It took a late Jan Vertonghen own goal to separate the teams as France edged past neighbours Belgium and into the last eight at EUR0 2024.
Randal Kolo Muani and Kylian Mbappé celebrate France’s winning goal
France are through to the quarter-finals at UEFA EURO 2024 after a late Jan Vertonghen own goal decided a tense last-16 tie against neighbours Belgium in Düsseldorf.
Key moments
24′: Maignan stops De Bruyne free-kick with feet
34′: Thuram heads wide from Koundé cross
45+1′: Tchouameni fires loose ball over
49′: Casteels parries deflected Tchouameni strike
51′: Thuram nods too high from close range
54′: Mbappé directs shot over crossbar
71′: Maignan keeps out fierce Lukaku effort
74′: Saliba sends attempt just wide
83′: Maignan repels De Bruyne drive
85′: Vertonghen diverts Kolo Muani shot into own net
Match in brief: France edge tight round of 16 derby
Mike Maignan keeps out a Kevin De Bruyne free-kick
As befitting two teams that have met in recent FIFA World Cup and UEFA Nations League semi-finals, France and Belgium began this encounter showing plenty of mutual respect. That translated into careful early probing, with Les Bleus more busily on the offensive as they tried to unpick their opponents’ five-man defence.
The first real frisson came at the other end, however. Belgium had fallen into a pattern of waiting for counters, but it was from a dead ball that they nearly took the lead. Kevin De Bruyne arced a free-kick into the France box that evaded everyone and forced Mike Maignan – seeing the ball late – to scramble a save with his feet.
Vivo Player of the Match: Jules Koundé (France)
Very strong defensively and very helpful in attacking areas. He put in dangerous crosses and proved very good defensively in his one-on-ones against Jérémy Doku.
That presaged a positive spell from the Red Devils, who were nonetheless fortunate to end the first half level, Marcus Thuram heading narrowly wide from a Jules Koundé cross before Aurélien Tchouameni blazed over. Tchouameni had the first bite after the interval too, his shot from the edge of the area deflected by Wout Faes and batted away by Koen Casteels.
France were building pressure, but their aim was largely askew. Thuram, Tchouameni and Kylian Mbappé all sent efforts over and William Saliba screwed a shot wide, after Romelu Lukaku had at least found the target for Belgium. The Roma forward tested Maignan with a fierce strike, and the France keeper was likewise equal to a De Bruyne drive.
The Red Devils looked like they might make France pay for their spurned chances – until the breakthrough finally came. Substitute Randal Kolo Muani was the instigator, turning in the area and beating Casteels with a shot that took a crucial deflection off Jan Vertonghen. Tough on Belgium, perhaps, but France had long threatened to strike and they can now look forward to the quarter-finals.
Alex Clementson, France reporter
A tussle between two European footballing behemoths. It was tense, cagey and took a while to break down a resolute Belgian back line, but the wait was all worth it. A microcosm of their EURO 2024 campaign to date, but the Deschamps machine keeps rolling on. This is a side that lives and breathes success, and there’s a steely confidence in their ability to find a way when needed. On they go.
David D’Hondt, Belgium reporter
In a difficult game, ultimately France had more opportunities than Belgium and won the game as a result. The Red Devils gave it all they had, but they just couldn’t carve out the opportunities for Lukaku and company that they would have wanted. Their EURO 2024 journey ends here.
Reaction
Belgium pay close attention to Antoine Griezmann
Didier Deschamps, France coach: “We made a lot of progress and our opponents were obviously cautious, even if they’re an attacking team on paper. We did everything we could to create chances, and we created more than them, but we played the waiting game and didn’t fall into their trap. I liked that, but obviously you can’t win through possession alone. I’d like us to create more chances.”
Jules Koundé, Vivo Player of the Match: “For me, this was our best performance of the competition. We created a lot of chances, we played a comprehensive game, and the goal at the end made sure all our efforts were worth it.”
Adrien Rabiot, France midfielder: “I feel joy of course. We’re happy to have qualified for the quarter-finals. It wasn’t an easy game, against a good Belgian side, but we’re ready for any type of challenge. Obviously, there’s a lot of satisfaction in scoring in the final minutes. We played well, we pushed, we created chances without managing to convert them. We pushed to win, so I think it’s deserved.”
Domenico Tedesco, Belgium coach: “It’s difficult to go into detail tonight. We saw France had trouble defending behind their lines. They were really high. We wanted to play with three forwards to attack the spaces in behind. That was the main idea. In defence, we wanted to take out their wingers and this worked well. To think that Lukaku goes home without a goal [in the tournament] after how he performed… it’s a pity.”
Key stats
Kylian Mbappé (left) and Kevin De Bruyne share a moment
- France have now reached at least the quarter-finals in six of the last seven major tournaments, three times at a UEFA EURO and three times in the FIFA World Cup.
- Les Bleus have won all five of their matches against Belgium at major tournaments.
- Overall, France have won 27 of their 76 games against Belgium, losing 30 and drawing 19.
- Excluding penalty shoot-outs, France have lost only one of their last 15 EURO matches (W8 D6).
- France’s three goals at EURO 2024 include two own goals and an Mbappé penalty.
- N’Golo Kanté has contested the most games in EURO history without ever finishing on the losing side (W7 D5).
- Belgium have won just two of their last 14 meetings with France (D4 L8).
- This was only Belgium’s second defeat in their last 18 internationals (W11 D6).
- The Red Devils have still never played extra time in a EURO match.
Line-ups
France line up for action in Düsseldorf
France: Maignan; Koundé, Upamecano, Saliba, Hernández, Tchouameni, Kanté, Rabiot; Thuram (Kolo Muani 62), Griezmann, Mbappé
Belgium: Casteels; Castagne (De Ketelaere 88), Faes, Vertonghen, Theate; Openda (Mangala 64), Onana, Carrasco (Lukébakio 88); De Bruyne, Lukaku, Doku