France’s 4-1 demolition of Norway in Foxborough was less a football match than a masterclass in squad depth, with Ousmane Dembélé’s 25-minute first-half hat-trick the most vivid illustration of why Didier Deschamps’ side remain the tournament’s clear favourites. While the absence of Erling Haaland and Martin Ødegaard left Norway’s bench looking like a reserve team, France’s relentless rotation of threats—Mbappé’s incisive passing, Olise’s creativity, Doué’s late flourish—turned a mismatch into a statement of intent.
Dembélé’s hat-trick: the sum of all parts
The goals arrived in rapid succession: a seventh-minute strike, a 20th-minute finish, and a 32nd-minute drive, each carved from the same template. All three were left-footed strikes into the same corner of Egil Selvik’s net, each preceded by Dembélé cutting inside from the right. The first owed much to Kylian Mbappé’s defence-splitting pass, the second to Michael Olise’s probing delivery, and the third to a collective surge that left Norway’s makeshift defence haemorrhaging space. The sequence was less a solo performance than a 17-pass relay, every member of France’s starting XI touching the ball before Dembélé’s decisive strike—a detail that underscores why this side are so feared.
Norway’s tactical decision to field 10 changes backfired spectacularly. Their second-string defence, exposed by Mbappé’s early effort that rattled the bar inside 22 seconds, offered no resistance to Dembélé’s ruthless finishing. Thelo Aasgaard’s 21st-minute reply briefly flattered the scoreline, but Dembélé’s third goal arrived just 79 seconds later, completing a hat-trick that felt inevitable given the imbalance in class.
Mbappé’s invisible influence
While Dembélé claimed the headlines, Mbappé’s role was equally pivotal. His opening pass set the tone, a perfectly weighted through-ball that exposed Norway’s high line before they’d settled. The Real Madrid forward’s involvement in the build-up to all three goals highlighted a deeper truth: France’s frontline operates as a hydra, with each attacker capable of unlocking defences. Whether it was Mbappé threading a defence-splitting pass, Olise teasing space in midfield, or Bradley Barcola’s late cross for Doué’s consolation goal, the message was clear. Norway’s experiment with a weakened XI was exposed not by one superstar, but by the collective brilliance of a squad built for longevity.
Ståle Solbakken’s decision to rest his first XI—despite the potential to finish top of the group—will be dissected for weeks. The Norwegian manager cited squad rotation, but the sight of 64,146 fans paying premium prices to watch a second-string side was met with understandable frustration. France, by contrast, treated the occasion as a showcase, with Dembélé’s treble the reward for a system that refuses to rely on any single player.
The depth that terrifies opponents
France’s squad is a tapestry of talent, woven together by Deschamps’ pragmatic genius. The inclusion of Olise, Doué, and Barcola—each of whom have now contributed at this World Cup—speaks to a depth that few nations can match. Doué’s late header, assisted by Barcola, was a reminder that even the substitutes carry the weight of expectation. This is a team where every position is contested, every role defined by versatility. The absence of Haaland and Ødegaard from Norway’s bench only amplified the contrast: France’s bench is a weapon, Norway’s a concession.
Norway’s penalty miss midway through the second half—Jørgen Strand Larsen’s weak spot-kick saved by Mike Maignan—offered a fleeting glimpse of resistance, but by then the game was already decided. The final score flattered Norway’s reserves, but the manner of France’s victory was the real story. A 17-pass move culminating in Dembélé’s third goal was less a football action than a tactical thesis: this is what it looks like when a team’s collective IQ outstrips its opponents’.
As the dust settles on Group I, one question lingers: which of France’s stars will step up next? Dembélé’s hat-trick has shifted the Golden Boot conversation, but the real story is the system that made it possible. With Mbappé, Olise, Doué, and Barcola all capable of decisive moments, the next opponent to face Les Bleus will face a hydra, not a single threat. That is why, despite the absence of Haaland’s headline duel, France remain the team to beat.
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