to qualify for the 1974 World Cup and was replaced by the Romanian Ștefan Kovacs who became the only international manager to ever manage the national team Under the management of Kovacs France failed to qualify for UEFA Euro 1976 After two years in charge he was sacked and replaced with Michel Hidalgo Michel Platini captained France to victory at UEFA Euro 1984 Under Hidalgo France flourished mainly due to the accolades of great players like defenders Marius Tresor and Maxime Bossis striker Dominique Rocheteau and midfielder Michel Platini who alongside Jean Tigana Alain Giresse and Luis Fernandez formed the carre magique Magic Square which would haunt opposing defenses beginning at the 1982 World Cup where France reached the semi finals losing on penalties to rivals West Germany The semi final match up is considered one of the greatest matches in World Cup history and was marked by controversy 15 France finished fourth overall losing the third place playoff 3 2 to Poland France earned their first major international honor two years later winning Euro 1984 which they hosted Under the leadership of Platini who scored a tournament high nine goals France defeated Spain 2 0 in the final Platini and Bruno Bellone scored the goals Following the Euro triumph Hidalgo departed the team and was replaced by former international Henri Michel France subsequently won gold at the 1984 Summer Olympics football tournament and a year later defeated Uruguay 2 0 to win the Artemio Franchi Trophy an early precursor to the FIFA Confederations Cup Dominique Rocheteau and Jose Toure scored the goals In a span of a year France were holders of three of the four major international trophies At the 1986 World Cup France were among the favorites to win the competition For the second consecutive World Cup they reached the semi finals and faced West Germany Again they were defeated by Germany but achieved third place with a 4 2 victory over Belgium In 1988 the FFF opened the Clairefontaine National Football Institute Its opening ceremony was attended by then President of France Francois Mitterrand Five months after Clairefontaine s opening manager Henri Michel was fired and was replaced by Michel Platini who failed to get the team to the 1990 World Cup Platini did lead the team to Euro 1992 and despite going on a 19 match unbeaten streak prior to the competition suffered elimination in the group stage A week after the completion of the tournament Platini stepped down as manager and was replaced by his assistant Gerard Houllier Under Houllier France and its supporters experienced a major disappointment in failing to qualify for the 1994 World Cup With two matches to play qualification had been all but secured with matches remaining against last placed Israel and in contention Bulgaria However France was upset at home by Israel 3 2 after leading 2 1 late in the match and against Bulgaria conceded a 90th minute goal for a 2 1 defeat 16 The subsequent blame and public outcry led to the firing of Houllier and departure of several players from the national team fold Houllier s assistant Aime Jacquet was appointed as manager BarthezLeboeufDesaillyThuramLizarazuDeschampsKarembeuPetitZidaneDjorkaeffGuivarc hFrance starting line up against Brazil at the 1998 FIFA World Cup Final a match they won 3 0 Under Jacquet the national team achieved multiple successes The squad comprised some experienced players from the group that had failed to reach the 1994 FIFA World Cup as well as some talented younger players such as Zinedine Zidane The team reached the semi finals of Euro 1996 where they lost 6 5 on penalties to the Czech Republic The team s next major tournament was the 1998 World Cup which France hosted France went through the tournament undefeated and became the seventh nation to win the World Cup defeating Brazil 3 0 in the final at the Stade de France in Paris Jacquet stepped down after the country s World Cup triumph and was succeeded by assistant Roger Lemerre who guided them through Euro 2000 Led by FIFA World Player of the Year Zidane France defeated Italy 2 1 in the final David Trezeguet scored the golden goal in extra time The victory gave the team the distinction of holding both the World Cup and Euro titles a feat first achieved by West Germany in 1974 this was also the first time that a reigning World Cup winner went on to capture the Euro Following the result the France national team was accorded the number one spot in the FIFA World Rankings In the following year the team won the 2001 FIFA Confederations Cup Zinedine Zidane captaining France at the 2006 FIFA World Cup After this period of achievement France were much less successful in subsequent tournaments and failed to make it past the group stage at the 2002 World Cup One of the greatest shocks in World Cup history saw France defeated 1 0 by debutantes Senegal in the opening game of the tournament France became only the second nation to be eliminated in the first round as World Cup holders the first being Brazil in 1966 After the 2010 2014 and 2018 World Cups Italy Spain and Germany were also added to this list 17 After France finished bottom of the group Lemerre was dismissed and was replaced by Jacques Santini A full strength team started out strongly at Euro 2004 but they were upset in the quarter finals by the eventual winners Greece Santini