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The French Connection

A seagull following French football's sardine trawler


James Horncastle

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Has Domenech stumbled upon a World Cup solution for France?


Saturday 29 May 2010 10:38

Watching France train in the alpine resort of Tignes over the last week was a little like discovering a sequel to `90s classic Cool Runnings. At times it was farcical, partly because seeing a group of footballers on ski lifts and then crashing buggies just weeks before the World Cup was refreshingly reckless.

Then there was Raymond Domenech who had been cast in place of the late John Candy, leaving no one under the impression that this French team, like a group of Jamaican bobsledders, would actually win anything this summer.

A survey conducted by French newspaper L’Équipe, which was spread over nine different countries, showed that only three per cent of respondents thought Les Bleus would win the World Cup. And if that wasn’t bad enough, France finished second behind Diego Maradona’s Argentina in a poll of the least appreciated teams at this summer’s finals in South Africa.   

Yet it’s clear that despite the acrimony and recrimination that surrounded their qualification for the World Cup and March’s humiliating defeat to Spain, confidence is high in the French camp. “We practically have the best players in the world at every position,” Manchester United’s Patrice Evra explained. “That does not make us the best team in the world, not yet anyway, and we have to work to become that but we’re going to the World Cup to win.”


"No, you can't be in my bobsleigh team - you're a chuffing Libra!"

Surprisingly, credit for the creation of that mentality should go to Domenech. When the players arrived in Tignes, he sat them down for dinner and apparently said: “You must like each other off the pitch, otherwise you won’t like each other on it and you’ll never succeed in matches. Learn to appreciate each other. Discover each other. Be united.”

After emerging from a group hug, Domenech could walk away - slipped disc permitting - with the confidence that he had learned from the Euro 2008 debacle when divisions within the squad flared up and contrived to wreck their campaign. Rebellious types like Samir Nasri, who got on William Gallas’s nerves when he ‘disrespected’ Thierry Henry by taking his place on the team bus in Switzerland two years ago, were left at home.

Bro-mance was the order of the day in Tignes. So much so that Henry, France’s captain, even accepted a place on the bench for Wednesday’s warm-up match against Costa Rica in Lens. “No matter who plays, this team has shown that it is working to have a soul,” Henry smiled, no doubt channeling Winston from Cool Runnings. There would be no need for Domenech to “get his gun” as he’d promised to do in April should the players not be clever enough to forget their egos.

Of course, France’s team-building exercises - like cycling, shooting and tennis - all had a secondary purpose: they were there to take the players’ minds off the altitude, although Lyon goalkeeper Hugo Lloris did note that playing in such conditions made the new Jabulani ball move in a ‘catastrophic’ fashion.

Training at 9,800 feet also triggered an illness in Lassana Diarra, which led doctors to diagnose him with ‘asthenic syndrome secondary to a sickle-cell anemia’, ruling him out of the World Cup, but posing no risk to his career.


Insert 'on yer bike' pun here...

Ironically though Diarra’s misfortune may actually help France, as it forced Domenech into a tactical rethink, persuading him to shelve the rigid 4-2-3-1 that Les Bleus have used in each of the last six seasons in favour of a more fluid and attacking 4-3-3. “It’s an interesting option that gives us more guarantees offensively, but more fragility in defence.”

Instead of having two holding midfield players, Domenech retained Jérémy Toulalan just in front of the defence but had Yoann Gourcuff and Florent Malouda patrolling the flanks. His next move was to play Ribéry in his preferred position on the left-hand side of the attack, placing Nicola Anelka in the centre and Sidney Govou on the right of a three-pronged attack.

Bixente Lizarazu, a member of France’s World Cup and European Championship winning sides, had his reservations. “The 4-2-3-1 is an imperfect book that the players know well and can correct. The 4-3-3 is a new book whose first page is yet to be written.” And Bixente looked as if he would be proven right when Costa Rica took the lead through Carlos Hernández’s long rang shot in the eleventh minute, which Steve Mandanda misjudged, perhaps because of the ball’s changing trajectory. Sitting on the bench, Lloris probably thought: “I told you so.”

But France, captained by Evra, were dominating, displaying an enthusiasm and attacking verve that their players so often show for their clubs, but rarely for their country under Domenech. The triangle of Evra, Malouda and Ribéry on the left-hand side looked sharp and brimmed with intent, while Gourcuff, playing slightly deeper than at Bordeaux offered technical quality and a threat from distance.

France equalised after 22 minutes thanks to a shot from Ribéry, which deflected in off Douglas Sequeira, restoring a smidgen of pride to a team that deserved a break. However, the night ultimately belonged to Mathieu Valbuena - Domenech’s wildcard - who came on and became the fifth player to score on his debut for France under Ray, hitting a fine winner in the 83rd minute off a pass from Abou Diaby who also impressed when introduced in place of Malouda.

When the final whistle went, fans leaving the Félix-Bollaert were smiling for once. But then again France have never lost in Lens and with all due respect it was only Costa Rica. Domenech’s dabbling with a 4-3-3 is a work in progress, but a success nonetheless.

Occasionally, the team looked split in two between five attackers and five defenders, but Raynald Denoueix, the man who brought through Didier Deschamps, Marcel Desailly and Claude Makélélé at Nantes, still felt compelled to say: “It was delicious. I saw a super match of football.”  

Sunday’s match against Tunisia will tell us more about whether France have struck upon the magic formula just in time for the World Cup.

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About James Horncastle

European Football Writer, Fox Soccer and FourFourTwo Columnist, Guest Podder on Guardian Football Weekly, contributor to The Blizzard, Champions, WSC and more

Comments

  May 29, 2010 12:33

Codorniu said:

France beat Costa Rica and now have a change at the world cup? Give me a break.

When is the last time they beat quality opposition? Horrible at Euro's, horrible at qualifying.

  May 29, 2010 13:34

Basil Boli said:

There is no doubting the strength France have within their squad. Absolutely no doubt. The problem have always been whether Domenech could get the most out of that potential. So far he has failed, playing stodgy football like the writer acknowledges, sticking with a 4-2-3-1 for six years. But now, that attacking 4-3-3 looks to have unlocked that potential. I know it's only Costa Rica, but France shouldn't be written off.

  May 29, 2010 14:30

The Brain said:

The problem with France is they are too functional and arguably too many players one-dimensional in forward positions.

So this change, with players like Malouda and Ribery linking takes advantages of their strengths but is it going to last? Where does Henry fit as he is yet to play centre-forward much this season?

Diaby and Valbuena look good options, although not exactly ground breaking.

  May 30, 2010 14:16

Yorugua said:

The Problem with France is that a player like Zidane comes around every 50 years or so, attempting to justify this collection of players as a continuation of the squads Zidane played is a bit too much to ask. Ribery still hasn't shown he can be "that guy" at any level, he missed out on the Champions League Final and was Robin to Zidane's Batman in 2006. It's time for Ribery to step up and take the mantle, if he can't this team isn't going anywhere cuz Henry is finished as a player, he shouldn't even be on this squad. Anelka is a EURO 2000 veteran, playing him in this World Cup is more desperate than Maradona's capping of Martin Palermo.

  May 31, 2010 12:17

Aureliano said:

Indeed 4-3-3 is a much more fluent and apparently attractive option. However, I agree with Lizarazu. It's unknown. With 4-3-2-1, players are kind of accustomed. It would be interesting to see how effective Gourcouff will be in his newer deeper position when he turns up against defensively stronger sides like Brazil (really??) or Germany.

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