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World Cup: France beat Norway 4-1 as Dembélé hits hat-trick

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France maintained their perfect start to the 2026 FIFA World Cup with a commanding 4-1 victory over Norway on Friday, thanks to a first-half hat-trick from Ousmane Dembélé that sealed top spot in Group I.

The French winger struck in the seventh, 20th and 32nd minutes, with two of his goals set up by captain Kylian Mbappé and the third assisted by Aurélien Tchouaméni. Désiré Doué added a fourth deep into stoppage time to complete another dominant display by Didier Deschamps’ side.

Norway briefly threatened a comeback when Thelo Aasgaard pulled one back in the 21st minute after being set up by Andreas Schjelderup. However, the Scandinavians struggled to break down the French defence for the remainder of the contest despite enjoying more possession after the interval.

France, who had already secured qualification before kick-off, completed the group stage with three wins from three, underlining their credentials as one of the favourites for the World Cup title. Mbappé once again played a key role, providing two assists before being substituted late in the game.

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The result ensured Norway also progressed to the Round of 32 despite the defeat, having already booked qualification with victories in their opening two matches.

France will now head into the knockout stage with maximum points and growing momentum, while Norway will look to regroup before their Round of 32 clash after suffering their first defeat of the tournament.

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BREAKING: Ferran Torres Fires Spain To World Cup Title, Spoils Messi Fairytale

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Spain’s forward #07 Ferran Torres celebrates scoring his team’s first goal during the 2026 World Cup football tournament final match between Spain and Argentina at the New York/New Jersey Stadium in East Rutherford on July 19, 2026.

Spain’s forward #07 Ferran Torres celebrates scoring his team’s first goal during the 2026 World Cup football tournament final match between Spain and Argentina at the New York/New Jersey Stadium in East Rutherford on July 19, 2026.

Ferran Torres scored an extra-time winner as Spain defeated holders Argentina 1-0 to win the World Cup on Sunday and shatter Lionel Messi’s dreams of a triumphant farewell to football’s greatest stage.
Barcelona striker Torres lashed home a thumping finish in the 106th minute to reward a dominant display by Spain against an Argentina team who failed to register a single shot on target in 120 minutes.

A star-studded crowd of 80,663 that included US President Donald Trump packed East Rutherford’s MetLife Stadium to see if Argentina captain Messi could crown his glittering career with a second World Cup victory.
But the 39-year-old maestro — almost certainly playing in his final World Cup game — was reduced to irrelevance as Spain took control early on against an Argentina team who committed a catalogue of cynical fouls throughout.
The South Americans’ skullduggery ended with midfielder Enzo Fernandez being sent off after a brutal challenge on Spain defender Pau Cubarsi in injury time.
For long periods though it looked as if Argentina may somehow hold on for a penalty shoot-out as Spain struggled to make the breakthrough.

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But after Nico Williams had a goal controversially disallowed in extra-time, Spain struck.
A lofted cross to the back post by Pedro Porro found Williams who nodded into the path of Torres to crash home the goal that would clinch Spain’s second World Cup title after their maiden 2010 triumph.
Earlier, a clear sign of Argentina’s frustration came in the 15th minute when Alexis Mac Allister went flying in with a studs-up challenge that struck Dani Olmo’s ankle.
Mac Allister escaped an early yellow card although after Slovenian referee Slavko Vincic only awarded a foul.

Spain made their presence felt moments later though, with Alex Baena poleaxing Messi with an elbow to the back that again escaped sanction.
Argentina continued to test referee Vincic’s patience with a series of niggly challenges, and Nicolas Tagliafico was lucky not to be cautioned after raking Lamine Yamal’s calf in a clumsy challenge.
Lopsided half
Spain meanwhile continued to probe for openings but Mikel Oyarzabal failed to seriously test Emi Martinez with a low shot that the Argentina goalkeeper gathered easily in the 39th minute.
Eventually though Vincic did reach for a yellow card, with Lisandro Martinez booked for a cynical challenge on Oyarzabal.

