FIFA World Cup 2026: England Beat France 6-4 in Historic 10-Goal Thriller
England claimed third place at the FIFA World Cup 2026 by defeating France 6-4 in an unforgettable ten-goal bronze final thriller at Miami Stadium. Bukayo Saka stole the show with a sensational hat-trick, while Kylian Mbappé made history on the other side by becoming the tournament’s all-time top scorer.

Table of Contents
Match Summary
| Metric | France | England |
|---|---|---|
| Final Score | 4 | 6 |
| First-Half Score | 0 | 4 |
| Second-Half Score | 4 | 2 |
| Possession (%) | 45% | 55% |
| Shots (On Target) | 18 (9) | 18 (10) |
| Passing Accuracy | 92% | 92% |
The Historic Ten-Goal Narrative
The match will go down as arguably the greatest third-place playoff in FIFA World Cup history. Entering the bronze final after agonizing semi-final exits—England falling late to Argentina and France neutralized by Spain—both teams were eager to exit on a high. What resulted was a game of two vastly contrasting halves, tactical overhaul, and individual records.
First Half: Clinical England Blithes Les Bleus
Thomas Tuchel started the match with key figures Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham resting on the bench, handing the captaincy and midfield reins to Declan Rice. The tactical layout reaped instant rewards. In the 3rd minute, Desire Doue misplaced a pass, allowing Rice to seize possession, charge down the pitch, and curl a stunning long-range strike past Mike Maignan.
England’s high press completely suffocated a disoriented French backline. After a Bukayo Saka strike was ruled out for offside, the Three Lions struck again. In the 18th minute, Rice turned provider, swinging a dangerous corner into the penalty area where Ezri Konsa rose above the defense to nod home his second ever international goal.
As France struggled to generate an attacking rhythm, England exposed their wide-open defensive shapes with rapid counter-attacks. In the 37th minute, Marcus Rashford slid an unselfish pass across the face of the box to Saka, who cleanly tapped it into an empty net to make it 3-0. Just before the break, Saka struck again, unleashing a brilliant strike from the edge of the penalty box in the first minute of stoppage time. England marched into the tunnel with a staggering 4-0 lead, marking the first time in World Cup history that France had conceded four goals in a single half.
Second Half: The French Resurrection
Facing what threatened to be their worst-ever tournament defeat, departing French manager Didier Deschamps—managing his 185th and final match after 14 years at the helm—acted aggressively. He made four sweeping tactical substitutions at halftime, introducing Dayot Upamecano, Lucas Digne, Ousmane Dembélé, and Bradley Barcola to shift the team’s energy.
The tactical gamble transformed the match instantly. In the 48th minute, Michael Olise threaded a precise pass to Kylian Mbappé, who clinical finished past second-choice England goalkeeper Dean Henderson. Just six minutes later, the substitute Barcola burst past Jarell Quansah and fired a low effort into the net, trimming the deficit to 4-2.
England appeared completely rattled as France pushed higher, swarming the midfield. In the 66th minute, Mbappé combined beautifully with Olise on the edge of the area and buried his second goal of the night. With that goal, Mbappé reached 10 goals for the 2026 tournament and a career total of 22 World Cup goals, officially surpassing Argentina’s Lionel Messi to become the standalone top scorer in World Cup history. Concurrently, Olise’s assist marked his seventh of the tournament, breaking Pelé’s 1970 record for the most assists in a single World Cup.
World Cup All-Time Top Scorers:
1. Kylian Mbappé (France) - 22 Goals
2. Lionel Messi (Argentina) - 21 Goals
Stoppage Time Drama
With the score at 4-3 and England reeling, Tuchel brought Jude Bellingham and Elliot Anderson off the bench to re-establish control. In the 86th minute, English right-back Djed Spence embarked on a surging run into the penalty box and was tripped by Malo Gusto, prompting the referee to award a penalty. Bellingham handed the ball to Saka, who coolly dispatched the spot-kick past Maignan to complete his hat-trick and put England ahead 5-3.
Yet, France refused to capitulate. Six minutes into stoppage time, Upamecano intercepted a loose pass from Rice and fed Ousmane Dembélé, who skipped past Trevoh Chalobah to blast home a left-footed strike, making it 5-4.
