Scary France have not reached attacking ceiling yet

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Sat, 27 Jun 2026 - 06:51 GMT

BY

Sat, 27 Jun 2026 - 06:51 GMT

France's Michael Olise in action with Norway's Thelo Aasgaard IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/David Butler Ii

France's Michael Olise in action with Norway's Thelo Aasgaard IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/David Butler Ii

 (Reuters) - France's attacking riches are beginning to look ​frightening — and perhaps the most ominous sign for the rest of the World Cup is that Didier Deschamps' ‌magic triangle has yet to produce a game in which all three are at their devastating best.

 

Against Norway, Michael Olise was quieter than in his previous outings as Ousmane Dembele stole the spotlight with a breathtaking first-half hat-trick.

 

It was a notable shift from France's previous two matches. Against ​Senegal, Olise had been the catalyst, striking up an instant understanding with Kylian Mbappe while Dembele struggled to impose ​himself.

 

Four days later against Iraq, Dembele got on the scoresheet and delivered an improved display, ⁠but questions lingered over where he fit best in France's attacking set-up as Olise and Mbappe again looked the more ​established partnership.

 

That is what makes France so dangerous. Through three group matches, Deschamps has never had all three forwards firing at ​full capacity simultaneously, yet Les Bleus have still scored 10 goals and won every game comfortably.

 

One member of the trio has always been slightly below his usual standards, but another has invariably stepped forward to ensure the attack loses none of its potency.

 

It leaves an unsettling question for ​France's rivals: what happens when all three click simultaneously?

On paper, their qualities complement each other almost perfectly.

 

Mbappe stretches defences with ​relentless runs in behind, Dembele attacks spaces at frightening speed and unpredictability, while Olise offers composure, creativity and the final pass between the ‌lines.

 

On the ⁠left, Desire Doue and Bradley Barcola have shared the starting role, leaving whichever one is rested, along with Rayan Cherki and Marcus Thuram, among others, to provide formidable attacking reinforcements.

 

Speaking on Fox after France dismantled Norway, former Sweden striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic described France as a "complete team" and conceded their collective understanding in attack was "a little scary".

 

He highlighted not only the individual brilliance of ​Mbappe, Dembele, Olise and Doue ​but also the way ⁠they combine.

 

There remains, however, one obvious caveat.

France's attacking ambition inevitably leaves room for opponents to counter. With full backs pushing high and so much freedom granted to the front players, the ​burden on the two central midfielders becomes immense.

 

Aurelien Tchouameni, Manu Kone or Adrien Rabiot - depending ​on who starts - ⁠are often left covering vast areas of the pitch, breaking up transitions before they expose a defence that has occasionally looked vulnerable when isolated.

 

It is a risk Deschamps has been willing to accept so far.

 

With an attack capable of deciding matches in a matter ⁠of minutes, ​France increasingly look like a side prepared to trade a little defensive ​security for overwhelming firepower.

 

If their three leading men ever produce a complete performance together, they may become almost impossible to stop as they prepare to face ​Sweden in the last 32 with a potential clash against Germany in the following round.

 

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