World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
32°C in the shade, feels like over 35°C, humidity at 60%. The starting point of the French team's World Cup campaign is a more expensive endeavor—Deschamps' 6 liter water KPI, Lucas's defense for Mbappé, Rabiot and Saliba both hitting pause. Boston's 35°C is the first test for the defending champions as they prepare across the Atlantic.
Six liters of water.
This isn't the two-gulp swig players grab in the locker room after a match. It's the hard KPI Deschamps' coaching staff set for every thigh in Boston—forced hydration every two hours on training days, totaling about six liters a day. Ice towels draped over necks, mobile cryotherapy chambers on standby, and the temperature difference between air conditioning and heat waves has been written into the risk list.
32°C, in the shade.
The real feel has long surpassed 35°C. Humidity above 60%, the air sticky like unthawed glue.
That's the full deck of cards for the 2026 World Cup defending champions, France, as they open their campaign on new soil.
Don't get it wrong: this isn't tanking. It's an operation more expensive than in Doha or Moscow—because the opponents aren't just the group stage. There's also the June humidity of New England, the six-hour time difference across the Atlantic, and the loose ends within this team that haven't fully come together yet.
France landed in Boston on Wednesday. Thursday, the first training session. Location: Bentley University, Waltham campus—sounds like an accounting firm, right next to Boston University. The entire training center doesn't have a single shade canopy.
No canopy, but all 26 players showed up.
That includes Jules Koundé, previously flagged by L'Équipe for "slight muscle discomfort," and those who played full minutes in Real Madrid's Champions League final. Deschamps didn't rotate, didn't pull anyone out, didn't give early leave. One rule: either everyone comes, or nobody comes.
But two names were missing from the scrimmage.
Adrien Rabiot. William Saliba.
L'Équipe gave the standard line: "precautionary rest." Both only jogged with fitness coach Cyril Moine, at an intensity low enough to be called a stroll. The coaching staff's stance is "nothing to worry about." But this kind of "nothing to worry about," in the context of a week before the World Cup, either means it's truly fine, or someone has buried the issue.
Rabiot is the most crucial pivot in this team's midfield; his form directly determines whether Tchouaméni or Camavinga starts. Saliba is the anchor of the defense—his performance in last year's Champions League semi-final at Anfield was arguably the only one from a French player that didn't drop off.
Two players, same day, same training session, both put on pause at the same time—
Coincidence doesn't exist a week before the World Cup.
This World Cup was never about playing football from the start; it's about science.
The French staff's checklist is more detailed than the head coach's tactical board. Ice towels are standard, swapped every 30 minutes. Six liters of water is the baseline—any player who loses more than 2% of their body weight after training goes straight into the cryotherapy chamber, the kind of mobile freezing device that numbs thighs. Logistics have shifted too: Deschamps combined the press conference and field training into the same afternoon, cutting out the 30-minute bus ride back and forth between the hotel and training ground.
That 30 minutes isn't saved for fun; it's to reduce one "cold-to-hot transition" for the players.
When the AC runs too strong, stepping back into 35°C outdoor air triggers a wave of heat that becomes a breeding ground for muscle strains.
Maxence Lacroix wore long sleeves during training.
The Crystal Palace defender admitted afterward that he "made a mistake."
Long sleeves in 32°C shade—this isn't an error; it's amateurish. Even for 15 minutes of drills, sweat turns the sleeve into a high-temperature steam tent. Lacroix had a decent season at Palace, but the French team's sports car won't tolerate a single loose screw.
Details don't matter, but details spread.
Deschamps knows this well.
Friday afternoon, the second training session.
This time, it's open to the public. 400 invited supporters poured into Bentley University.
Little tactical value, but huge political significance—this is the last formal public appearance before the World Cup, France's first "self-introduction" on new soil. The French Football Federation treated this open day as a soft launch, building a connection between players and fans that says, "I'm in your home."
The training itself was an 11v11 scrimmage.
Full-field, four quarters, over 60 minutes.
This is Deschamps' hidden move—he can't have players only doing technical drills in 35°C; the real World Cup rhythm must be found in competition.
Four players scored: Koundé, Doué, Mateta, Dembélé.
Mbappé didn't score.
But he hit the crossbar.
That crossbar is the biggest suspense point of France's week.