Martinez was substituted shortly afterwards with an apparent injury, veteran Nicolas Otamendi coming on in his place.
The final’s controversial extended half-time show featuring the likes of Madonna, Shakira and Justin Bieber stretched to 27 minutes but did little to upset Spain’s rhythm.
The Spanish piled on the pressure in a lopsided second half as Argentina hung on grimly.
Spain coach de la Fuente sent on Pedri and Ferran Torres for Fabian Ruiz and Oyarzabal and the chances continued with Argentina in full siege mode.
Yamal twisted away and chipped a cross for Torres, whose downward header was saved by Martinez.
Pedri and Cubarsi both lashed long-range shots that Martinez failed to grasp at the first attempt but somehow Argentina continued to hold on.
But the arrival of substitutes Williams and Mikel Merino gave fresh life to Spain’s attacking momentum, and the onslaught continued.
Fernandez was booked for dissent in the 82nd minute before Torres and Rodri both fired long-range shots from Martinez.
Fernandez’s dismissal left Spain down to 10 men heading into extra-time.
Martinez had one last save deep in stoppage time when Yamal’s superb whipped free-kick was clawed wide.
The Spanish dominance continued in extra-time, with Williams almost opening the scoring with a glancing header that Martinez got down well to save one-handed.
Moments later it looked as if Spain had made the breakthrough when Williams slid a low finish into the net but referee Vincic blew for a marginal foul on Nicolas Otamendi.
But the breakthrough came with Torres’s winner on 106 minutes. Argentina made a desperate last raid on Spain’s goal but La Roja held firm to seal victory.
AFP

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Olise Smashes Pelé’s World Cup Assist Record, Weeps After France’s 6-4 Defeat to England

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Despite smashing Pele’s record, France winger Michael Olise endured a night of mixed emotions after Les Bleus suffered a dramatic 6-4 defeat to England in a thrilling World Cup encounter.

Despite making history by registering his seventh assist of the tournament to surpass Pelé’s long-standing record of six assists in a single FIFA World Cup campaign, Olise reportedly left the field in tears.

According to reports from L’Equipe, the 24-year-old was seen in tears in the dressing room after the final whistle, blaming himself for missing two clear-cut scoring opportunities during the match.

The report added that France head coach Didier Deschamps consoled the winger, reassuring him after he became overwhelmed by the result and his missed chances.

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Olise’s record-breaking seventh assist now stands as the highest ever recorded by a player in a single World Cup edition, eclipsing the mark set by Pelé during Brazil’s victorious 1970 campaign.

While the historic achievement highlights Olise’s outstanding creativity throughout the tournament, the painful defeat to England overshadowed the milestone as France’s World Cup journey came to a heartbreaking end.

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France Captain, Kylian Mbappe Becomes World Cup All-Time Top Scorer

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Kylian Mbappe became the top scorer in World Cup history on Saturday when he netted his second goal in the third-place play-off against England to take his tally to 22.

He became the competition’s all-time top scorer and Bukayo Saka scored a hat-trick as England won an extraordinary 10-goal thriller 6-4 against France in Miami tonight to finish third at the 2026 World Cup.

The Three Lions were involved in the bronze match – formerly known as the third-place play-off – after losing their semi-final to Argentina in galling fashion.

However, they showed no hangover from that disappointment by racing into a four-goal first-half lead in a chaotic game which up-ended any gloomy pre-match talk.

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Saka – an unused sub against Argentina – scored twice after Declan Rice and Ezri Konsa had put England in control inside the opening 20 minutes.

Momentum completely switched after the break, with France pulling three goals back and missing clear-cut chances to equalise.

Mbappe netted either side of a Bradley Barcola goal, to put himself ahead in the race for the 2026 Golden Boot and leap above Lionel Messi to become the World Cup’s all-time leading scorer (22 goals).

But Saka completed his hat-trick from the penalty spot in the 87th minute after Djed Spence was fouled by Malo Gusto.

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Ousmane Dembele curled home in the sixth minute of stoppage time to cut the deficit to 5-4, however Jude Bellingham jinked through France’s defence to seal England’s win in the 98th minute.

Bellingham finished with seven goals at this World Cup – the most of any England men’s player at a single edition.

It means England achieve their highest men’s World Cup finish since winning the tournament in 1966 and their best-ever result on foreign soil.

And they did so in the highest scoring World Cup third-place match ever, surpassing France 6-3 West Germany in 1958.

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