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Mbappé's Penalty Sends France into Quarter-Finals as 'Dirty Football' Beats Paraguay

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – Kylian Mbappé's second-half penalty was enough to send France into the World Cup quarter-finals as the defending champions ditched the "champagne football" to play "dirty football" and beat a combative Paraguay side 1-0 in sweltering Philadelphia heat.

In the annals of France-Paraguay encounters, this was more France 98, a 1-0 French victory in extra time, than Sweden 58, where Just Fontaine embellished his World Cup legend with a hat-trick. Les Bleus' modern-day goal machine, Mbappé, had to make do with just the one, a penalty, to draw him level again with Lionel Messi in the Golden Boot race, but one behind the great man in terms of the all-time goalscoring record.

Paraguay, meanwhile, will return home with whatever gloss they had acquired by dumping Germany out in the last 32 now lost thanks to a performance that featured elbows thrown, careless tackles, and a relentless hammering of the referee, Ilgiz Tantashev of Uzbekistan. Not that Tantashev covered himself in glory with a lenient display. While Paraguay committed 13 fouls to France's 11, they escaped without a single yellow card while their opponents received three.

Key developments:

  • France beat Paraguay 1-0 to reach World Cup quarter-finals
  • Kylian Mbappé scores from penalty in 70th minute
  • Mbappé draws level with Messi in Golden Boot race
  • Paraguay commit 13 fouls but receive no yellow cards
  • France receive three yellow cards despite fewer fouls
  • Mbappé: "We know how to play dirty football too"
  • Orlando Gill makes impressive double save from Mbappé in stoppage time
  • France to face Morocco in quarter-finals
  • Match played in 38°C (100°F) Philadelphia heat
  • Paraguay dumped Germany out in last 32

Mbappé's Message: 'We Know How to Play Dirty Football Too'

Mbappé made Paraguay's approach the focus of his post-match remarks to TV cameras. "We've shown we're not just a team that knows how to play attacking football," he said. "If we have to get our hands dirty, we will do it. They thought we'd show up in tuxedos to play, but we know how to play dirty football too. We won and we were better than them."

On this occasion, France kept the champagne football on ice. Which was probably just as well, given the temperature. As Philadelphia broiled in an Independence Day heatwave, the World Cup favourites were forced to drop a gear or two but still had too much for a Paraguay team that set out for a fight but were ultimately no more than a nuisance.

Paraguay goalkeeper Orlando Gill goes the wrong way as Kylian Mbappe keeps his cool to score from the spot
Paraguay goalkeeper Orlando Gill goes the wrong way as Kylian Mbappé keeps his cool to score from the spot. The French captain sent Gill the wrong way with a composed finish.

The Penalty That Decided It

It was only in the 55th minute that the French had their first shot on target, a long-range effort from Manu Koné that was well saved by Orlando Gill. But there was little in the way of penetration into the Paraguay area and, after a succession of long-range efforts went nowhere, Deschamps acted, removing Bradley Barcola after he wasted an opportunity on the hour, and replacing him with Désiré Doué.

It had the desired effect. Stationed on the left, Doué immediately set about taking on the Paraguay defence and now you could see the impact on the South Americans of an hour chasing the ball. In the 64th minute, Doué got the ball and went straight for the box. He beat one, he beat two and he was brought down by the third, Diego Gomez. Tantashev initially called no foul but, eventually, the video assistant referee had other ideas.

When the penalty was confirmed, and Tantashev had restored the penalty spot after Paraguayan scuffing, Mbappé sent Gill the wrong way to score. Right behind the ref's back, Velázquez dug his cleat into the grass at the penalty spot. The fates had spoken. Mbappé stepped, stopped (that used to be illegal, right?), Gill went the wrong way, and Mbappé easily slid the ball to his right.

Kylian Mbappé and teammates celebrate after their win against Paraguay
Kylian Mbappé and teammates celebrate after their win against Paraguay. France are through to the quarter-finals where they will face Morocco.

Paraguay's Frustration Boils Over

Paraguay congregated around the ref, who shouldn't have been putting up with the behaviour but was. Galarza got in Olise's face, then fell, and it was yellow on Olise – a humiliating performance from the referee. Paraguay had no business confronting the referee – they got away with everything but a billion dollars in crypto – but they did it anyway.

Paraguay react as well as you'd think after the final whistle. They had dumped Germany out in the last 32 but could not repeat the feat against France. Their performance featured elbows thrown, careless tackles, and a relentless hammering of the referee.

Paraguay goalkeeper Orlando Gill makes a double save from Mbappé
Paraguay goalkeeper Orlando Gill makes a double save from Mbappé. The impressive stop in stoppage time denied the French captain a second goal.

Gill's Heroics and Mbappé's Record

Gill denied the France captain in stoppage time with an impressive double save, which means Mbappé has only 19 goals in 19 World Cup appearances. The first was from 20 yards but thumped with menace. Saving the rebound was even better.

With a quarter-final against Morocco just five days away, he will soon have a chance to correct the record. Mbappé's 19 goals in 19 World Cup matches is a remarkable record, but he will want to add to that tally against the 2022 semi-finalists.

Philadelphia's Independence Day Spectacle

This was undoubtedly a big occasion. And on the day of the semiquincentennial anniversary of the US declaration of independence, there was no way Philadelphia would not commemorate the moment. The celebration was predictably grand, with an interpretation of the stars and stripes rendered on the pitch, formation dancing, and a performance of America the Beautiful by a boys' choir.

This being Philly, local rap superstars the Roots also performed a quick set and a member of the group bounced around in the formidable heat while also playing the French horn. Rap at 100F – 38C – is possible, it appears, but playing football is more of a challenge. A game that was already likely to end up as cat chasing mouse was made even cagier by the fact neither party was able to chase.

France dominated possession in the first half; as they returned to play after the opening, much-needed hydration break, they had 208 passes to Paraguay's 33. Those passes were almost entirely in front of the Paraguay defence, however, as France sought to let the ball do the work on their behalf.

What's Next for France

France will face Morocco in the quarter-finals – a rematch of their 2022 semi-final, which France won 2-0. Morocco have been one of the stories of the tournament, reaching the last eight after beating Canada 3-0 in the last 16.

Mbappé's message after the game was clear: France are ready for whatever challenge comes their way. "We've shown we're not just a team that knows how to play attacking football," he said. "We know how to play dirty football too."

19
Goals in 19 World Cup appearances (Mbappé)
38°C
Temperature at kick-off
208-33
First-half passes (France-Paraguay)

⚽ The Big Picture

France's quarter-final qualification was not pretty, but it was effective. In sweltering Philadelphia heat, the defending champions were forced to abandon their usual champagne football and instead play a more pragmatic, physical game against a combative Paraguay side. Kylian Mbappé's penalty was the difference, but the real story was France's willingness to get their hands dirty. "We know how to play dirty football too," Mbappé said after the match, a clear message to future opponents. Now, France face Morocco in the quarter-finals – a repeat of the 2022 semi-final. The Atlas Lions will be confident after their impressive run, but France have the quality and experience to go all the way. The question is whether they can rediscover their attacking fluency when it matters most.

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This article was last updated on July 5, 2026 at 7:46 AM
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