resigned as coach and Raymond Domenech was picked as his replacement France struggled in the early qualifiers for the 2006 World Cup This prompted Domenech to persuade several past members out of international retirement to help the national team qualify which they accomplished following a convincing 4 0 win over Cyprus on the final day of qualifying In the 2006 World Cup final stages France finished undefeated in the group stage portion and advanced to the final defeating Spain Brazil and Portugal in the knockout matches France played Italy in the final The match finished 1 1 after extra time with Italy winning 5 3 on penalties to be crowned World Cup champions The match featured a notable incident during extra time that led to captain Zinedine Zidane being sent off The French team in front of fans in 2006 France started its qualifying round for Euro 2008 strong and qualified for the tournament despite two defeats to Scotland France bowed out during the group stage portion of the tournament after having been placed in the group of death which included Netherlands and Italy 18 19 Just like the team s previous World Cup qualifying campaign the 2010 campaign got off to a disappointing start with France suffering disastrous losses and earning uninspired victories France eventually finished second in the group and earned a spot in the UEFA play offs against the Republic of Ireland for a place in South Africa In the first leg France defeated the Irish 1 0 and in the second leg procured a 1 1 draw via controversial circumstances to qualify for the World Cup 20 In the 2010 World Cup final stages the team continued to perform under expectations and were eliminated in the group stage while the negative publicity the national team received during the competition led to further repercussions back in France Midway through the competition striker Nicolas Anelka was dismissed from the national team after reportedly having a dispute in which obscenities were passed with team manager Raymond Domenech during half time of the team s loss to Mexico 21 22 The resulting disagreement over Anelka s expulsion between the players the coaching staff and FFF officials resulted in the players boycotting training before their third game 23 24 25 In response to the training boycott Sports Minister Roselyne Bachelot lectured the players and reduced France s disgraced World Cup stars to tears with an emotional speech on the eve of their final group A match 26 France then lost their final game 2 1 to the hosts South Africa and failed to advance to the knockout stage The day after the team s elimination it was reported by numerous media outlets that then President of France Nicolas Sarkozy would meet with team captain Thierry Henry to discuss the issues associated with the team s meltdown at the World Cup at Henry s request 27 Following the completion of the World Cup tournament Federation President Jean Pierre Escalettes resigned from his position Domenech whose contract had expired was succeeded as head coach by former international Laurent Blanc On 23 July 2010 at the request of Blanc the FFF suspended all 23 players in the World Cup squad for the team s friendly match against Norway after the World Cup 28 On 6 August five players who were deemed to have played a major role in the training boycott were disciplined for their roles 29 30 After captaining France intermittently since 2010 goalkeeper Hugo Lloris has been the French captain permanently since February 2012 At Euro 2012 in Poland and Ukraine France reached the quarter finals where they were beaten by eventual champions Spain 31 32 Following the tournament coach Laurent Blanc resigned and was succeeded by Didier Deschamps who captained France to glory in the 1998 World Cup and Euro 2000 33 34 His team qualified for the 2014 World Cup by beating Ukraine in the playoffs and Deschamps then extended his contract until Euro 2016 35 Missing star midfielder Franck Ribery through injury 36 France lost to eventual champions Germany in the quarter finals courtesy of an early goal by Mats Hummels 37 Paul Pogba was awarded the Best Young Player award during the tournament 38 France automatically qualified as hosts for Euro 2016 39 Karim Benzema and Hatem Ben Arfa were not in the squad 40 41 France were drawn in Group A of the tournament alongside Romania Switzerland and Albania 42 France won their group with wins over Romania and Albania and a goalless draw against Switzerland and were poised to play the Republic of Ireland in the round of sixteen 43 Ireland took the lead after just two minutes through a controversially awarded penalty which was converted by Robbie Brady A brace from Antoine Griezmann however helped France to win the match 2 1 and qualify for the quarter finals where they beat a resilient Iceland 5 2 to set up a semi final clash against world champions and tournament co favourites Germany 44 45 46 France won the match 2 0 marking their first win over Germany at a major tournament since 1958 47 48 France however were beaten by Portugal 1 0 in the final courtesy of an extra time goal by Eder Griezmann was named the Player of the Tournament and was also awarded the Golden Boot in addition to being named in the Team of the Tournament alongside Dimitri Payet The defeat meant that France became the second nation to have lost the final on home