Final, 2-0 France: The referee blows the final whistle. France wins and advances to the 2018 World Cup semifinals.
#FRA win!
France are the first team to book their place in the semi-finals with a 2-0 victory over @Uruguay! #URUFRA // #WorldCup pic.twitter.com/JLwN4S2TDI
— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 6, 2018
France was clinical. Uruguay wasn’t. That was the difference between the teams Friday, as France’s Raphael Varane and Antoinne Griezmann scored on their team’s two shots on target. The game was a physical and mental battle more than anything else, and France edged Uruguay on both fronts by the narrowest of margins.
#FRA reach the semi-finals for the first time since 2006, and their sixth time in total 🤙#URUFRA // #WorldCup pic.twitter.com/KYhZW0E23J
— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 6, 2018
We also can view the game as a tale of two goalkeepers. The stunning save France’s Hugo Lloris made just before halftime changed the tenor of the game. Instead of going into the interval tied 1-1, France used the confidence its lead offered as a springboard to bigger things in the second half.
At the other end, Uruguay’s Fernando Muslera made perhaps the biggest blunder of World Cup 2018 when he batted in Griezmann’s strike. He was having a superb tournament before the quarterfinals, but reported personal issues might have factored into his stark performance decline. Spare a thought for him.
Seen suggestions in a few places that Muslera lost 2 relatives in quick succession this week. If true, a very tough period for him. #FRA #WorldCup #URU https://t.co/WBnd5MS6Vn
— Jonathan Johnson (@Jon_LeGossip) July 6, 2018
Fernando Muslera has been one of the best goalkeepers at this World Cup and should not be remembered for this performance. Add to that the really stressful week he's had (if true, he lost his grandmother and uncle this week), the last thing you want to do is criticize him.
— Roberto Rojas (@RobertoRojas97) July 6, 2018
Uruguay also missed Edinson Cavani, whose calf injury prevented him from playing and left longtime strike partner Luis Suarez isolated and starved for service for much of the game. Will we ever see them in a World Cup again?
France has fulfilled its immense promise in reaching the semifinals for the first time in 12 years. A date with another global power undoubtedly beckons. Will Les Bleus conquer the world by winning its next two games? Time will tell.
France are the 4th team to reach the last four at a World Cup for at least 6 times, after Germany (13, incl. West Germany), Brazil (11, excl. 2018) and Italy (8) #WorldCup #LesBleus
— Gracenote Live (@GracenoteLive) July 6, 2018
Uruguay can leave Russia with heads held high.
Man of the Match: Griezmann continues to shine on soccer’s biggest stages.
The @Budweiser #ManoftheMatch for #URUFRA was @FrenchTeam's @AntoGriezmann! #WorldCup pic.twitter.com/D3kjMOeq8q
— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 6, 2018
Next up: Uruguay is going home. France will face either Brazil or Belgium at 2 p.m. ET on Tuesday in the semifinals.
That’s all for now, and thanks for joining us. Let’s discuss this one on Twitter @NESNsoccer and Facebook. Be sure to keep an eye out for some news, fan reactions, analysis and opinion coming up on NESN.com/soccer.
90th minute +3, 2-0 France: Antoine Griezmann departs, and Nabil Fekir replaces him in France’s third, and final, substitution.
90th minute, 2-0 France: There will be five minutes of stoppage time in the second half.
88th minute, 2-0 France: Ousmane Dembele enters, and Kylian Mbappe exits in France’s second substitution.
86th minute, 2-0 France: This crying Uruguay fan is just about everyone in his country right now.
Uruguay mood. https://t.co/iBuTU5HlHs
— NESN Soccer (@NESNSoccer) July 6, 2018
79th minute, 2-0 France: Corentin Tolisso exits and Stephen N’Zonzi enters in France’s first substitution.
78th minute, 2-0 France: Uruguay is gambling desperately by committing more players to its attack and leaving France space to exploit.
73rd minute, 2-0 France: Uruguay makes its final substitution. Jonathan Urretaviscaya enters. Nahitan Nahitan exits.
73rd minute, 2-0 France: Corentin Tolisso curls a shot just high and wide of the top corner of France’s goal.
