Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 14th July 2026, 10:57 PM

TEXAS — Two absolute titans of international football, France and Spain, are set to lock horns tonight in the first semi-final of the FIFA World Cup 2026. The highly anticipated fixture will take place at the iconic AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. With a place in the prestigious final at stake, both nations bring contrasting yet deeply compelling historical records to this penultimate stage of the tournament.
For France, this monumental fixture marks their eighth appearance in a World Cup semi-final. While Les Bleus have established themselves as one of the most consistently dominant forces in modern football, their early history at this stage of the competition was defined by bitter heartbreak. The French national team suffered agonising defeats in their first three semi-final appearances. In 1958, a young Pelé inspired Brazil to a crushing 5-2 victory over the French. Decades later, the 1980s brought further despair against West Germany. France suffered a dramatic penalty shoot-out defeat in 1982, followed by a clinical 2-0 loss to the same opponents in 1986.
The narrative transformed dramatically in 1998 when France hosted the tournament on home soil. A hard-fought 2-1 victory over Croatia secured their maiden final appearance, culminating in their first World Cup title. Since that historic night in Paris, France have been virtually unstoppable in semi-finals. They ground out a tense 1-0 win against Portugal in 2006, defeated Belgium by the same scoreline in 2018, and comfortably dispatched Morocco 2-0 in 2022. By reaching the last four in the 2026 edition, France have become only the third nation in football history—following Germany and Brazil—to contest three consecutive World Cup semi-finals.
Early semi-final heartbreaks paved the way for modern French dominance on the world stage.
In sharp contrast to France’s extensive and varied history, Spain’s appearances in traditional World Cup semi-finals are incredibly limited. However, La Roja boast a flawless hundred per cent success rate when they manage to reach this specific stage of the tournament.
Spain’s only previous official World Cup semi-final occurred during the 2010 tournament in South Africa. Facing a formidable German side in Durban, the Spaniards secured a memorable 1-0 victory courtesy of a powerful, thumping header from veteran defender Carles Puyol. Vicente del Bosque’s side subsequently defeated the Netherlands in a fierce final to lift their historic first World Cup trophy.
While historical archives indicate that Spain secured a fourth-place finish at the 1950 World Cup in Brazil, that tournament did not feature a traditional knockout semi-final. Instead, the final round was uniquely contested as a four-team round-robin group. Tonight’s clash in Texas offers Spain the chance to maintain their perfect knockout record, while France aim to rely on their extensive big-match experience to book another ticket to the final.
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