
Kylian Mbappé gave France the statement result they needed on Sunday night in Philadelphia, scoring twice and driving a 3-0 win over Iraq at Lincoln Financial Field. Ousmane Dembélé capped the performance with a third goal in the 66th minute before being subbed off moments later. France dominated from the opening exchanges, finishing with 19 total shots to Iraq’s four, and never looked threatened after taking the lead inside 15 minutes.
Key Moments
- 6′, Amir Al-Ammari picked up a yellow card for a foul, an early sign that Iraq would struggle to contain France’s front line without conceding cheap set pieces.
- 14′, Mbappé opened the scoring with a normal goal to put France ahead, converting early and setting the tone for what became a controlled evening for Deschamps’ side.
- 26′, Iraq made their first substitution, withdrawing Aymen Hussein, a sign that coach Graham Arnold was reacting to problems up front rather than choosing to wait.
- 28′, A VAR check was triggered involving Ali Al-Hamadi, though no goal or red card resulted from the review.
- 54′, Mbappé doubled France’s lead with his second goal of the match, killing the contest early in the second half and effectively ending Iraq’s hope of a comeback.
- 66′, Dembélé made it 3-0 with a normal goal, capping a strong individual performance before being substituted off two minutes later as Deschamps managed his squad.
Tactical Breakdown
France set up in a 4-2-3-1 under Didier Deschamps and controlled the match with 55% possession, generating 19 shots in total, five of which were on target. Iraq’s goalkeeper Ahmed Basil made two saves but was largely a spectator as France’s front four consistently found pockets of space. The early goal settled any nerves, and France’s double pivot of Manu Koné and Adrien Rabiot gave them the platform to push wide and central runners forward without much defensive exposure.
The match’s second phase was decided quickly after the interval. Mbappé’s 54th-minute goal, just nine minutes into the second half, came before Iraq could reset tactically after their double substitution at the hour mark. By the time Dembélé added the third in the 66th minute, Deschamps was already planning rotations, withdrawing Dembélé himself, Jules Koundé, and eventually Mbappé in the 91st minute to protect his key players ahead of the next group fixture.
Iraq, set up in a 4-1-4-1 by Graham Arnold, had no answer for France’s pace on the flanks. They generated just four total shots, none of which troubled Mike Maignan, who was not required to make a single save all match. The early yellow card for Al-Ammari at the six-minute mark was emblematic of Iraq’s evening: reactive, stretched, and ultimately unable to impose any pressure in the final third.
Player Ratings
Match Context
Verdict
France move into their next group fixture having established goal difference and momentum. The group they find themselves tracking features Mexico at the top on six points after two wins, meaning France will need a strong result in their next outing to position themselves favorably for qualification. Iraq, meanwhile, face serious pressure to produce something from their remaining match after a performance that offered little cause for optimism.
