World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
France vs Senegal in the 2026 World Cup opener: Mbappé equals Giroud's 57 goals at the start, while behind it lies Pape Thiaw's 24 year reincarnation from the 2002 bench to the 2026 coaching seat; 33 players were born in France, 10 African teams raise their flags high, and the collective trauma of 2002 weighs on MetLife Stadium—this time, the lion truly wants to devour the rooster.
When Mbappé poked the ball diagonally into the net in the 57th minute, the stands at MetLife Stadium erupted with two completely opposite sounds at once—on one side, the release the French had held in for an entire first half, and on the other, the "here we go again" look in the eyes of the Senegalese.
Olise delivered a pass so subtle it was almost invisible, slicing through the channel. Mbappé drove it with his instep at the near post, the ball skimming the turf into the far corner. It was his 57th goal for France, officially tying Olivier Giroud's all-time national team scoring record.
It sounds beautiful. But if you think this goal tells the whole story of the match, you haven't been around football long enough.
This goal first had to answer: Is the 2026 French team an upgraded version of the 2018 Gallic Roosters, or a continuation of the "I'm tired" fatigue that set in after losing the 2022 Qatar final on penalties to Argentina? More importantly, it had to answer: Would the 1-0 that haunted all of France 24 years ago crawl out of the Senegalese locker room walls tonight?
Stop asking how Senegal won that match in 2002. That question has been dissected hundreds of times over the past 24 years through replays, memoirs, and documentaries. Papa Diop's goal, France's humiliation of failing to score a single goal in three group matches, the defending champions finishing last in their group with one draw and two losses, the black faces of Trezeguet and others in the stands—these are all part of football's public memory.
What's truly interesting tonight is something else.
In that 1-0 Senegalese team 24 years ago, there was one man sitting on the bench. He didn't play. The French had won Euro 2000 and World Cup 1998; when Senegal toppled the defending champions in that century's biggest upset in Melbourne, he was just "present."
That man is Pape Thiaw. A member of the 2002 Senegalese team.
Twenty-four years later, he's back. Not on the bench this time—but in the coaching seat.
Football's dark humor lies in this: Thiaw, who took over Senegal's coaching reins in December 2024, faced France in his first major tournament at the helm. The same opponent from that match he didn't play in. The answer to the career-defining question, "Why didn't you play then?"
He said it flatly in the pre-match press conference: "This match is symbolic."
But a French coach hearing that might chuckle—Symbolic? These guys are serious.
Thiaw dropped a line in his pre-match press conference aimed directly at the French: "Africa's progress in football is not a surprise. Morocco reached the semifinals in Qatar. There's no such thing as a 'surprise' in football. Every team deserves its place." Translation: Stop pretending and playing ignorant. Your strength isn't news, and neither is ours.
He added a sharper note: "If Senegal beats France, I won't be surprised."
The French probably exchanged glances in the locker room after hearing that.
But Thiaw actually has cards to play. Sadio Mané, with 5 goals in African qualifiers, is the team's top scorer; Nicolas Jackson, a key figure in the 2026 African Cup final; the veteran defensive line of Kalidou Koulibaly, plus Idrissa Gueye sweeping from midfield. Senegal's 4-3-3 formation maximizes physicality, confrontation, and direct thrust—Edouard Mendy guarding the goal, a three-man defense of Diouf, Niakaté, and Koulibaly, and a front three of Sarr, Mané, and Jackson.
What's the level of this squad? In this World Cup's African qualifiers, they played 10 matches, winning 7 and drawing 3, finishing top of their group with 24 points, 2 points ahead of DR Congo, scoring 22 goals with a +19 goal difference. One word: tough.
And France? Didier Deschamps set up a 4-2-3-1: Mike Maignan in goal, Upamecano and William Saliba as center-backs, an attacking quartet of Michael Olise, Ousmane Dembélé, Désiré Doué, and Mbappé, with Tchouaméni and Rabiot as double pivots.
Note a detail: N'Golo Kanté was on the bench.
Deschamps benched the man who started the 2022 final and was a key figure in the 2018 triumph. French domestic opinion immediately exploded, but Deschamps' logic was clear: Tchouaméni and Rabiot are younger, more mobile, and better suited to a high-temp, high-humidity battle in New Jersey against a team like Senegal. Kanté, the old warhorse, would be unleashed when needed.
But the problem was—the French clearly lost the battle in the first half.
Foot Mercato's report was blunt: "En souffrance durant la première période"—"Suffering throughout the first half." The midfield was overrun, passing was sluggish, and Senegal's players pressed with a "I'm going to physically push you aside" intensity, effectively silencing France's star-studded attack for 45 minutes.