69th minute, 2-0 France: The referee shows Uruguay’s Cristian Rodriguez and France’s Kylian Mbappe yellow cards.
68th minute, 2-0 France: France’s Kylian Mbappe is down on the field in apparent pain, and Uruguay’s players are swarming the referee.
Things are getting a bit chippy pic.twitter.com/80tpegHI0A
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) July 6, 2018
🇺🇾🇫🇷 OLHA. O. GODÍN. #FOXNaRússia #JogaOQueSabe #URUFRA pic.twitter.com/nMAJdVSEoN
— SportsCenter Brasil (@SportsCenterBR) July 6, 2018
The internet has jokes about the Paris Saint-Germain starlet and his more illustrious teammate.
Mbappé channeling his inner Neymar.
— Subscribe to GrantWahl.com (@GrantWahl) July 6, 2018
61st minute, 2-0 France: Antoine Griezmann will receive credit for doubling France’s lead, but Uruguay goalkeeper Fernando Muslera simply makes a mess of his save and punches the ball into his own goal.
Ayy…#FiestaEnRusia pic.twitter.com/QXvrByXanP
— FOX Deportes (@FOXDeportes) July 6, 2018
Griezmann’s shot knuckled as it approached Uruguay’s goal, but Muslera still should have done better.
Welp.
Muslera fails to save a strike from Griezmann, as France double their lead on a howler. #URUFRA pic.twitter.com/tG10FMO9WE
— FOX Sports (@FOXSports) July 6, 2018
#MundialTelemundo ¡Vaya error! Muslera pudo hacer mucho más en el disparo de @AntoGriezmann . Aumenta la ventaja para #FRA sobre #URU. Así lo narró 🎙 @sadovnik1965 pic.twitter.com/XKtevAT1xJ
— Telemundo Deportes (@TelemundoSports) July 6, 2018
Griezmann knows he’s lucky, but the best players often create their own good fortune, and he’s one of them.
7 – Antoine Griezmann has scored seven goals in his last six appearances in the knockout stages of major tournaments (World Cup and European Championships). Magnifique.#URU #FRA #URUFRA #WorldCup pic.twitter.com/LyidbKaQt6
— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) July 6, 2018
59th minute, 1-0 France: Uruguay makes a double substitution, with Maxi Gomez replacing the ineffective Christhian Stuani, and Cristian Rodriguez replacing Rodrigo Betancur, who was carrying a yellow card.
55th minute, 1-0 France: The second period has opened similar to how much of the first played out. The teams are closing down space quickly and challenging for every ball but making little of their possession or forays into the opponents’ half. That competitive spirit is stifling individual and collective quality in this contest. That’s not necessarily a bad thing.
46th minute, 1-0 France: The second half is under way.
Halftime, 1-0 France: That’s the end of the first half.
A great header from @raphaelvarane gives #FRA the lead at half-time! #URUFRA 0-1#WorldCup pic.twitter.com/4uCT63CjCc
— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 6, 2018
France has the edge thanks to Varane’s headed goal, Lloris’ heroics and Uruguay’s overall lack of punch. Varane’s goal doesn’t necessarily reflect France’s advantage on balance of play, as Uruguay is competing in every aspect. Instead, it represents the fine margins that often determine results at this level. Betancur’s bad tackle in a dangerous position allowed France to capitalize on a well-worked free-kick routine. This is an example of how the best teams punish mistakes.
1 – France 🇫🇷 have found the net on their 1st shot on target of the game. Accurate.#CM2018 #URUFRA pic.twitter.com/iGBobpqQo1
— OptaJean (@OptaJean) July 6, 2018
Key stats:
👉 #URU are trailing for the first time this #WorldCup
Only #DEN and #BRA have not trailed in the 2018 tournament👉 #FRA have now scored from each of their last five shots on goal at the #WorldCup #URUFRA pic.twitter.com/dH2y6Avtgu
— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 6, 2018
Uruguay now must turn the tide of history.
16 – Uruguay haven't won any of their last 16 World Cup games in which they've conceded the first goal (D3 L13), since beating France 2-1 in 1966. Possibility. #URU #FRA #WorldCup #URUFRA
— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) July 6, 2018
And Les’ Bleus must prevent La Celeste from doing just that.
