England defeated France 6-4 in an epic match neither side were all that keen to play! The World Cup third-place game is the most awkward of fixtures. As Probuddha Bhattacharjee writes, "winning the FIFA World Cup is the ultimate prize...[the third-place match] brings together two teams still processing the collapse of their greatest ambition, asks them to recover within days and then presents bronze as a prize. The finalists prepare for immortality; the losing semi-finalists must return for one more game."
So, it was not surprising that both camps expressed their dissatisfaction at having to play this match. Thomas Tuchel--blamed by just about everyone, including Donald Trump, for England's semi-final defeat (once more) against archrival Argentia--plainly said it: “None of our players and none of the French players want to play this match...They want to play the final. We gave everything to achieve that.” Didier Deschamps, his French counterpart, confirmed the mood. “England does not want to play this game, and neither do we. But here we are.”
Yet, this 'unwanted' game keeps providing exciting matches and records. Up until yesterday, the prior 20 third-place matches produced 76 goals or 3.8 per game on average, including one in 1958 that delivered nine goals. World class teams, relieved of the pressures of winning the tournament, often produce unusually open football. That free flowing approach was taken to the extreme on Saturday in Miami in a historic game that produced ten(!!) goals.
Let's be honest no one really expected much from this game. England, still nursing their crushing semi-final loss, did not bother to start their stars Jude Bellingham and Harry Kane. While France did field Kylian Mbappe (chasing his second Golden Boot) and Michael Olise, the team initially seemed content to float through this tournament obligation with as much verve as you do a lazy river. But after an embarrassing first half for France, national pride and competitive instincts took over. With both teams firmly 'in it to win it,' in the second half we had one of the games of the tournament! As Jonathan Wilson of the Guardian writes, "What did we just witness? A third-place play-off or a schoolyard match where defending was strictly prohibited? England walked away with a 6-4 victory, but the scoreline barely scratches the surface of the tactical anarchy in Miami... A rampant Bukayo Saka hat-trick seemed to have buried France by halftime, only for Kylian Mbappé to treat the second half like a personal crusade, momentarily becoming the undisputed king of World Cup history before the wheels fell off Didier Deschamps' farewell party." Enjoy the highlights below:
1. 10 goals — the highest-scoring third-place match ever, surpassing the 1958 record of 9 goals
2. First FIFA World Cup match to feature 10 goals since Hungary’s 10–1 win over El Salvador in 1982
3. Mbappe's brace in the match brings his tally to 10 goals in the tournament surpassing Lionel Messi's 8 (for now)
4. Mbappe is now also the all-time leading World Cup scorer with 22 goals (in 22 games!), surpassing Messi's 20 (for now)
5. Michael Olise set up two goals yesterday, setting a new FIFA World Cup record with seven assists in a single tournament, surpassing Pelé’s 56-year-old record
On to the final: Spain/ Barcelona vs Argentina/ Bangladesh (Dhaka or Buenos Ares?)





