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2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

France meet Spain in first semi-final

2 min read
10:33UTC

France beat Morocco 2-0 to reach the last four; Spain followed hours later, setting a Tuesday semi-final between the 2010 and 2018 world champions in Arlington.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

France play Spain in the World Cup's first semi-final on Tuesday, the 2010 champions against the 2018 winners.

France will play Spain in the World Cup's first semi-final on Tuesday 14 July at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, near Dallas. France booked their place by beating Morocco 2-0 in Boston , a result that repeated their 2022 semi-final win over the same opponent, having earlier seen off Paraguay in the previous round . Spain came through against Belgium hours earlier to complete the tie.

The fixture puts the 2010 world champions against the 2018 winners, two of Europe's most decorated national sides, for a place in the final. France, back-to-back finalists in 2018 and 2022, carry the tournament's most complete attack. Spain have advanced without playing near their best, and the contrast in form is the tie's opening question.

A France win would return them to a final they last contested in 2022; for Spain, victory would end a wait for a final that stretches back to their sole title. The winner faces either the England-Norway or Argentina-Switzerland victor, with the second semi-final set for 15 July in Atlanta. Switzerland completed the quarter-final field on penalties .

Deep Analysis

In plain English

France and Spain are two of the strongest teams left in this year's World Cup. France booked their place in the last four by beating Morocco 2-0 on 9 July, a day before Spain's win over Belgium. The two sides will now play each other on Tuesday 14 July at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, a suburb of Dallas, with the winner going through to the World Cup final. France's forward Kylian Mbappé, one of the tournament's top scorers, picked up a minor knock to his ankle in the win over Morocco but says he is fit to play.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

France and Spain meeting in the semi-final rather than a hypothetical final is a structural consequence of the tournament's bracket draw. Both were placed in the same half of the knockout bracket when the group stage concluded.

That draw position guaranteed whichever side went furthest would face the other before either could reach the final itself.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A recurrence or worsening of Mbappé's ankle knock before 14 July would be the single biggest threat to France's semi-final chances, though both player and manager have played it down.

  • Meaning

    Spain's route to the final now runs through a France side unbeaten in this cycle's knockout rounds, setting up a contrast between Spain's narrow, late-goal wins and France's more comfortable progression.

First Reported In

Update #39 · Merino sends Spain to World Cup semi

ESPN· 11 Jul 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
FIFA
FIFA
FIFA had not opened disciplinary proceedings over the Malvinas banner as of 16 July, continuing a pattern set by its fast reversal of Folarin Balogun's ban while South Africa's appeal over Themba Zwane's ban remained outstanding. The nearest tariff, a CHF 30,000 fine from 2014, remains only a precedent, not a decision.
France
France
France's tournament ended at the semi-final stage for the first time since 2010, beaten 2-0 by Spain in Arlington, and Kylian Mbappe's Golden Boot chances are reduced to Saturday's third-place game alone. The 2022 runners-up now play for bronze rather than a second straight final.
Spain
Spain
Spain reached their first World Cup final since winning the trophy in 2010, beating France 2-0 through goals from Mikel Oyarzabal and Pedro Porro. Sixteen years after their only title, this squad returns to the same stage without the sovereignty politics attached to the other semi-final.
Downing Street (UK Government)
Downing Street (UK Government)
Downing Street said on the record that the Falkland Islanders 'are British with the right to determine their own future,' answering Argentina's vice-president and foreign minister. London rests its case on the islanders' 2013 referendum, not on the fixture, and lodged no formal protest despite the semi-final framing.
Argentina
Argentina
Vice-President Victoria Villarruel called England 'the usurping pirates' before kickoff; midfielder Leandro Paredes said after the 2-1 win that the Falklands 'will always be Argentine'. Argentina's 1994 constitution commits every office-holder to press the Malvinas claim, so a World Cup semi-final was never going to pass without it.
Switzerland
Switzerland
Switzerland reached their first World Cup quarter-final since 1954 and led Argentina before Breel Embolo's second yellow card left them a man down for the last half-hour. They expect the run to raise expectations for the next cycle rather than close a chapter.