World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
France lost 1 2 to Ivory Coast before the World Cup, and captain Mbappé was widely criticized with three accusations: poor performance on the field, an apparent rift with Kanté, and taking his partner on vacation during training breaks. Lucas Hernández, a Paris Saint Germain defender who had just beaten Arsenal in the Champions League final and reported a week later than others, took all the bullets for Mbappé in the press conference room in Boston—this isn't public relations, it's dressing room politics.
In the press room in Boston, the row of journalists seated opposite him included a few whose pens were dipped in poison.
Lucas Hernandez glanced up and didn't flinch.
He didn't need to.
Three days earlier, France had lost 1-2 to Ivory Coast in a warm-up match. Twelve days later, they would step onto the pitch for the opening match of the 2026 World Cup, facing Senegal at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford—a venue typically used for American football.
At this critical juncture, French public opinion had stripped captain Kylian Mbappe down to his bare essentials.
Three charges, clearly laid out.
First, poor on-field form. This season at his club, Mbappe's goal tally had fallen far short of the expectations for a "€100 million man." Second, an apparent rift with N'Golo Kante—was the dressing room about to split? Third, and most absurd: he had dared to go on holiday with his partner during a break in national team training.
The French media don't negotiate. They care about only one thing—whether you, Mbappe, are worth that top-tier salary.
But at that moment, the person who stepped forward wasn't the president of the French Football Federation, nor was it head coach Didier Deschamps.
It was Lucas Hernandez.
The Paris Saint-Germain defender's background made him the perfect spokesperson for this press conference: he had just beaten Arsenal in the Champions League final, lifting the trophy for the second consecutive year; he had reported for duty a week late—arriving at the Boston training camp only after the final; and he was one of the few people in the France dressing room who could look Mbappe in the eye as an equal.
He didn't mince words.
AS Football titled its report on his press conference: "deja a toda la sala de prensa congelada"—the entire press room was frozen by his single statement.
He opened by saying he was "100% motivated" by Mbappe.
The weight of those words was a hundred times heavier than a simple "keep going." It wasn't "I believe he'll find his form," nor was it "let's give him some time." It was: "He will make all the critics shut up with his performances."
Sticking his neck out for the captain.
At a press conference twelve days before the World Cup opener, a defender sticking his neck out for the star striker—the political signal behind this was enough to make even Deschamps sweat.
The siege on Mbappe was, at its core, not a sporting issue. It was a backlash against a "marketing machine."
At the 2018 World Cup in Russia, a 19-year-old Mbappe burst onto the scene, tearing Argentina's defense to shreds. France won the title, and the world debated: Is this 19-year-old the next Pele or Maradona?
In the years that followed, doubts gradually crept in.
Fluctuating form, dressing room undercurrents, exposure of his personal life—each time, the French media seized on it as a reason to dismantle the "marketing machine."
So this time—poor form, the Kante rift, the holiday with his partner—three charges converged at once. The French media's calculation was simple: if you can't handle the pressure, don't blame us for dragging you off your pedestal.
Hernandez came in and did one thing—he didn't take the bait.
L'Equipe quoted him directly: "It's better for this sort of thing (losing) to happen today, rather than on June 16th."
In plain English: So what if we lost a warm-up? Everyone loses. The important thing is not to lose the opener.
He didn't shy away from the 1-2 loss to Ivory Coast. He framed it as "part of the preparation phase" and attributed it to "rotation"—the constant substitutions at halftime had led to a lapse in concentration.
What was this? It was a "tactical deflection," but a brilliant one.
He didn't blame any single person. He blamed the "rotation mechanism." This meant Deschamps' selections were fine; it was just that the process needed refinement.
This move was even more ruthless than simply backing Mbappe.
Because it told the French media: The three charges you're focused on are all superficial. The real battlefield in our dressing room is about rotation, concentration, and the final twelve days before the big tournament.
Then, he casually dismantled another potential bomb in the dressing room politics.
Mundo Deportivo noted that he proactively discussed the relationship between Mbappe and Ousmane Dembele, confirming they were "close friends who communicate often."
The subtext of this single sentence was: Stop spreading the "dressing room split" narrative.
Dembele and Mbappe are both top stars of France's new generation. If their personal relationship is fine, then the "Kante rift" is just a bubble inflated by the media.
One sentence, one bomb dismantled.
That's Lucas Hernandez.
He wasn't just taking a bullet for Mbappe; he was taking a bullet for the entire order of the France dressing room.
What made it even more interesting was the venue for his comments—not Paris, not Madrid, but Boston.
What is Boston? A university town in the northeastern United States, rich in sports culture, but separated from mainland France by an entire Atlantic Ocean. Holding this press conference in Boston was itself a signal from Deschamps' team: We want to escape the noise of the domestic media and focus on preparation.
And Hernandez chose this place, far from the domestic media frenzy, to "weld" the team's most controversial figure firmly into the starting lineup.
12 days. Not long, not short.
Between the Boston training camp and the American football stadium in East Rutherford, what happens in these 12 days will determine whether Mbappe can sheathe the media's daggers before the opening match.