With France throwing everyone forward in search of an equalizer, England produced one final counter-punch. In the 98th minute, Jude Bellingham picked up the ball near the halfway line, danced past three French defenders inside the box, threw multiple body dummies, and slotted the ball into the corner. It was Bellingham’s seventh goal of the tournament, making him the first English player to score seven goals in a single World Cup edition. The final whistle blew immediately after, cementing a wild 6-4 victory for England.
Match Reactions
England Camp
- Thomas Tuchel (Manager): “The first half was pure dreamland, maybe the most clinical football we have played all tournament. We suffered immensely in the second half under their tactical changes, but the character to counter-punch and secure the bronze medal shows the growth of this team. It takes away some of the bitter taste from the semifinal.”
- Bukayo Saka: “We won the first half, they won the second, and thankfully we found the goals at the end to edge it. When the penalty was given, Jude told me right away to take it and secure the hat-trick. It’s an honour to join the short list of English players with a World Cup hat-trick.”
France Camp
- Didier Deschamps (Manager): “Our start was shambolic and uncharacteristic, but I am proud of the pride and spirit shown in the second half. It is not the fairytale ending I wanted after 14 years, but this team has a brilliant future. It has been the ultimate privilege to wear and coach this jersey.”
- Kylian Mbappé: “Breaking the scoring record means very little when you do not walk away with the victory. We gave everything in that second-half comeback, but we left ourselves too much of a mountain to climb from the first half. Coach Deschamps deserved a better send-off for everything he gave to French football.”
Tactical Review: A Tale of Two Systems
The tactical overview highlighted a fundamental shift in structure between the periods:
First Half: England High-Press & Wing Transitions
[Rashford / Eze] ----> Exploited Unsettled French Fullbacks
[Rice / Rogers] ----> Overloaded Midfield Against Doue / Cherki
Second Half: French Width & Direct Play via Substitutions
[Dembélé / Barcola] -> Stretched English Low-Block
[Olise / Mbappé] -> Quick Overlaps in Half-Spaces
Tuchel’s initial plan successfully exploited the defensive vulnerabilities of France’s starting mid-block, particularly pressing Desire Doue and Rayan Cherki into early turnovers. However, when Deschamps introduced natural wide outlets in Barcola and Dembélé, England’s backline lacked the lateral quickness to prevent inverted runs, forcing Tuchel to abandon his passive shape and introduce Bellingham to rescue the match.
The result secures England’s highest finish at a global finals since their historic victory on home soil in 1966, capping off a chaotic but historic 2026 campaign.
Frequently asked questions following the spectacular ten-goal bronze final at Miami Stadium:
1. Who scored the goals in England’s 6-4 victory over France?
- England (6): Declan Rice (3′), Ezri Konsa (18′), Bukayo Saka (37′, 45+1′, 86′ pen), Jude Bellingham (90+8′).
- France (4): Kylian Mbappé (48′, 66′), Bradley Barcola (54′), Ousmane Dembélé (90+6′).
2. Did Bukayo Saka make history with his performance?
Yes. By scoring three goals against France, Bukayo Saka became only the fourth English player to score a hat-trick in a FIFA World Cup match, joining the elite company of Geoff Hurst (1966), Gary Lineker (1986), and Harry Kane (2018).
3. What records did Kylian Mbappé and Michael Olise break during the match?
- Kylian Mbappé: With his second-half brace, he reached 10 goals for the 2026 tournament and a career total of 22 World Cup goals. This officially surpassed Argentina’s Lionel Messi (21) to make Mbappé the all-time top scorer in World Cup history.
- Michael Olise: By assisting both of Mbappé’s goals, Olise reached 7 assists in the 2026 edition, breaking Pelé’s long-standing 1970 record (6) for the most assists in a single World Cup tournament.
4. Was this Didier Deschamps’ final match as manager of France?
Yes, this match marked the official conclusion of Didier Deschamps’ historic 14-year tenure as the manager of Les Bleus. He leaves his post after a legendary run that included winning the 2018 World Cup and reaching the 2022 final.
5. Where does this match rank in World Cup history for goals scored?
Conceding and scoring a combined 10 goals makes this the highest-scoring knockout match since 1954 (when Austria beat Switzerland 7-5) and comfortably the highest-scoring third-place playoff in FIFA World Cup history.
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