Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
2026 FIFA World Cup
5JUN

Deschamps says Saliba will play in US

2 min read
08:45UTC

Didier Deschamps said William Saliba 'will play' at the World Cup, reversing earlier reports labelling him very doubtful and confirming any back surgery will wait until after the tournament.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Saliba's World Cup place is confirmed; Deschamps has reversed the doubt and deferred surgery.

France manager Didier Deschamps said centre-back William Saliba "will play" at the World Cup, deferring any surgery on his back injury until after the tournament 1. The statement reverses ESPN sources who days earlier had called Saliba "very doubtful" after he aggravated the injury in the UEFA Champions League final.

The reversal settles France's most serious defensive question. Saliba is the squad's first-choice centre-back, and a deferred surgery means he plays managed rather than missing the tournament. Carrying an injury he will operate on later is a calculated risk on a player Deschamps has built the defence around, taken six days before France's opener.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

William Saliba is France's first-choice central defender, playing for Arsenal in England. He hurt his back playing in the Champions League final, and reports said he was 'very doubtful' for the World Cup. His coach Didier Deschamps (who manages the French national team) said on 5 June that Saliba 'will play' and that any surgery to fix the injury permanently will happen after the tournament. This matters because Saliba was France's best defender last season and losing him would have left a significant gap in France's back line. His confirmation removes the biggest fitness doubt in France's squad.

First Reported In

Update #14 · 6 Days to Go: Iran flies on a visa it doesn't have

ESPN· 5 Jun 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Deschamps says Saliba will play in US
France's first-choice centre-back partnership is intact, removing the squad's most serious defensive fitness uncertainty six days before kickoff.
Different Perspectives
France (FFF)
France (FFF)
Manager Didier Deschamps confirmed William Saliba will play, reversing the 'very doubtful' briefing from earlier in the week and deferring any surgery until after the tournament. France recovers its first-choice central defender for the group stage at a point when rivals were adjusting their tactical assessments.
Canada Soccer
Canada Soccer
Canada must submit its Flores replacement to FIFA before the 11 June 3pm ET deadline; Austin FC's Jayden Nelson is the favoured choice after Flores ruptured his ACL. Canada's Toronto opening ceremony on 12 June will feature Palestinian singer Elyanna, a booking that sets a political tone for the co-host's public face at the tournament.
Mexico (co-host)
Mexico (co-host)
Mexico certified Iranian visas and confirmed the Tijuana base camp on 3 June, acting as operational host for a team the northern co-host has not cleared. Guadalajara's Estadio Banorte still has no FIFA clearance after concrete fell from seats in Liga MX matches.
FIFA
FIFA
FIFA's Ethics Committee has taken no action on the Infantino complaint in six months, and FIFA has answered neither the NY/NJ subpoena nor the EU Article 102 filing. It approved Iran's Tijuana base camp but cannot issue a US visa; Infantino's April guarantee that Iran 'will be at the World Cup' was a commitment against authority he does not hold.
Norwegian Football Federation
Norwegian Football Federation
NFF president Lise Klaveness submitted a letter of support for FairSquare's Article 15 complaint before 2 June, writing 'we are sending this letter alone' in a deliberate signal that the move was unilateral rather than coordinated. Norway's backing gives other federations a template for post-tournament solidarity without requiring them to act before kickoff.
US State Department
US State Department
Rubio restated on 3 June that IRGC-linked individuals will not embed in the delegation; waiver authority sits with the Secretary himself, not consulates, which is why Taremi's 2010-2012 service can hold the whole squad without a formal denial. The same government withholding entry from Iran is spending $1.47bn to protect the tournament.