First, the schedule.
After Hernandez's press conference on June 12, France has one more warm-up match—against Northern Ireland. Sandwiched between Ivory Coast and Senegal, this is Deschamps' final opportunity to experiment without consequences for the record.
Unlike the Ivory Coast match, the Northern Ireland friendly won't see as much rotation. Deschamps needs to see a stable starting lineup, to see who Mbappe combines best with, and to figure out how to set up a midfield and defense that were already broken once.
This means Mbappe will be placed in a relatively stable system for one final "pre-tournament check-up."
If he's still poor against Northern Ireland, the media won't give him a 12-day grace period. They'll give him an existential interrogation 48 hours before the opener.
Conversely, if he finds his form against Northern Ireland, every bullet Hernandez took for him in Boston today will be transformed into a "veteran backs captain, captain delivers" inspirational narrative.
That's the script France and Deschamps most want.
But the problem is—football isn't a script.
Let's dig deeper: Was Hernandez's vocal support an individual act, or was it a collective mandate from the dressing room?
Based on reports from L'Equipe and Mundo Deportivo, Hernandez himself had only just arrived in Boston after the Champions League final. A defender who had played until the very last second of the club season, defending the captain on his first day with the national team—this doesn't seem like a spontaneous reaction. It looks more like a pre-arranged "PR move."
The French Football Federation wouldn't let a newly arrived defender simply open fire. The scale, angle, and timing of such a statement must have been tacitly approved by the coaching staff, possibly even directly orchestrated by Deschamps' team.
In other words—Deschamps used Hernandez's mouth to install an insurance policy for Mbappe.
Why Hernandez?
Because he's one of the few people who both knows Mbappe personally, has the hard credentials of a Champions League winner, and has just played at the highest level. He is the most qualified person in this France squad to "take a bullet" for Mbappe.
His opening statement—"100% motivated by Kylian Mbappe"—was effectively telling the French media: Those three charges you talk about are all in your heads. The real situation in our dressing room is much better than you imagine.
Then there's the more delicate layer—the Mbappe-Kante "rift."
Mundo Deportivo noted that one reason for the media's attack on Mbappe was his relationship with Kante. Who is Kante? A core member of France's 2018 title-winning team, the absolute defensive bulwark in midfield. He's older, but he's still that figure in the dressing room who doesn't talk much but is listened to when he does.
If Kante really had a problem with Mbappe, that would be a huge issue—it would mean a crack between the older and younger generations at the team's core.
But Hernandez didn't directly address the Kante issue. Instead, he talked about Mbappe and Dembele's personal friendship.
Why? Because in the context of the national team, player relationships are often fragmented by club backgrounds. Mbappe and Dembele are both top stars of France's new generation. If their relationship is fine, it means there's no split within that new generation.
As for Kante—that's a different level of problem.
By not mentioning him, Hernandez tacitly acknowledged that there might be some nuance to this issue in the dressing room, but it wasn't the right venue to expose it all.
The more likely script is that Deschamps, after the Northern Ireland warm-up, will arrange for Mbappe and Kante to have more interactive moments in training, letting the media capture it, allowing the "rift" narrative to fade away on its own.
That's the real level of French football's PR—not confronting it head-on at a press conference, but orchestrating it on the training ground.
But all of this has one prerequisite—the opening match must be won.
Senegal is no pushover. Over the past few years, this team has become the most Europeanized African side in terms of playing style. Their physicality, discipline, and rhythm are not typical of the "wild punches" approach of traditional African teams.
If France fails to beat Senegal in the opener, every bullet taken for Mbappe in Boston today will become "backfire material."
Then, Hernandez's "100% motivated" comment will be tirelessly replayed as a mockery—and Deschamps' entire PR strategy will collapse.
So you see—this isn't just about a warm-up match. It's about whether the entire narrative of France's World Cup campaign can stand firm.
Lost the warm-up 1-2 to Ivory Coast. Hernandez calmly explained it away as "rotation causing a lack of concentration." Whether this explanation is accepted depends entirely on the result of the opener in 12 days.
Win, and everyone will say: Lucas is a real man. He can handle the pressure.
Lose, and everyone will say: So France really is panicking. Even panicking over a lost warm-up.
This is a high-stakes gamble.
Deschamps, Hernandez, Mbappe—they've all pushed their chips into the center of the table.
12 days later, East Rutherford.
When the whistle blows for the opener, it will either be a new king's coronation or the collapse of a pedestal.
There is no middle ground.
And that defender, who just beat Arsenal in the Champions League final, reported a week late, and chose to take a bullet for Mbappe in Boston—
His bet might be bigger than Deschamps' and Mbappe's combined.
Because he isn't betting on just one game. He's betting on whether the Champions League trophy he's lifted for two consecutive years at PSG can be replicated with the national team.
If it can—he's the most underrated "anchor" in French football history.
If it can't—every word he said at that Boston press conference will become ironic fodder for the next one.
That is the true gamble of the Boston lone warrior.