soil after Portugal lost the final to Greece in 2004 49 50 51 52 53 LlorisVaraneUmtitiPavardHernandezPogbaKanteMbappeMatuidiGriezmannGiroudFrance starting line up against Croatia at the 2018 FIFA World Cup Final a match they won 4 2 In 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying France topped their group with 23 points winning 7 wins drawing 2 and losing once 54 although their two draws were against considerably weaker nations drawing 0 0 with Belarus in their opening match 55 and against Luxembourg failing to secure a win against the latter for the first time since 1914 nearly 103 years 56 Their only defeat of the qualifying phase was against Sweden losing 2 1 in the last few minutes following an error from goalkeeper Hugo Lloris 57 France secured qualification to the World Cup finals with a 2 1 win over Belarus after defeating the Netherlands 4 0 at home a few weeks earlier 58 They were drawn to play Australia Peru and Denmark in a group in which they were considered heavy favourites 59 60 Overall due to the strength and value of their squad France were tipped by many as one of the favourites for the title 61 62 63 France however had a somewhat disappointing performance in the group stage only managing a 2 1 win over Australia and a 1 0 win over Peru followed by a match against Denmark which finished in a 0 0 draw 64 65 66 67 France beat Argentina 4 3 in the round of sixteen and then Uruguay 2 0 to qualify for the semi final stage where they beat Belgium 1 0 courtesy of a goal from defender Samuel Umtiti 68 69 Belgium had defeated Japan in the second round coming back from 2 0 down to win 3 2 France adopted a tactical approach to counter the Belgian attack Les Bleus played a low block to not leave any space to the Belgians and relied mostly on counter attacking play this defensive approach proved successful but led to criticism from some Belgian players who felt they were better than France 70 On 15 July France beat Croatia in the final 4 2 to win the World Cup for the second time 71 Didier Deschamps became the third man to win the World Cup as a player and a coach and also became the second man to win the title as a captain and a coach 72 Kylian Mbappe was awarded the Best Young Player award and Antoine Griezmann was awarded the Bronze Ball and the Silver Boot for their performance during the tournament 73 Upon scoring in the final Mbappe became only the second teenager to score in a World Cup Final the first being Pele in 1958 Home stadium EditMain articles Stade de France Parc des Princes and INF Clairefontaine During France s early years the team s national stadium alternated between the Parc des Princes in Paris and the Stade Olympique Yves du Manoir in Colombes France also hosted matches at the Stade Pershing Stade de Paris and the Stade Buffalo but to a minimal degree As the years moved forward France began hosting matches outside the city of Paris at such venues as the Stade Marcel Saupin in Nantes the Stade Velodrome in Marseille the Stade de Gerland in Lyon and the Stade de la Meinau in Strasbourg Stade de France Following the renovation of the Parc des Princes in 1972 which gave the stadium the largest capacity in Paris France moved into the venue permanently The team still hosted friendly matches and minor FIFA World Cup and UEFA European Football Championship qualification matches at other venues Twice France have played home matches in a French overseas department in 2005 against Costa Rica in Fort de France Martinique and in 2010 against China in Saint Pierre Reunion Both matches were friendlies In 1998 the Stade de France was inaugurated as France s national stadium ahead of the 1998 World Cup Located in Saint Denis a Parisian suburb the stadium has an all seater capacity of 81 338 France s first match at the stadium was played on 28 January 1998 against Spain France won the match 1 0 with Zinedine Zidane scoring the goal Since that match France has used the stadium for almost every major home game including the 1998 World Cup final Prior to matches home or away the national team trains at the INF Clairefontaine academy in Clairefontaine en Yvelines Clairefontaine is the national association football centre and is among 12 elite academies throughout the country The centre was inaugurated in 1976 by former FFF president Fernand Sastre and opened in 1988 The center drew media spotlight following its usage as a base camp by the team that won the 1998 World Cup In the 20th and 23rd minute of an international friendly on 13 November 2015 against Germany three groups of terrorists attempted to detonate bomb vests at three entrances of Stade de France and two explosions occurred Play would continue until the 94th minute in order to keep the crowd from panicking Consequently the stadium was evacuated through the unaffected gates of the stadium away from the players benches Due to the blocked exits spectators who could not leave the stadium had to go down to the pitch and wait until it was safer Team image EditMedia coverage Edit The national team has a broadcasting agreement with TF1 Group who the Federal Council of the FFF agreed to extend its exclusive broadcasting agreement with the channel The new deal grants the channel exclusive broadcast rights for the matches of national team which include friendlies and international games for the next