Spain beat France 2-0 to reach FIFA World Cup 2026 final
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Spain booked their place in the FIFA World Cup 2026 final with a commanding 2-0 victory over France at Dallas Stadium on Wednesday, 15 July, goals from Mikel Oyarzabal and Pedro Porro doing the damage in a semi-final that was never as close as the occasion demanded. Spain will face the winner of the England vs Argentina tie at New Jersey Stadium.
How Spain Controlled the Game
Lamine Yamal — playing a day after his 19th birthday — earned the opening goal, beating Lucas Digne to the ball before being clipped inside the box. Oyarzabal stepped up and converted the resulting penalty past Mike Maignan, who had built a reputation as a spot-kick-saving specialist at this tournament. The lead was doubled when Porro combined in a slick one-two with Dani Olmo, taking the return first-time and burying it in the bottom corner to put the tie beyond France's reach.
France's Late Push Falls Short
Didier Deschamps introduced Desire Doue and Rayan Cherki as France pushed for a way back, with Kylian Mbappe threatening on the counter throughout. But goalkeeper Unai Simon was alert as a sweeper-keeper, and Marc Cucurella produced an excellent last-ditch challenge to deny Mbappe. Spain's defensive discipline held firm until the final whistle.
France's Recurring Semi-Final Curse
This was France's fourth semi-final defeat in eight World Cup semi-final appearances, having also lost at the same stage in 1958, 1982, and 1986. More strikingly, it was the third consecutive time Spain have eliminated France at the semi-final stage of a major competition — following the UEFA Euro 2024 (2-1) and the UEFA Nations League 2025 (5-4). France had gone 11 knockout matches unbeaten at the World Cup since a 0-1 quarter-final defeat to Germany at the 2014 edition — a run of 10 wins and 1 draw now ended.
Spain's Defensive Record and Historical Echo
The victory gave Spain their sixth clean sheet in seven matches at this tournament. They have conceded just two goals across their entire North American campaign — matching the record for the fewest goals conceded by a World Cup-winning side, a mark shared by France (1998), Italy (2006), and Spain themselves (2010). That 2010 final ended with Andres Iniesta sinking the Netherlands at Soccer City — Spain's only previous World Cup final appearance, which they won.
What Comes Next
Spain now await the England-Argentina final qualifier, with the decider set for New Jersey Stadium. For France, attention turns to the third-place play-off on Saturday, where Mbappe will have an opportunity to bolster his case for the Golden Boot. The final whistle in Dallas brought scenes of elation in the Spanish camp and visible despair among the French players — a moment that underscored just how completely Luis de la Fuente's side have come to dominate this rivalry.