Mbappé's year at Real Madrid hasn't been pretty, whether in numbers or visuals. In the Champions League knockout stages, his presence was almost inversely proportional to his running distance. French domestic media—especially L'Équipe, which has never liked him—started digging up old grievances: Where's the 2018 winger? Where's the 2022 Golden Boot charm?
After training, Mbappé didn't follow the group back to the locker room.
He stayed behind with goalkeeper Robin Risser for extra shooting practice.
Alone. One keeper. Repeated strikes, saves, strikes, saves.
This is the image of "100% fueled by criticism."
Lucas Hernández defended him at Friday's press conference: "He is 100% motivated for this tournament."
The Madrid defender's words carry weight, because he's someone who's been criticized, underestimated, and bounced back himself.
But Mbappé's crossbar and extra practice are just noise in a larger context.
The real context is called: Senegal.
June 16. East Rutherford. MetLife Stadium. Kickoff at 3 PM.
The temperature in New York at that time—
22°C.
A full 10 degrees lower than Boston.
This is a "temperature-friendly" match. Deschamps' 35°C training intensity last week looks like an overly harsh pre-exam simulation. But on actual matchday, France likely won't face Boston's hellish humidity.
Senegal?
This team has the foundation of an African champion—Koulibaly's defensive system, Mané's savvy, and a few youngsters from the Premier League and Serie A. Their physicality is a natural advantage in humid heat. If France drags the game into the second half, stamina becomes the variable.
So Deschamps' "hell training" in Boston this week isn't for New York—it's for Miami, for Atlanta, for the knockout rounds where 35°C might show up.
This group needs to push their bodies to a threshold that can withstand any temperature ceiling.
All 26 players present.
This message, a week before the World Cup, is a political signal. Deschamps doesn't like any player "feeling off form" on their own; he wants everyone on the same starting line. That's why Rabiot and Saliba's rest was singled out—because only they rested.
Everyone else, including goalkeepers Maignan, Samba, and Risser, trained separately on another field. Three keepers with three styles; training apart is routine, but the whole team finishing at the same time and leaving together is a rare sight.
This is Deschamps' "wartime mobilization."
Then, the entire team returned to the Four Seasons Hotel in downtown Boston.
This choice is also telling—the Four Seasons isn't a base camp; it's a showcase. Its location in Boston is like the George V in Paris: luxurious, but refined. Deschamps chose for players to stay here not for five-star treatment, but for the atmosphere of "I represent the nation, I must act with dignity." The streets around Boston's Four Seasons are all office buildings and museums. If players go for a walk after training, they meet professionals in suits, not tourists with cameras everywhere like in LA.
This is Deschamps' subtle adjustment of the players' mental state—pulling them from "aging star's vacation" mode back to "national team member" mode.
Goalkeeper Brice Samba said in an interview: "We really are very comfortable."
It sounds like a cliché, but it's also true. In Boston's June New England humidity, the team finding a "cool, dignified, and secluded" corner at a place like the Four Seasons is itself a logistical victory.
The French team a week before the World Cup is a contradiction.
They are the defending champions.
But being defending champions is never the core story of this team—the real core is: they are always at odds with themselves. Before the 2018 title, they were on the edge of infighting; before the 2022 World Cup final, they had locker room stories; for the 2026 edition, the biggest pre-tournament suspense is—
Who can survive Boston's 35°C? Who can survive the media's microscope? Who can survive Mbappé?
Mbappé is the easiest line to read in this series.
He hit the crossbar. He stayed for extra practice. He wore short sleeves in 35°C instead of long sleeves. Lucas Hernández spoke for him. Deschamps didn't sideline him.
All of this points to the same image:
He wants it.
But wanting it isn't the same as achieving it.
The French team's World Cup opening move has never been an easy warm-up.
In Boston's 35°C, they aren't training technique—they're training endurance. In the cycle of crossbars and extra practice, Mbappé isn't training shooting—he's training mentality. In the image of Rabiot and Saliba being pressed pause, Deschamps isn't training protection—he's training whether the team has a backup plan if they really fall in the next game.
4 days.
June 16. East Rutherford.
Senegal.
New York's 22°C will make them more comfortable—but Senegal won't.
The defending champion's biggest enemy is never its opponents—it's the voice inside that says, "We already won last time."
Boston's 35°C, six liters of water, and that ice towel are meant to drown that voice out.