four seasons beginning in August 2010 and ending in June 2014 TF1 will also have extended rights notably on the Internet and may also broadcast images of the national team in its weekly program Telefoot 74 The FFF will receive 45 million a season a 10 million decrease from the 55 million they received from the previous agreement reached in 2006 75 After France won their second World Cup in 2018 M6 together with TF1 broadcast all international fixtures featuring France respectively until 2022 76 Friendlies and qualifiers Edit Television channel PeriodORTF 1954 1974Antenne 2 1975 1984TF1 1984 2022M6 2009 2022TMC friendly match only 2018 2022L Equipe UEFA Nations League match on rebroadcast 2018 2023Finals tournament Edit Television channel PeriodFIFA World CupORTF 1954 1958 1966TF1 1978 1986 1998 2022France Television 1978 1986 Antenne 2 1998UEFA European ChampionshipORTF 1960TF1 1984 1992 2021France Television 1984 1992 Antenne 2 1996 2004M6 2008 2021 Kits and crest Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to France national football team kits France team that played its first international v Belgium in 1904 wearing the white shirt with the rings emblem The France national team utilizes a three colour system composed of blue white and red The team s three colours originate from the national flag of France known as the tricolore Nevertheless the first France shirt as seen in their first official international match against Belgium in 1904 was white with the two interlinked rings emblem of USFSA the body that controlled sport in France by then 77 on the left 78 France normally wear blue shirts white shorts and red socks at home similar setup to Japan while when on the road the team utilizes an all white combination or wear red shirts blue shorts and blue socks with the former being the most current Between 1909 and 1914 France wore a white shirt with blue stripes white shorts and red socks In a 1978 World Cup match against Hungary in Mar del Plata both teams arrived at Estadio Jose Maria Minella with white kits so France played in green and white striped shirts borrowed from Club Atletico Kimberley 79 France s Zinedine Zidane number 10 home shirt as made by Adidas Beginning in 1966 France had its shirts made by Le Coq Sportif until 1971 In 1972 France reached an agreement with German sports apparel manufacturer Adidas to be the team s kit provider Over the next 38 years the two would maintain a healthy relationship with France winning Euro 1984 the 1998 World Cup and Euro 2000 while wearing Adidas famous tricolour three stripes During the 2006 World Cup France wore an all white change strip in all four of its knockout matches including the final 80 On 22 February 2008 the FFF announced that they were ending their partnership with Adidas and signing with Nike effective 1 January 2011 The deal was valued at 320 million over seven years 1 January 2011 9 July 2018 making France s blue shirt the most expensive sponsorship in the history of football 81 82 Nike made France merchandise on display for UEFA Euro 2016 The first France kit worn in a major tournament produced by Nike was the Euro 2012 strip which was all dark blue and used gold as an accent colour 83 In February 2013 Nike revealed an all baby blue change strip In advance of France s hosting of Euro 2016 Nike unveiled a new unconventional kit set blue shirts and shorts with red socks at home white shirts and shorts and with blue socks away The away shirt as worn in pre Euro friendlies and released to the public also featured one blue sleeve and one red sleeve in reference to the tricolore However due to UEFA regulations France was forced to wear a modified version with the sleeve colours almost desaturated in their Euro 2016 group stage game against Switzerland which continued to be worn during 2018 World Cup qualifying 84 Kit sponsorship Edit Kit supplier Period Notes Allen Sport 1938 1966 85 86 Le Coq Sportif 1966 1971 Adidas 1972 2010 Nike 2011 presentKit deals Edit Kit supplier Period Contractannouncement Contractduration Value Notes Nike 2011 present 2008 02 22 2011 2018 7 years Total 340 8 million 42 6 million per year 87 2016 12 08 2018 2026 8 years Total 450 million 50 million per year 88 Nickname Edit France is often referred to by the media and supporters as Les Bleus The Blues which is the nickname associated with all of France s international sporting teams due to the blue shirts each team incorporates The team is also referred to as Les Tricolores or L Equipe Tricolore The Tri color Team due to the team s utilization of the country s national colors blue white and red During the 1980s France earned the nickname the Brazilians of Europe mainly due to the accolades of the carre magique Magic Square who were anchored by Michel Platini Led by coach Michel Hidalgo France exhibited an inspiring elegant skillful and technically advanced offensive style of football which was strikingly similar to their South American counterparts 89 Despite being offence oriented France s defence is considered one of the best in world for their aggression and technicality Their defence played a vital role in winning the 2018 FIFA World Cup and had earned them the title of Mur de fer The Iron Wall Results and fixtures EditMain article France national football team results Further information France national football team