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regular-article-logo Saturday, 23 November 2024

Nations League: Belgium allow France to come back

This was another night of top quality football in a competition that was in danger of being forgotten amid the post-Covid calendar crush

Reuters Turin Published 09.10.21, 12:49 AM
Theo Hernandez scores France’s third goal in Turin on Thursday.

Theo Hernandez scores France’s third goal in Turin on Thursday. Getty Images

France recovered from two goals down to beat Belgium 3-2 in a thrilling Nations League semi-final on Thursday with a last-minute strike from Theo Hernandez securing a place in Sunday’s showpiece match against Spain.

In a crazy end to the game, Belgium thought they had won the pulsating contest minutes earlier but Romelu Lukaku’s late effort was ruled out for offside by VAR.

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After Spain’s impressive and inspiring victory over European champions Italy on Wednesday, this was another night of top quality football in a competition that was in danger of being forgotten amid the post-Covid calendar crush.

The idea of the Nations League was to turn friendlies with nothing at stake into games that mattered — delivering football worth watching for the fans in the stadium and at home — and the goals have certainly been met this week.

Both sides came out with positive intent and it was clear from the outset with both sides playing attacking 3-4-3 formations that there was no chance of this being a cagey chess match.

“It’s a new system, we need time,” said France coach Didier Deschamps, who has tried the formation in the past, most noticeably in the painful loss to the Swiss in Euro 2020.

Yannick Carrasco fired Belgium ahead in the 37th minute, cutting in front from the left flank and surprising Hugo Lloris, firing past the wrong-footed French goalkeeper at the near post.

Three minutes later Lukaku doubled the lead with a superbly taken goal, turning sharply to lose his marker Lucas Hernandez and blasting a thunderous drive past Lloris from a tight angle.

The 2-0 scoreline at the interval was somewhat harsh on France who had played attractive football, Kylian Mbappe and Karim Benzema linking up well with Antoine Griezmann in the attack.

It was Benzema who brought France back into the game in the 62nd minute, brilliantly twisting and turning to find space to drill home a shot from the edge of the box after excellent work from Mbappe.

Mbappe equaliser

Mbappe, who had not scored in his last six internationals, equalised with a penalty after German referee Daniel Siebert went to the pitchside monitor before ruling that Youri Tielemans had caught Griezmann’s foot as he challenged him.

France were on top and searching for the winner but three minutes from the end of normal time Lukaku looked to have won it for Belgium, steering home a cross from Carrasco, but the goal was ruled out by VAR for offside.

Paul Pogba hit the top of the post with a curling free-kick before Les Bleus grabbed victory with a 90th-minute strike.

Mbappe and Griezmann lined up down the right, the overlapping Benjamin Pavard fired in a low cross which an off-balance Toby Alderweireld could only get a slight touch on, diverting the ball to Hernandez who beat keeper Thibaut Courtois with a pinpoint low drive.

“We were unlucky in the first half. We sat back a little too much,” Deschamps said.

“They had a good period for 20 minutes but after that we were not in danger and had a lot of chances. The result shows the character of the team. We were here to play the final and here we are,” he added.

Another failure

It was more disappointment, though, for Belgium’s “golden generation” whose trophyless history now begins to look cursed.

Martinez, whose side have struggled to live up to their billing as contenders in recent tournaments, felt the weight of expectation had taken its toll on the world’s top-ranked team.

“It is the responsibility we feel to our fans and the way this generation wants to bring silverware in such a desperate manner,” he said.

“All of a sudden it became a game that we wanted to finish. At that point we stopped playing. If anything, it is the responsibility we feel to our fans and the way this generation wants to bring silverware in such a desperate manner.”

“What you have to upload is the commitment and desire of wanting to be there. We are in the right phases of the competitions,” he said.

“Now it is making sure we learn. We all feel as a nation that we are all together hurting, but 12 months from now we have a major tournament.

“It is a good moment for us to show resilience, that we want to grow even through this cruel experience,” Martinez added.

“In the second half, we were a little too emotional — maybe we were thinking a little too much about the final, about qualifying. We didn’t do what we had to do. We let France come back”.

They did and Mbappe and company did not need a second invitation.

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