Lucky Rebel Sportsbook · FIFA World Cup 2026 · Group I
France
Les Bleus
Two stars. Sixteen World Cups. Built to win.
Every four years the world picks a side. Some back the defending champions. Some back whoever has the best forward. Most back whoever their dad backed. France don’t need any of that. France pick themselves.
Football à la française isn’t a thing. There is no national philosophy. No coaching manual. No identity sold back to the public on a t-shirt. What France produces, year after year, generation after generation, is talent. Raw, decorated, world-class talent. Players who would walk into the team of any nation on earth, and have. The system isn’t the system. The players are the system.
France have appeared in five of the last twelve World Cup finals. They have won two of them. They have lost two more on penalties. They are also the only nation in history to defend the trophy as champions and finish a World Cup without scoring a goal. The volatility is the point. The greatness is the point. The two are the same point.
Group I Fixtures
Three games. Senegal first, the African champions of 2022, with Sadio Mané in what is almost certainly his last World Cup. Then Norway, the Erling Haaland and Martin Ødegaard generation finally arriving at a major tournament after twenty-eight years of waiting. Then the winner of Inter-Confederation Playoff 2, identity confirmed in late March. France should top the group. France probably will. France have also lost first games at every recent tournament. Don’t take it for granted.
| Date | Match | Kickoff | Preview | Bet |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19 Jun | France vs Senegal | 18:00 ET | Preview | Bet |
| 24 Jun | France vs Norway | 18:00 ET | Preview | Bet |
| 28 Jun | France vs IC Playoff 2 | 18:00 ET | Preview | Bet |
All kickoff times in local venue time (Eastern Time). Subject to change.
A History Written in Gold
1998. Stade de France, Saint-Denis. A 26-year-old from a council estate in Marseille named Zinédine Zidane scored two headers in the World Cup final against Brazil. The favourites. The defending champions. The team with Ronaldo. France 3, Brazil 0. The country didn’t sleep for four days. Half the population went onto the Champs-Élysées. The first star landed on the shirt. The world had a new heavyweight.
2000. Rotterdam. France won the European Championship two years later. Trezeguet’s golden goal beat Italy in the final. They became the first nation since West Germany in 1974 to hold both trophies at once. The squad had everything. Zidane in the hole. Henry and Trezeguet up front. Vieira and Petit in midfield. Thuram and Desailly at the back. Barthez doing whatever he was doing in goal. They were untouchable. They were also about to learn how quickly that ends.
2002. South Korea and Japan. Defending champions. Three group games. Zero goals scored. One point won. Sent home. The most spectacular collapse in World Cup history. Henry suspended for the second match. Zidane injured before the tournament started. The squad fell apart in real time and a generation that should have won everything walked into the wall at the worst possible moment.
Then came the years that made France an idea rather than a team. 2006 Berlin and Zidane’s last act. 2010 Knysna and a player revolt. 2014 Brazil and a quarter-final exit. 2018 Moscow and the second star. 2022 Lusail and Mbappé’s hat-trick that wasn’t quite enough. Five World Cups. Two wins. Two final defeats. One disgrace. France don’t do middle ground.
Platini. Sevilla. The Crime of 1982.
Michel Platini. Born in Jœuf, a steelworking town near the German border. The son of an Italian footballer who became a teacher. He was rejected by Metz at fifteen because the club doctor decided his lungs were too weak. He joined Nancy instead, where his father had played, and became one of the greatest attacking midfielders the game has ever seen. Three Ballons d’Or in a row. A free kick that bent and dipped and ended up in the top corner so often it stopped being remarkable. He made playing the number ten role look like a thing anyone could do. Nobody since has actually managed it.
The 1982 France team was the carré magique. Four midfielders who could all pass, all run, all see the game three moves ahead. Platini in the centre. Tigana driving forward. Giresse stitching everything together. Genghini, then later Fernández, holding the floor. Behind them was a defence that would lose its mind under pressure. In front was a strike force that came and went. But that midfield was the closest thing the European game has ever produced to Brazil’s 1970 squad. Football you wanted to bottle.
Sevilla. The 1982 World Cup semi-final. France versus West Germany. 1-1 at full time. Then in extra time France went 3-1 up. Trezeguet’s father Jorge was probably watching. So was every kid in France with a television. Three-one. Nineteen minutes from the final. Then West Germany scored. Then they scored again. 3-3. Penalties. Earlier in the match the West German goalkeeper Toni Schumacher had run from his line and clattered into Patrick Battiston, knocking him unconscious, breaking three of his teeth and damaging two vertebrae. The referee gave a goal kick. Schumacher then saved a penalty in the shootout. France went out. The most beautiful European team since Hungary 1954 went home. Platini wept on the touchline. Battiston was still in hospital.
1986. Mexico. Same opponents. Same stage. Same outcome. France lost the semi-final 2-0. Platini retired at the end of the European Cup the following year. He never won a World Cup. Forty-four years on, football still hasn’t given him one back.