results 2020 present Further information 2021 22 in French football and 2022 23 in French football The following is a list of match results from the previous 12 months as well as any future matches that have been scheduled 2022 Edit France v Ivory Coast 25 March 2022 FriendlyFrance 2 1 Ivory CoastMarseille FranceCET UTC 1 Giroud 22 Tchouameni 90 3 Report Pepe 19 Stadium Stade Velodrome Referee Vitor Ferreira Portugal France v South Africa 29 March 2022 FriendlyFrance 5 0 South AfricaVilleneuve d Ascq FranceCEST UTC 2 Mbappe 23 76 pen Giroud 34 Ben Yedder 81 Guendouzi 90 2 Report Mudau 84 Stadium Stade Pierre Mauroy Referee Sandro Scharer Switzerland France v Denmark 3 June 2022 Nations LeagueFrance 1 2 DenmarkSaint Denis France20 45 CEST UTC 2 Benzema 51 Report Cornelius 68 88 Stadium Stade de France Attendance 75 833Referee Felix Zwayer Germany Croatia v France 6 June 2022 Nations LeagueCroatia 1 1 FranceSplit Croatia20 45 CEST UTC 2 Kramaric 83 pen Report Rabiot 52 Stadium Stadion Poljud Attendance 30 000Referee Marco Guida Italy Austria v France 10 June 2022 Nations LeagueAustria 1 1 FranceVienna Austria20 45 CEST UTC 2 Weimann 37 Report Mbappe 83 Stadium Ernst Happel Stadion Attendance 44 800Referee Anastasios Sidiropoulos Greece France v Croatia 13 June 2022 Nations LeagueFrance 0 1 CroatiaSaint Denis France20 45 CEST UTC 2 Report Modric 5 pen Stadium Stade de France Attendance 77 410Referee Orel Grinfeld Israel France v Austria 22 September 2022 Nations LeagueFrance 2 0 AustriaSaint Denis France20 45 CEST UTC 2 Mbappe 56 Giroud 65 Report Stadium Stade de France Attendance 70 188Referee Andreas Ekberg Sweden Denmark v France 25 September 2022 Nations LeagueDenmark 2 0 FranceCopenhagen Denmark20 45 CEST UTC 2 Dolberg 34 Skov Olsen 39 Report Stadium Parken Stadium Attendance 36 064Referee Istvan Kovacs Romania France v Australia 22 November 2022 2022 FIFA World CupFrance 4 1 AustraliaAl Wakrah Qatar22 00 AST UTC 3 Rabiot 27 Giroud 32 71 Mbappe 68 Report Goodwin 9 Stadium Al Janoub Stadium Attendance 40 875Referee Victor Gomes South Africa France v Denmark 26 November 2022 2022 FIFA World CupFrance 2 1 DenmarkDoha Qatar19 00 AST UTC 3 Mbappe 61 86 Report A Christensen 68 Stadium Stadium 974 Attendance 42 860Referee Szymon Marciniak Poland Tunisia v France 30 November 2022 2022 FIFA World CupTunisia 1 0 FranceAl Rayyan Qatar18 00 AST UTC 3 Khazri 58 Report Stadium Education City Stadium Attendance 43 627Referee Matthew Conger New Zealand France v Poland 4 December 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup R16France 3 1 PolandDoha Qatar18 00 AST UTC 3 Giroud 44 Mbappe 74 90 1 Report Lewandowski 90 9 pen Stadium Al Thumama Stadium Attendance 40 989Referee Jesus Valenzuela Venezuela England v France 10 December 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup QFEngland 1 2 FranceAl Khor Qatar22 00 AST UTC 3 Kane 54 pen Report Tchouameni 17 Giroud 78 Stadium Al Bayt Stadium Attendance 68 895Referee Wilton Sampaio Brazil France v Morocco 14 December 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup SFFrance 2 0 MoroccoAl Khor Qatar22 00 AST UTC 3 T Hernandez 5 Kolo Muani 79 Report Stadium Al Bayt Stadium Attendance 68 294Referee Cesar Arturo Ramos Mexico Argentina v France 18 December 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup FinalArgentina 3 3 a e t 4 2 p FranceLusail Qatar18 00 AST UTC 3 Messi 23 pen 109 Di Maria 36 Report Mbappe 80 pen 81 118 pen Stadium Lusail Iconic Stadium Attendance 88 966Referee Szymon Marciniak Poland PenaltiesMessi Dybala Paredes Montiel Mbappe Coman Tchouameni Kolo Muani 2023 Edit France v Netherlands 24 March 2023 2023 03 24 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group BFrance v NetherlandsSaint Denis France20 45 Report Stadium Stade de France Republic of Ireland v France 27 March 2023 2023 03 27 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group BRepublic of Ireland v FranceDublin Republic of Ireland20 45 19 45 UTC 1 Report Stadium Aviva Stadium Gibraltar v France 16 June 2023 2023 06 16 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group BGibraltar v FranceFaro Loule Portugal20 45 Report Stadium Estadio Algarve France v Greece 19 June 2023 2023 06 19 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group BFrance v Greece20 45 Report France v Republic of Ireland 7 September 2023 2023 09 07 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group BFrance v Republic of Ireland20 45 Report France v TBC 10 September 2023 FriendlyFrance v TBC Netherlands v France 13 October 2023 2023 10 13 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group BNetherlands v France20 45 Report France v TBC 16 October 2023 FriendlyFrance v TBC France v Gibraltar 18 November 2023 2023 11 18 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group BFrance v Gibraltar20 45 Report Greece v France 21 November 2023 2023 11 21 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group BGreece v France20 45 21 45 UTC 2 ReportCoaching staff Edit Didier Deschamps the current coach of the France national football team As of August 2019 90 Position NameHead coach Didier DeschampsAssistant coach Guy StephanGoalkeeper coach Franck RaviotTrainer Cyril MoineDoctor Franck Le GallVideo analysts Thierry Marszalek Eric DubrayOsteopath Jean Yves VandewallePhysiotherapists Christophe Geoffroy Denis Morcel Alexandre