👀 France are unbeaten in their FIFA World Cup history when leading at halftime (19W-1D-0L) pic.twitter.com/D95VOThkxk
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) July 6, 2018
The effect of Edinson Cavani’s injury increases in intensity, as Uruguay certainly could do with an additional threat.
45th minute, 1-0 France: There will be two minutes of added time in the first half.
44th minute, 1-0 France: Hugo Lloris preserves France’s lead with a stunning save on Rodrigo Betancur’s header. Lloris then recovers his footing and blocks Diego Godin’s follow-up effort.
What a save by Hugo Lloris!
…but Godin *probably* should've scored the rebound 😁 pic.twitter.com/itE0yGv1Nf
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) July 6, 2018
Lloris’ save arguably is the best of the World Cup.
Advantage #FRA #URUFRA 0-1#WorldCup pic.twitter.com/Ua1cOJ7RHZ
— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 6, 2018
Capitaine HUGO 🙏 1-0 #FRAURU #FiersdetreBleus pic.twitter.com/LOocfF8cKw
— Equipe de France ⭐⭐ (@equipedefrance) July 6, 2018
40th minute, 1-0 France: Rafael Varane gives Les Bleus the lead on the ensuing free kick.
#FRA GOAL! @raphaelvarane's header gives @FrenchTeam the lead in Nizhny Novgorod! #URUFRA 0-1#WorldCup pic.twitter.com/Do4DLOWbyQ
— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 6, 2018
Antoine Griezmann curls his free kick into Uruguay’s penalty area for Varane, who glances a pinpoint header to the far post.
Varane beats his man to the ball and puts France up 1-0 late in the first half! pic.twitter.com/aWMmla9aaI
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) July 6, 2018
Varane’s latest goal for his country undoubtedly is the talented central defender’s biggest yet.
3 – Raphael Varane has scored his 3rd goal for France 🇫🇷 (each time with a header), his 1st since March 2015 against Brazil. Timing.#Worldcup pic.twitter.com/T2r3Dk4h8M
— OptaJean (@OptaJean) July 6, 2018
Varane also ends his country’s decades-long goal drought against Uruguay.
Raphaël Varane is the first #FRA player to score against Uruguay since José Touré in 1985 (523 minutes in between). The French could have watched all 5 Taxi films #WorldCup
— Gracenote Live (@GracenoteLive) July 6, 2018
278 – Raphael Varane's goal ended a 278-minute goalless run in #WorldCup games between #URU and #FRA; with the previous one coming in 1966, scored by Uruguayan Julio Cesar Cortes. Merci. pic.twitter.com/W4o5wqXIAJ
— OptaJavier (@OptaJavier) July 6, 2018
It’s just the second goal Uruguay has conceded at World Cup 2018.
2 – The two goals conceded by Uruguay in the 2018 World Cup have come from set pieces and have been scored by a defender. Danger.#WorldCup #URUFRA #URU #FRA
— OptaJoao (@OptaJoao) July 6, 2018
38th minute, 0-0: The referee shows Rodrigo Betancur a yellow card for a mistimed tackle on France’s Corentin Tolisso.
Betancur, Uruguay’s left-sided midfielder, will miss the semifinal if his team progresses.
33rd minute, 0-0: The referee shows France’s Lucas Hernandez a yellow card for pulling the shirt of Uruguay’s Lucas Torreira.
30th minute, 0-0: More of the same. France hogs possession, Uruguay makes life hard for France with good positioning, focus and determination. France must use the wide spaces better in order to unlock this Uruguay defense.
20th minute, 0-0: Neither side has established a rhythm to its play, largely due to the physical nature of the contest. Nevertheless, the trend probably suits Uruguay, which is perfectly comfortable counter-attacking, more than it does the ball-dominant France team.
15th minute, 0-0: France’s Olivier Giroud heads a pass across the goal-mouth to Kylian Mbappe, who rises but fails to hit the target with his header.
Mbappé finds himself wide open in the box but his header loops over the crossbar as Uruguay catch a break! pic.twitter.com/jq8ElzQDwW
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) July 6, 2018
11th minute, 0-0: France seems to have settled into the contest, which has taken the expected physical turn early on.
