Paraguay tried to strip France of their identity by replacing football with friction. Instead, they discovered that champions can roll up their sleeves withoutParaguay tried to strip France of their identity by replacing football with friction. Instead, they discovered that champions can roll up their sleeves without

Mbappe’s tuxedo theory

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The night’s defining image wasn’t a goal. It was the battle for emotional control. (AFP pic)

PETALING JAYA: Paraguay’s greatest achievement wasn’t making France play badly. It was making France stop looking like France.

That was the real contest hidden beneath the 1-0 scoreline in Philadelphia. France eventually reached another World Cup quarter-final, but the more revealing story lay in the uncomfortable hour before Kylian Mbappe’s penalty settled matters.

Paraguay had little interest in matching France pass for pass or chance for chance. Instead, they set out to dismantle rhythm itself, slowing the game until every attack became an argument and every decision a negotiation.

It worked. France dominated possession without dominating the game.

They completed more than 200 passes before Paraguay had managed 40, yet goalkeeper Orlando Gill remained largely unemployed because possession, stripped of tempo and imagination, becomes little more than accounting.

Afterwards, Mbappe produced the line that explained everything.

“They thought we’d turn up in tuxedos,” he said. “But we know how to play the dirty game too.”

It sounded like a throwaway remark. It wasn’t. It was the evening’s central thesis.

The evolution of the dark arts

Paraguay deserve credit before criticism.

Their defensive organisation was disciplined, compact and intelligent. Gustavo Alfaro’s players defended with conviction, closed passing lanes and frustrated one of the tournament’s most gifted attacking sides for more than an hour.

Had they confined themselves to that, this would have been remembered as a courageous defensive display.

Instead, they chose to decorate it. Not with violence, but with the subtler tricks that have evolved in football’s VAR age.

When football finally returned, France needed only one moment of clarity, with Kylian Mbappe calmly converting the decisive penalty. (EPA Images pic)

The penalty spot was quietly disturbed before Mbappe’s kick. Dayot Upamecano absorbed an elbow that somehow escaped meaningful sanction.

Jules Kounde took a hand to the face. Julio Enciso made an evening of inviting fouls, while every interruption seemed designed less to win possession than to chip away at France’s composure.

These were not the crude excesses of another era. Modern football has forced the dark arts to become more sophisticated.

The objective is no longer to escape the referee’s attention altogether; it is to remain just beneath VAR’s threshold, where irritation flourishes but punishment rarely follows.

That is why the officiating became almost as significant as the football. Paraguay committed 13 fouls, pushed the boundaries throughout the contest and somehow completed the match without a single yellow card, while France collected three bookings from 11 fouls.

The imbalance deepened the frustration and encouraged the very behaviour the referee seemed unable to control.

Paraguay did not merely defend space. They defended emotional territory.

The identity test

The temptation in matches like these is to conclude that France simply learned to play dirty.

That would miss the point. There were moments when tempers threatened to boil over. Andres Cubas’ challenge on Adrien Rabiot sparked another confrontation involving Ousmane Dembele.

Mbappe himself flirted with retaliation after repeated fouls, and the match often felt closer to a running dispute than a contest between two football teams.

Yet there is an important difference between responding to provocation and surrendering to it. France edged towards the line without crossing it.

Mbappe’s post-match comments captured that distinction better than any tactical analysis could.

“If we have to get our hands dirty,” he said, “”We’ve no problem with that.”

Notice what he did not say.

He did not claim France had become Paraguay. He claimed they had survived Paraguay.

That difference matters because elite teams are tested not only by opponents who play better football, but by opponents who try to prevent football from breaking out at all.

Paraguay succeeded in dragging France into unfamiliar surroundings, yet they never quite persuaded them to abandon the qualities that made them favourites in the first place.

When Didier Deschamps introduced Desire Doue, France rediscovered themselves. His direct running forced Diego Gomez into the challenge that VAR could no longer ignore, and Mbappe converted the penalty with the calm of a player who now has 19 World Cup goals, one behind Lionel Messi’s all-time tournament record.

The decisive moment arrived not through chaos, but through football.

A familiar road, a different lesson

There was another reminder hidden inside this awkward, ill-tempered evening.

The last time France met Paraguay in a World Cup knockout match, Laurent Blanc’s golden goal settled a similarly tense last-16 tie on home soil in 1998. Two weeks later, midfielder Didier Deschamps lifted the trophy as captain.

Didier Deschamps, who lifted the World Cup in 1998, watched another chapter against Paraguay unfold – this one won by his charges through patience rather than brilliance (AFP pic)

Twenty-eight years on, Deschamps continues the journey from the technical area, hoping history proves just as accommodating.

Whether it does or not, France leave Philadelphia with something more valuable than another clean sheet.

They leave with a better understanding of themselves.

Paraguay succeeded in slowing them, frustrating them and, for long periods, making them look unlike the exhilarating side that had captivated this tournament. That was no small achievement.

But identity is not measured by how you behave when everything comes naturally. It is measured by what survives when somebody spends 90 minutes trying to take it away.

Paraguay almost succeeded in making France forget who they were.

Champions, however, are rarely defined by the football they play on their best days. More often, they reveal themselves on nights when the tuxedos stay in the dressing room, the overalls come out, and elegance gives way to honest labour without ever surrendering the values beneath it.

That is why France’s victory was not the penalty that sent them into the quarter-finals. It was leaving with their identity intact.

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