THIS all-European fixture pits one of the tournament favourites against a side that have been no stranger to World Cup runs, but are now a heavy underdog.
Still, it has been a turbulent tournament so far, and potentially the greatest World Cup knockout stage upset was recorded on Monday with Germany’s elimination.
France were one of only three teams – alongside cohosts Mexico and reigning champions Argentina, to maintain a 100 percent record in the group stage. Les Blues won all of their group matches at a major tournament for the first time since the 1998 World Cup, when they won the trophy on home soil.
France topped Group I, beating Senegal 3-1 in the first game and Iraq 3-0 in the second. The French side wrapped up its group campaign with a 4-1 thrashing of Norway.
Sweden advanced as one of the eight best third-placed sides, finishing with four points in Group F, behind the Netherlands and Japan. Back at the World Cup after missing the 2022 edition, Sweden started their tournament with a 5-1 thrashing of Tunisia.
But their campaign stuttered thereafter: Five days later, they suffered a brutal 5-1 defeat to the Dutch and then drew 1-1 with Japan in the final match day on June 25.
France have had a near-perfect World Cup campaign so far winning all three of their group-stage fixtures, scoring 10 while conceding just twice.
Beginning with a 3-1 win against Senegal, Didier Deschamps’ men then overcame Iraq 3-0 before Norway were dispatched 4-1 in their final outing.
Kylian Mbappe, unsurprisingly, has been their star attraction with four goals but their strength in depth is evident with Ousmane Dembele hitting a hat-trick against the Norwegians to go level on four goals with his team-mate.
ANALYSIS:
Didier Deschamps makes four changes to the France starting XI that beat Norway 4-1 in their final group match.
Lucas Digne, Adrien Rabiot, William Saliba, and Bradley Barcola all come in, with Manu Kone, Maxence Lacroix, Desire Doue, and Theo Hernandez dropping to the bench.
Kylian Mbappe captains the side as he looks to add to his 16 World Cup goals.
Sweden boss Graham Potter makes two alterations to the side that drew 1-1 with Japan to secure a place in the knockout stages.
Daniel Svensson and Lucas Bergvall come in, with Alexander Bernhardsson taking a place on the bench and Isak Hien unavailable through injury.
France will dominate the ball and attack the spaces Sweden leave. With Kylian Mbappe stretching the back line, Ousmane Dembele and Michael Olise combining and the full-backs joining, they create overloads all over the pitch. The double pivot of Adrien Rabiot and Aurelien Tchouameni guards against counters. If there is a knock on France, it is a slow first half, but the quality eventually tells.
Sweden’s plan has to be discipline first. Stay compact, deny France the spaces in behind, and hope Viktor Gyokeres and Alexander Isak can make the few chances count. The problem is that the defense has looked vulnerable, they are missing Isak Hien, and their shot volume late in lost games has flattered them. Against this France, mistakes get punished.
There is not much reason to overthink this one. France are better in every area except maybe the two center forwards, and even there it is close. Sweden can score, which is why a clean sheet is not a lock, but France should have far too much. The pattern worth noting is that France can start slow before pulling away.
The one matchup that gives Sweden a chance is Viktor Gyokeres and Alexander Isak against William Saliba and Dayot Upamecano. It is a terrific test, two in-form strikers against arguably the best young center-back pairing in the tournament. If Saliba is rested or limited, that battle tilts, which is why his status matters.
PREDICTIONS:
Sadiq’s Prediction: France’s superior structure and depth should tell in a game they are expected to dominate from possession.
Didier Deschamps’ side will control midfield through the double pivot of Adrien Rabiot and Aurélien Tchouaméni, allowing France to dictate tempo and shut down transitions. With Kylian Mbappé stretching Sweden’s back line and Ousmane Dembélé plus Michael Olise operating in wide overloads, Sweden’s compact block will eventually be stretched.
Sweden’s biggest issue is defensive vulnerability, especially with Isak Hien unavailable, and against elite movement, their resistance tends to drop after sustained pressure. France, despite sometimes starting slowly, usually improve as the game opens up.
A professional, low-risk France win with control rather than chaos.
My Prediction: France 3-1 Sweden
Peter’s Prediction: Sweden may hold firm early, but France’s attacking depth should overwhelm them after the break.
Graham Potter’s side will sit deep and rely on Viktor Gyökeres and Alexander Isak to punish any rare French defensive lapses. However, the absence of defensive stability and limited attacking volume against top opposition makes sustained pressure unlikely.