🇺🇾🇫🇷 Galera tá chegando com tudo #FOXNaRússia #JogaOQueSabe #URUFRA pic.twitter.com/KxBxi6RvJC
— SportsCenter Brasil (@SportsCenterBR) July 6, 2018
Fourth minute, 0-0: Uruguay creates early danger inside France’s penalty area with a series of quick crosses that catch France’s defenders flat-footed. Uruguay fails to register a shot on goal, but any nerves the young French team is feeling have emerged.
Kickoff: Uruguay vs. France is underway.
We're under way! #WorldCup // #URUFRA pic.twitter.com/Jrgkaqwxav
— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 6, 2018
The anthems are finished. Watch them out below:
France
#MundialTelemundo ¡Así se escuchó! En Nizhni Nóvgorod el himno de #FRA pic.twitter.com/W40Ht6HSLK
— Telemundo Deportes (@TelemundoSports) July 6, 2018
Uruguay
#MundialTelemundo ¡Así se escuchó! En Nizhni Nóvgorod el himno de #URU pic.twitter.com/Aqttq2cSV4
— Telemundo Deportes (@TelemundoSports) July 6, 2018
Pregame: The biggest storyline leading up to is Edinson Cavani’s absence from Uruguay’s starting lineup. The star striker injured his calf Saturday in his team’s Round of 16 win over Portugal and subsequently failed to recover in time to make the starting lineup against France. Some doubt he’ll play at all in this quarterfinal.
No Cavani in the Uruguay lineup. Not a surprise, and Stuani could still cause problems, but it’s a bummer when such special games don’t have a Cavani or James Rodríguez.
— Subscribe to GrantWahl.com (@GrantWahl) July 6, 2018
The players are in the tunnel and Cavani is on the Uruguay bench but he does not look like someone who is going to play today.
— Sam Borden (@SamBorden) July 6, 2018
Cavani and Luis Suarez form one of the world’s deadliest striking partnerships. How will Suarez cope without his sidekick?
1 – Edinson Cavani and Luis Suárez are not starting a competitive game for Uruguay together for the first time since March 2017, when they lost 1-4 to Brazil. Separation.#URU #FRA #URUFRA #WorldCup pic.twitter.com/IBTUQM8V82
— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) July 6, 2018
Christhian Stuani will start in Uruguay’s attack in Cavani’s normal place.
9:45 a.m. ET: Here are the starting lineups:
#URUFRA | Formations… #URU#FRA#WorldCup pic.twitter.com/YnOiI2fWZa
— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 6, 2018
9:30 a.m. ET: The last eight in any competition often are pretty great.
France and Uruguay will look to prove their mettle when they face off Friday in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, in the quarterfinals of the 2018 FIFA World Cup. The teams have genuine ambitions of winning the tournament, but they’ll need to outwit strong opposition like the kind they’ll confront at this stage in order to do so.
Both sides are unbeaten so far at World Cup 2018, with Uruguay boasting a perfect 4-0-0 record with seven goals scored and only one conceded. France is 3-0-1 with seven goals scored and three conceded.
The winner of this game will face either Belgium or Brazil in the semifinals.
So, after today's results…
Friday 6th July, 17:00
Uruguay vs France 🇺🇾🇫🇷
Nizhny Novgorod #URUFRA pic.twitter.com/8RDTOIEmcE— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) June 30, 2018
France vs. Uruguay is scheduled to kick off at 10 a.m. Join us right here for all the action from Nizhny Novgorod.
Happening now in the @FIFAWorldCup🏆 : Uruguay🇺🇾 is playing against France🇫🇷 in the quaterfinal in #NizhnyNovgorod. See the highlights of the city and the stadium🏟 in our today's video!#FifaWorldCupRussia2018 ⚽⚽⚽ pic.twitter.com/jSxW727ut7
— Russia at the United Nations (@RussiaUN) July 6, 2018
Today's our last #WorldCup match in Nizhny Novgorod ☹️
Which stadium has been your favourite venue? #URUFRA pic.twitter.com/KiwDpNW4xv
— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 6, 2018