Kicker's German colleagues added a jab: Mbappé was "completely unlucky" in the first half, virtually invisible apart from missing one chance; meanwhile, Jackson smashed a shot off the post for Senegal—if that had gone in, the 2002 script would have been replayed at MetLife Stadium.
This was exactly what the French had feared before the match.
The 2002 loss was the last time France lost their World Cup opening match. In other words, for the past 24 years, the French have psychologically treated it as a "script to avoid repeating." They won in 2018, reached the 2022 final, but the shadow of that opening match has never truly faded.
Senegal is different. For this generation of Senegalese, 2002 is their parents' story.
Ten of these players were born in France.
Do the math again: France's 23-man squad includes 23 players born in France—100% local. Senegal's 23 includes 10 born in France, nearly half. Meaning, of the 46 players on both teams for this match, 33 were born in France.
That's one-third of all France-born players (99 total) in this World Cup.
The global reach of France's youth development system, the vast pool of immigrant football talent—when this number was highlighted by peers at Hupu, the story's nature changed entirely. This isn't "France vs Senegal." This is "France vs a team trained in France, born in France, but choosing to play for Senegal."
Different shirt colors. Different passports. But the Senegalese players, speaking French with a Marseille accent, and the Gallic Roosters across from them, essentially grew up on the same youth training grounds.
It's a very French irony.
Even more ironic is Senegal's current situation heading into this tournament.
In January 2026, Senegal beat Morocco to win the Africa Cup of Nations final. Then—due to some internal disputes (the specifics of which aren't clear from the material, just administrative red tape)—CAF's appeals committee "temporarily" stripped Senegal of their title. Senegal took the case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
So, the "African champions" under Thiaw are actually "African champions with pending status."
But Thiaw didn't complain in the pre-match press conference. When asked about unpaid wages, lack of a contract extension, a post-AFCON final press conference clash, and visa issues preventing Senegalese fans from attending, he gave a very professional answer: "Today, the most important thing is patriotism. I am here to make my country proud."
Unpaid wages couldn't stop him. No contract extension couldn't stop him. Even having the African title "suspended"—he packed it all away into the past.
When Senegalese set their minds to something, they can be ruthless.
So when Thiaw said in the pre-match press conference, "I will incorporate some of Bruno's recipes into the tactics," you better believe him.
Bruno Metsu. The head coach of that 2002 Senegalese team.
Metsu died of cancer in 2013. Thiaw called him a "father figure."
That 1-0 was, in a way, Metsu's legacy—an African team making its World Cup debut, beating the defending champions 1-0 in the opening match, then marching to the quarterfinals. It was so crazy that every time Senegal steps onto the world stage since, they are measured against it.
After 2002, Senegal didn't qualify in 2018 and reached the Round of 16 in 2022. This time, in 2026, they don't want to stop at the group stage.
For the French, Group I's situation is more delicate. The group also includes Iraq and Norway—a West Asian spoiler and a Nordic power. France cannot afford to lose; losing would drop them into the quagmire of "calculating goal difference in the group stage."
Deschamps was asked pre-match about Bouaddi (a player who could have played for France but ultimately chose Morocco). Former French international Rothen directly criticized Deschamps' selection policy—"Why do all our own youth products end up going to our opponents?"
The French domestic media scene has been bickering for months.
M6 bought the broadcast rights for France's matches. TF1 cried foul, claiming, "I've broadcast every World Cup since 1975," and in protest, switched to broadcasting the Nations League this year instead. So, French fans tonight either watch for free on M6 or pay for beIN SPORTS. This "civil war" in the French media has been raging for months.
The referee is Alireza Faghani, an Australian, known for officiating matches as high-stakes as the AFC Champions League final. Neutral, strict, unforgiving—that's his label.
MetLife Stadium has 80,000 seats, with an estimated 5,000 French fans expected to flood in. The remaining 75,000 will be a sea of green for Senegal.
As the match whistle blows, Thiaw sits on the coaching bench, facing a replica of the match he didn't play in 24 years ago.
Will he think back to that 1-0 in Melbourne on May 31, 2002? We don't know.
But everyone knows this—
If France crashes today, 2002 won't just be an upset anymore. It will become a curse.
And if the Senegalese really make France swallow a 0-1 on June 16, 2026, how much more will Bruno Metsu be laughing from above? Probably more than he did in 2002.
After all, the lion really wants to eat the rooster.
These Senegalese were never just "here for a lucky break."