Germain Guillaume VassoutTeam Manager Philippe BrocherieuxChef Xavier RousseauSecurity officer Mohamed SanhadjiSteward Bachir NeharMedia officer Raphael RaymondCoaching history Edit Main article France national football team manager As of 18 December 2022 Managers in italics were hired as caretakersManager France career Pld W D L Win Henri Guerin 1964 1966 15 5 4 6 0 33 3 Jose Arribas Jean Snella 1966 4 2 0 2 0 50 0 Just Fontaine 1967 2 0 0 2 00 0 0 Louis Dugauguez 1967 1968 9 2 3 4 0 22 2 Georges Boulogne 1969 1973 31 15 5 11 0 48 4 Ștefan Kovacs 1973 1975 15 6 4 5 0 40 0 Michel Hidalgo 1976 1984 75 41 16 18 0 54 7 Henri Michel 1984 1988 36 16 12 8 0 44 4 Michel Platini 1988 1992 29 16 8 5 0 55 2 Gerard Houllier 1992 1993 12 7 1 4 0 58 3 Aime Jacquet 1993 1998 53 34 16 3 0 64 2 Roger Lemerre 1998 2002 53 34 11 8 0 64 2 Jacques Santini 2002 2004 28 22 4 2 0 78 6 Raymond Domenech 2004 2010 79 41 24 14 0 51 9 Laurent Blanc 2010 2012 27 16 7 4 0 59 3 Didier Deschamps 2012 present 139 89 28 22 0 64 0Players EditFor all past and present players who have appeared for the national team see List of France international footballers See also List of France national football team captains Current squad Edit On 9 November 2022 Didier Deschamps named 25 players in the squad for the 2022 FIFA World Cup 91 On 14 November Presnel Kimpembe withdrew from the tournament with an injury and was replaced by Axel Disasi in addition Marcus Thuram also received a call up raising the squad to 26 players 92 93 Christopher Nkunku withdrew injured on 15 November and was replaced by Randal Kolo Muani 94 95 Karim Benzema withdrew injured on 19 November however was not excluded from squad list 96 Caps and goals as of 18 December 2022 after the match against Argentina No Pos Player Date of birth age Caps Goals Club1 1 GK Hugo Lloris captain 1986 12 26 26 December 1986 age 36 145 0 Tottenham Hotspur16 1 GK Steve Mandanda 1985 03 28 28 March 1985 age 37 35 0 Rennes23 1 GK Alphonse Areola 1993 02 27 27 February 1993 age 29 5 0 West Ham United2 2 DF Benjamin Pavard 1996 03 28 28 March 1996 age 26 47 2 Bayern Munich3 2 DF Axel Disasi 1998 03 11 11 March 1998 age 24 3 0 Monaco a 4 2 DF Raphael Varane 1993 04 25 25 April 1993 age 29 93 5 Manchester United5 2 DF Jules Kounde 1998 11 12 12 November 1998 age 24 18 0 Barcelona17 2 DF William Saliba 2001 03 24 24 March 2001 age 21 8 0 Arsenal18 2 DF Dayot Upamecano 1998 10 27 27 October 1998 age 24 12 1 Bayern Munich21 2 DF Lucas Hernandez 1996 02 14 14 February 1996 age 26 33 0 Bayern Munich22 2 DF Theo Hernandez 1997 10 06 6 October 1997 age 25 13 2 Milan24 2 DF Ibrahima Konate 1999 05 25 25 May 1999 age 23 6 0 Liverpool6 3 MF Matteo Guendouzi 1999 04 14 14 April 1999 age 23 7 1 Marseille8 3 MF Aurelien Tchouameni 2000 01 27 27 January 2000 age 22 21 2 Real Madrid13 3 MF Youssouf Fofana 1999 01 10 10 January 1999 age 23 7 0 Monaco14 3 MF Adrien Rabiot 1995 04 03 3 April 1995 age 27 35 3 Juventus15 3 MF Jordan Veretout 1993 03 01 1 March 1993 age 29 6 0 Marseille25 3 MF Eduardo Camavinga 2002 11 10 10 November 2002 age 20 6 1 Real Madrid7 4 FW Antoine Griezmann 1991 03 21 21 March 1991 age 31 117 42 Atletico Madrid9 4 FW Olivier Giroud 1986 09 30 30 September 1986 age 36 120 53 Milan10 4 FW Kylian Mbappe 1998 12 20 20 December 1998 age 24 66 36 Paris Saint Germain11 4 FW Ousmane Dembele 1997 05 15 15 May 1997 age 25 35 4 Barcelona12 4 FW Randal Kolo Muani 1998 12 05 5 December 1998 age 24 5 1 Eintracht Frankfurt20 4 FW Kingsley Coman 1996 06 13 13 June 1996 age 26 46 5 Bayern Munich26 4 FW Marcus Thuram 1997 08 06 6 August 1997 age 25 9 0 Borussia MonchengladbachRecent call ups Edit The following players have been called up within the past twelve months Pos Player Date of birth age Caps Goals Club Latest call upGK Alban Lafont 1999 01 23 23 January 1999 age 23 0 0 Nantes v Denmark 25 September 2022GK Mike Maignan 1995 07 03 3 July 1995 age 27 5 0 Milan v Denmark 25 September 2022 INJDF Presnel Kimpembe 1995 08 13 13 August 1995 age 27 28 0 Paris Saint Germain 2022 FIFA World Cup INJDF Ferland Mendy 1995 06 08 8 June 1995 age 27 9 0 Real Madrid v Denmark 25 September 2022DF Jonathan Clauss 1992 09 25 25 September 1992 age 30 6 0 Marseille v Denmark 25 September 2022DF Benoit Badiashile 2001 03 26 26 March 2001 age 21 2 0 Chelsea v Denmark 25 September 2022DF Adrien Truffert 2001 01 20 20 January 2001 age 21 1 0 Rennes v Denmark 25 September 2022DF Lucas Digne 1993 07 20 20 July 1993 age 29 46 0 Aston Villa v Austria 22 September 2022 INJMF Boubacar Kamara 1999 11 23 23 November 1999 age 23 3 0 Aston Villa v Austria 22 September 2022 INJMF N Golo Kante 1991 03 29 29 March 1991 age 31 53 2 Chelsea v Croatia 13 June 2022 INJMF Paul Pogba 1993 03 15 15 March 1993 age 29 91 11 Juventus v South Africa 29 March 2022FW Karim Benzema 1987 12 19 19 December 1987 age 35 97 37 Real Madrid 2022 FIFA World Cup RETFW Christopher Nkunku 1997 11 14 14 November 1997 age 25 8 0 RB Leipzig 2022 FIFA World Cup INJFW Wissam Ben Yedder 1990 08 12 12 August 1990 age 32 19 3 Monaco a v Croatia 13 June 2022FW Moussa Diaby 1999 07 07 7 July 1999 age 23 8 0 Bayer Leverkusen v Croatia 13 June 2022INJ Withdrew due to injuryPRE Preliminary squadRET Retired from the national teamSUS Serving suspensionPlayer of the Year Edit Further information French Player of the YearPlayer records EditMain