TACTICAL ANALYSIS

Mbappe is peaking but France has a glaring midfield issue

Jun 16, 2026 Analysis
Mbappe is peaking but France has a glaring midfield issue
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The efficiency driving the French offense

Watching Kylian Mbappe tear apart Senegal in yesterday's 3-1 victory felt like observing a predator that had finally mastered the art of the hunt. He wasn't just fast; he was clinical.

The numbers from his brace illustrate this shift perfectly. He required just 4 shots to net those two goals, effectively killing the contest before the 65th minute arrived. It is rare to see a forward so consistently calibrate his output against his opportunity volume.

His second goal was arguably the highlight. Rather than relying on his trademark recovery pace, he measured the distance, adjusted his stride, and fired a strike that left the keeper rooted to the grass. You can watch the tactical breakdown of that finish to see how he manipulates space in the final third.

Midfield instability remains a thorn in Deschamps' side

Despite Mbappe’s brilliance, France looks vulnerable in the middle of the park. While the frontline is operating at maximum capacity, the central pivot is failing to control the tempo against high-pressing opponents.

During the Senegal game, the gap between the defensive line and the midfield was often too large. This created pockets of space for the opposition to exploit, particularly on the counter-attack after a French corner was cleared.

If Deschamps expects to survive the later knockout stages, he must address this structural disconnect. His current setup relies too heavily on individual defensive recoveries rather than collective positioning.

Tactical parallels to the Scotland dilemma

There is a lessons-learned component here for other sides struggling with formation rhythm. As Scotland looks toward their own difficult fixtures, they could learn from the way Cape Verde managed their transition phases recently, as discussed by Neil McCann and Willie Miller regarding potential tactical adjustments before facing Morocco.

France is currently winning on raw talent, but the lack of discipline in the transition phase is a concern. When Senegal committed numbers forward, the French midfield was frequently caught behind the ball, forcing their center-backs into 1v1 situations that they were lucky to win.

If they face a technically superior midfield, like those found in the upcoming quarters, this reliance on Mbappe’s individual output will not hold. France needs a central anchor, not just a set of talented attackers.

Assessing the defensive vulnerability

The defensive record 3-1 scoreline masks some issues that are hard to ignore. Senegal hit the post in the 38th minute, a moment where the French midfield went missing, allowing a simple square pass to bypass their entire defensive block.

This suggests that while the front three are firing, the team lacks defensive cohesion. A deep-running pivot needs to patrol that space between the lines.

Unless the defensive shape tightens before the round of 16, they remain susceptible to teams that track back and hit them on the break. Mbappe has become the ultimate finisher, but the rest of the unit is playing like a side that believes their attacking rhythm is enough to win them the tournament.

Tournament history shows that relying on a superstar to carry defensive deficiencies is a blueprint for an early exit. Deschamps has the personnel to form a rigid defensive shell, but his selection preferences have slanted too far in the direction of offensive dynamism.

If the French midfield continues to operate as an optional entity rather than a structural necessity, the tournament might end with a whimper rather than a world title. The efficiency of a 4-shot brace is a luxury that won't always present itself in high-stakes knockout fixtures.

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