From the Street to the Stage
The thing that makes France different isn’t the academies. It isn’t Clairefontaine. It isn’t the technical pathway certified by the federation in a glossy PDF. It’s the banlieues. The concrete pitches in the housing estates ringing Paris and Lyon and Marseille where the children of immigrants from Algeria, Morocco, Senegal, Cameroon, the Côte d’Ivoire, Mali, Guadeloupe and Martinique go out and play because there is nothing else to do. France produces more professional footballers per capita than any other country in Europe. The pipeline is the streets. The pipeline has always been the streets.
Zinédine Zidane grew up in La Castellane, a housing project on the outskirts of Marseille. His parents were Kabyle Algerians who had crossed the Mediterranean before he was born. His first pitch was a tarmac square between four tower blocks. He scored two headers in a World Cup final at twenty-six. He nearly scored a third in another one at thirty-four before the headbutt. La Castellane still has his murals. They still go up faster than the council can take them down.
Kylian Mbappé was born in Bondy, a working-class commune ten kilometres northeast of Paris. His father coached the local youth team, AS Bondy. His mother had played handball professionally. He scored his first AS Bondy goal at six years old. He left for Monaco’s academy at twelve. He won the World Cup at nineteen. He scored a hat-trick in the World Cup final at twenty-three. He is now the captain of his country at twenty-seven. There’s a giant mural of him on the side of his old school in Bondy. The town renamed the stadium after him. They couldn’t do it fast enough.
Thierry Henry came from Les Ulis, another Paris suburb. Paul Pogba from Lagny-sur-Marne. N’Golo Kanté from Suresnes. Eduardo Camavinga from a refugee shelter in Lille. Bukayo Saka could have played for France through his father’s eligibility and didn’t. England got lucky. France produces. The world hires.
Recent Form and the Hard Truth
Second in the FIFA rankings. Cruised through UEFA Group E qualifying. Reached the semi-finals of Euro 2024 before losing to Spain, who went on to win it. Lost the 2022 World Cup final on penalties having gone to Qatar with most of the squad ill, half the squad rotated, Mbappé carrying the team for ninety minutes against Argentina and scoring a hat-trick in the final. They are not in crisis. They have never really been in crisis since 2018.
The hard truth is different. The hard truth is that France have one obvious vulnerability and one harder-to-name one. The obvious one is in central defence, where Upamecano and Saïliba are world-class on their best days but neither has the leadership presence the squad lost when Varane retired internationally in 2023. The other one is more philosophical. Deschamps has been in charge for fourteen years. The squad knows him better than they know each other. Whether that breeds the cohesion France needs to win three knockout games on the bounce, or whether it produces the staleness that costs them another final, is genuinely unknowable. Both have happened before. Both could happen again.
The Coach — Didier Deschamps
Head Coach · Appointed July 2012
Didier Deschamps
Born October 15 1968 in Bayonne, Basque Country. Defensive midfielder. Captain of every team he ever played for and most of the ones he ever managed. Eric Cantona once called him a water carrier and the line followed him for thirty years. Deschamps still won the World Cup as captain in 1998, the European Championship as captain in 2000, the Champions League with Marseille in 1993 and again in management. He carried more water than anyone in football history. The water was usually pointing at the goal.
He took over France in July 2012. He has been there for fourteen years. He has won the World Cup, finished runner-up at the World Cup, finished runner-up at the European Championship, won the Nations League and reached three further semi-finals at major tournaments. No France manager has ever come close to the longevity. No France manager has ever come close to the trophy count.
What Deschamps does, and has always done, is set a team up to be very difficult to play against and then trust the talent above him to do the rest. He doesn’t over-coach. He doesn’t lecture in front of cameras. He picks players who fit the system and he leaves the magic to the magicians. Mbappé, Griezmann, Dembelé and Tchouaméni are four very different talents with four very different motors. Getting them to commit to the dirty work as a unit is what wins tournaments. He has done it before. He is being asked to do it one more time.
Key Players
Players are selected using Lucky Rebel’s points-based framework. Automatic inclusions: captain and first-choice goalkeeper. Points-based inclusions require 4 or more points scored across World Cup experience, confederation tournament experience, caps, goals, assists and qualification stats. All selections are provisional pending final squad confirmation on June 1 2026.
France Betting Markets
+550 to win the tournament. Second favourites behind Spain. Two stars on the shirt and the highest individual ceiling in the squad of any team in the field. A coach who has won the thing before and lost it once on penalties. A captain who has scored seventeen World Cup goals before his twenty-eighth birthday. The price reflects the volatility. The volatility is also the case for the bet.
| Market | Selection | Price | Bet |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tournament Winner | France | +550 | Bet |
| Group I Winner | France | -350 | Bet |
| Golden Boot | Kylian Mbappé | +600 | Bet |
Odds correct at time of publication and subject to change. View all France World Cup markets at Lucky Rebel ↗
Keep Researching
All Teams
Group I
France vs Senegal
France vs Norway
France vs IC Playoff 2
Bet on France ↗
Gambling should be entertaining. You always risk losing the money you bet. Never spend more than you can afford to lose. If you think you may have a problem, visit luckyrebel.la/responsible-gaming. 18+ only. Lucky Rebel is licensed by the Office of Mwali International Services Authority under the Gaming and Gambling Act, 2022. Squad data provisional pending final squad confirmation June 1 2026. Caps and career statistics sourced from Wikipedia. Odds correct at time of publication and subject to change.