articles List of France international footballers and France national football team records and statistics See also List of leading goalscorers for the France national football team and List of France national football team captains As of 18 December 2022 97 Players in bold are still active with France Most appearances Edit Hugo Lloris is France s most capped player with 145 caps Rank Player Caps Goals Career1 Hugo Lloris 145 0 2008 present2 Lilian Thuram 142 2 1994 20083 Thierry Henry 123 51 1997 20104 Olivier Giroud 120 53 2011 present5 Antoine Griezmann 117 42 2014 present6 Marcel Desailly 116 3 1993 20047 Zinedine Zidane 108 31 1994 20068 Patrick Vieira 107 6 1997 20099 Didier Deschamps 103 4 1989 200010 Karim Benzema 97 37 2007 2022Laurent Blanc 16 1989 2000Bixente Lizarazu 2 1992 2004Most goals Edit Olivier Giroud is France s top goalscorer with 53 goals Rank Player Goals Caps Average Career1 Olivier Giroud list 53 120 0 44 2011 present2 Thierry Henry list 51 123 0 41 1997 20103 Antoine Griezmann 42 117 0 36 2014 present4 Michel Platini 41 72 0 57 1976 19875 Karim Benzema 37 97 0 38 2007 20226 Kylian Mbappe 36 66 0 55 2017 present7 David Trezeguet 34 71 0 48 1998 20088 Zinedine Zidane 31 108 0 29 1994 20069 Just Fontaine 30 21 1 43 1953 1960Jean Pierre Papin 54 0 56 1986 1995Competitive record EditMain article France national football team all time record For single match results of the national team see French football single season articles and the team s results page Champions Runners up Third place Tournament played on home soil FIFA World Cup Edit Main article France at the FIFA World Cup France was one of the four European teams that participated at the inaugural World Cup in 1930 and have appeared in 15 FIFA World Cups tied for sixth best The national team is one of eight national teams to have won at least one FIFA World Cup title The France team won their first World Cup title in 1998 The tournament was played on home soil and France defeated Brazil 3 0 in the final match In 2006 France finished as runners up losing 5 3 on penalties to Italy The team has also finished in third place on two occasions in 1958 and 1986 and in fourth place once in 1982 The team s worst results in the competition were first round eliminations in 2002 and 2010 In 2002 the team suffered an unexpected loss to Senegal and departed the tournament without scoring a goal while in 2010 a French team torn apart by conflict between the players and staff lost two of three matches and drew the other 98 99 In 2014 France advanced to the quarterfinal before losing 1 0 to the eventual champion Germany In 2018 France defeated Croatia 4 2 in the final match and won the World Cup for the second time 100 In 2022 France finished runners up to Argentina losing 4 2 on penalties FIFA World Cup finals record Qualification recordYear Round Position Pld W D L GF GA Squad Pld W D L GF GA Campaign 1930 Group stage 7th 3 1 0 2 4 3 Squad Qualified as invitees 1934 Round of 16 9th 1 0 0 1 2 3 Squad 1 1 0 0 6 1 1934 1938 Quarter finals 6th 2 1 0 1 4 4 Squad Qualified as hosts 1938 1950 Originally did not qualify then invited later withdrew 3 0 2 1 4 5 1950 1954 Group stage 11th 2 1 0 1 3 3 Squad 4 4 0 0 20 4 1954 1958 Third place 3rd 6 4 0 2 23 15 Squad 4 3 1 0 19 4 1958 1962 Did not qualify 5 3 0 2 10 4 1962 1966 Group stage 13th 3 0 1 2 2 5 Squad 6 5 0 1 9 2 1966 1970 Did not qualify 4 2 0 2 6 4 1970 1974 4 1 1 2 3 5 1974 1978 Group stage 12th 3 1 0 2 5 5 Squad 4 2 1 1 7 4 1978 1982 Fourth place 4th 7 3 2 2 16 12 Squad 8 5 0 3 20 8 1982 1986 Third place 3rd 7 4 2 1 12 6 Squad 8 5 1 2 15 4 1986 1990 Did not qualify 8 3 3 2 10 7 1990 1994 10 6 1 3 17 10 1994 1998 Champions 1st 7 6 1 0 15 2 Squad Qualified as hosts 1998 2002 Group stage 28th 3 0 1 2 0 3 Squad Qualified as defending champions 2002 2006 Runners up 2nd 7 4 3 0 9 3 Squad 10 5 5 0 14 2 2006 2010 Group stage 29th 3 0 1 2 1 4 Squad 12 7 4 1 20 10 2010 2014 Quarter finals 7th 5 3 1 1 10 3 Squad 10 6 2 2 18 8 2014 2018 Champions 1st 7 6 1 0 16 6 Squad 10 7 2 1 18 6 2018 2022 Runners up 2nd 7 5 1 1 16 8 Squad 8 5 3 0 18 3 2022Total 2 titles 16 22 73 39 14 20 136 85 N A 119 70 26 23 234 91 Total Knockout matches decided via penalty shoot out are considered a draw Red border indicates tournament was held on home soil UEFA European Championship Edit Main article France at the UEFA European Championship France is one of the most successful nations at the UEFA European Championship having won two titles in 1984 and 2000 The team is just below Spain and Germany who have won three titles each France hosted the inaugural competition in 1960 and have appeared in nine UEFA European Championship tournaments tied for fourth best The team won their first title on home soil in 1984 and were led by Ballon d Or winner Michel Platini In 2000 the team led by FIFA World Player of the Year Zinedine Zidane won its second title in Belgium and the Netherlands The team s worst result in the competition was a first round elimination in 1992 and 2008 UEFA European Championship record Qualifying recordYear Round Position Pld W D L GF GA Squad Pld W D L GF GA 1960 Fourth place 4th 2 0 0 2 4 7 Squad 4 3 1 0 17 6 1960 1964 Did not qualify 6 2 1 3 11 10 1964 1968 8 4 2 2 16 12 1968 1972 6 3 1 2 10 8 1972 1976 6 1 3 2 7 6 1976 1980 6 4 1 1 13 7 1980 1984 Champions 1st 5 5 0 0 14 4 Squad