France’s pattern of slow starts could give Sweden brief hope, but once Mbappé finds space between the lines and Bradley Barcola adds direct running, Sweden’s defensive shape tends to collapse.
The key mismatch remains France’s wide overloads versus Sweden’s full-back isolation, which becomes decisive over 90 minutes.
My Prediction: France 4-1 Sweden
Gbenga’s Prediction: This is the scenario where Sweden’s discipline and efficiency in transition briefly neutralise France’s dominance.
Sweden will prioritise compactness, denying central spaces and forcing France into wide circulation. If Gyökeres or Isak convert one of the few counter chances, Sweden can frustrate France’s rhythm.
France will still control possession through Rabiot and Tchouaméni, but their known issue of slow starts could again limit first-half output. Sweden’s ability to stay organized, combined with France occasionally lacking early urgency, opens the door for a draw.
However, Sweden must remain almost perfect defensively, one lapse against Mbappé’s pace is usually enough to undo them.
My Prediction: France 2-2 Sweden
Gloria’s Prediction: Sweden’s best chance lies in exploiting isolated moments against France’s high line, especially through Gyökeres vs Saliba/Upamecano.
That duel is the game’s key tactical battleground: power and direct running versus elite recovery defending. If Sweden break once, they can make it competitive.
However, France’s depth and attacking rotations usually tilt tight matches. With Mbappé’s finishing record (16 World Cup goals) and support from Dembélé and Olise, France have multiple ways to break down structured defenses.
Sweden may stay in the game deep into the second half, but France’s superior quality in decisive moments likely edges it.
My Prediction: France 3-1 Sweden
Previous Match Recap
Haaland Scores Late Winner As Norway Knock Out Côte d’Ivoire From World Cup
Erling Haaland scored a late winner as Norway set up a last-16 showdown with Brazil at the World Cup after taming the Côte d’Ivoire 2-1 in Texas on Tuesday.
The Manchester City striker prodded in from close range, the ball dribbling in on 86 minutes for his fifth goal of the tournament.
It was the first time that Norway had won a knockout game in the history of the competition.
After an even first half that was slow to get going, Antonio Nusa fired Norway into the lead six minutes before the break with one of the goals of the tournament.
Manchester United’s Amad Diallo was sent on for the Côte d’Ivoire after an hour and was immediately in the thick of it, stopping a certain second Norway goal and then grabbing a terrific equaliser on 74 minutes.
With extra time looming, predator supreme Haaland got on the end of a cross by Patrick Berg to make some Norwegian history.
They face five-time champions Brazil on Sunday in New Jersey with the quarter-finals at stake.
A match between two physical teams was tepid to begin with at the impressive air-conditioned home of the Dallas Cowboys.
Côte d’Ivoire had a sight of goal after 20 minutes, defender Ghislain Konan bursting into the Norway box from the left but finding the side netting.
The Côte d’Ivoire players and fans were irate just before the drinks break when the livewire Yan Diomande was brought down on the break just inside his own half.
Referee Jesus Valenzuela surprisingly did not even book defender David Moller Wolfe.
The 19-year-old winger Diomande, who appears set to join European champions Paris Saint-Germain from RB Leipzig, was growing into the game.
The African side, one of the youngest at the tournament, were on top and particularly threatening down Diomande’s left-hand side of the pitch.
Haaland had little to feed on but might have done better with a tame header that bounced into the hands of goalkeeper Yahia Fofana.
Then came a moment of genuine class as Nusa, fed by captain Martin Odegaard, cut inside and bent the ball wonderfully into the top corner.
Odegaard put his hands on his head in disbelief at the strike by the 21-year-old, Diomande’s Leipzig team-mate.
Stale Solbakken’s Norway finished the first half on the hunt for a second and Haaland was denied by a last-gasp block by Ibrahim Sangare, who celebrated as if scoring a goal.
The Côte d’Ivoire, into the knockout rounds for the first time, won their 10th corner to start the second half.
Nicolas Pepe was denied by the legs of Norway stopper Orjan Nyland as the Côte d’Ivoire piled on the pressure.
Norway, runners-up to France in the group stage, were inches away from a second when Diallo blocked the ball on the goal line following a corner.
The Norway fans, sensing the next round was close, began their now-famous rowing in the stands.
Almost as soon as they stopped, Diallo danced into the box past two challenges for a spectacular leveller.
Then up popped Haaland to break Ivorian hearts, with goalkeeper Nyland pulling off a flying stop from Diallo’s well-struck free kick at the death to send Norway through.