Qualified as hosts 1984 1988 Did not qualify 8 1 4 3 4 7 1988 1992 Group stage 6th 3 0 2 1 2 3 Squad 8 8 0 0 20 6 1992 1996 Semi finals Joint 3rd 5 2 3 0 5 2 Squad 10 5 5 0 22 2 1996 2000 Champions 1st 6 5 0 1 13 7 Squad 10 6 3 1 17 10 2000 2004 Quarter finals 6th 4 2 1 1 7 5 Squad 8 8 0 0 29 2 2004 2008 Group stage 15th 3 0 1 2 1 6 Squad 12 8 2 2 25 5 2008 2012 Quarter finals 8th 4 1 1 2 3 5 Squad 10 6 3 1 15 4 2012 2016 Runners up 2nd 7 5 1 1 13 5 Squad Qualified as hosts 2016 2020 Round of 16 11th 4 1 3 0 7 6 Squad 10 8 1 1 25 6 2020 2024 To be determined To be determined 2024Total 2 titles 10 16 43 21 12 10 69 50 112 67 27 18 231 91 Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks UEFA Nations League Edit Main article France in the UEFA Nations League UEFA Nations League recordLeague phase FinalsSeason LG GP Pos Pld W D L GF GA P R RK Year Pos Pld W D L GF GA Squad2018 19 A 1 2nd 4 2 1 1 4 4 6th 2019 Did not qualify2020 21 A 3 1st 6 5 1 0 12 5 1st 2021 1st 2 2 0 0 5 3 Squad2022 23 A 1 3rd 6 1 2 3 5 7 12th 2023 Did not qualify2024 25 A To be determined 2025 To be determinedTotal 16 8 4 4 21 16 12th Total 2 2 0 0 5 3 Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks Group stage played home and away Flag shown represents host nation for the finals stage FIFA Confederations Cup Edit Main article France at the FIFA Confederations Cup France have appeared in two of the eight FIFA Confederations Cups contested and won the competition on both appearances The team s two titles place in second place only trailing Brazil who have won four France won their first Confederations Cup in 2001 having appeared in the competition as a result of winning the FIFA World Cup in 1998 The team defeated Japan 1 0 in the final match In the following Confederations Cup in 2003 France appearing in the competition as the host country won the competition beating Cameroon 1 0 after extra time FIFA Confederations Cup recordYear Round Position Pld W D L GF GA Squad 1992 Did not qualify 1995 1997 1999 2001 Champions 1st 5 4 0 1 12 2 Squad 2003 Champions 1st 5 5 0 0 12 3 Squad 2005 Did not qualify 2009 2013 2017Total 2 titles 2 10 10 9 0 1 24 5 CONMEBOL UEFA Cup of Champions Edit CONMEBOL UEFA Cup of Champions recordYear Round Position Pld W D L GF GA 1985 Champions 1st 1 1 0 0 2 0 1993 Did not qualify 2022Total 1 title 1 3 1 1 0 0 2 0Honours Edit France celebrating their victory of the 2018 FIFA World Cup This is a list of honours for the senior France national teamFIFA World Cup Champions 2 1998 2018 Runners up 2006 2022 Third place 1958 1986 Fourth place 1982UEFA European Championship Champions 2 1984 2000 Runners up 2016 Third place 1996 Fourth place 1960UEFA Nations League Champions 1 2021FIFA Confederations Cup Champions 2 2001 2003CONMEBOL UEFA Cup of Champions Champions 1 1985Competition TotalFIFA World Cup 2 2 2 6UEFA European Championship 2 1 1 4FIFA Confederations Cup 2 0 0 2CONMEBOL UEFA Cup of Champions 1 0 0 1UEFA Nations League 1 0 0 1Total 8 3 3 14See also Edit Association football portal France portalFrance women s national football team France Olympic football team France national under 21 football team France national youth football team French Guiana national football team Guadeloupe national football team Martinique national football team New Caledonia national football team Reunion national football team Saint Martin national football team Tahiti national football team Ligue 1 Football in France Sport in FranceNotes Edit a b Monaco is a Monegasque club playing in the French football league system References Edit The FIFA Coca Cola World Ranking FIFA 22 December 2022 Retrieved 22 December 2022 Elo rankings change compared to one year ago World Football Elo Ratings eloratings net 18 December 2022 Retrieved 18 December 2022 France on FIFA Archived from the original on 3 June 2007 Retrieved 7 June 2012 Tournaments FIFA Archived from the original on 2 June 2007 Retrieved 7 June 2012 France amp Belgium rivals on top of the world FIFA 30 December 2018 Retrieved 18 December 2022 Kay Oliver Messi Mbappe and an uncomfortable rivalry defined by mutual respect The Athletic Retrieved 18 December 2022 Smith Robert 13 July 2018 World Cup 2018 France Croatia set to rehash rivalry in grand finale Vanguard News Retrieved 14 December 2022 Falconer Diane 10 December 2022 France fans savour brilliant World Cup win over England sports yahoo com Retrieved 18 December 2022 Douglas Steve 3 July 2014 France Germany renew rivalry at World Cup www gainesvilletimes com Retrieved 18 December 2022 Storia recente di Italia Francia in Italian fantagazzetta com 14 November 2012 Archived from the original on 24 February 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2018 Portugal renew rivalry Eurosport 3 July 2006 Retrieved 11 December 2022 Okwonga Musa 11 October 2021 France s Win Over Spain Was a Prelude to an Epic Rivalry in the Making The Ringer Retrieved 18 December 2022 Our history uk fff fr Retrieved 18 December 2022 France v Belgium 1904 Match Report French Football Federation Retrieved 4 June 2010 France v Germany 1982 Match Report French Football Federation Retrieved 4 June 2010 The forgotten story of 17 November 1993 Rob Smyth the Guardian 15 February 2012 Retrieved 2 January 2023 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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