Dembélé hat-trick seals France top spot and raises the defensive question of the tournament
A first-half demolition of a rotated Norway side delivered France the group summit — and confirmed for the rest of the field the scale of the problem Ousmane Dembélé poses.
France arrived at the 2026 World Cup with a question that has shadowed the squad since the disappointment of Qatar and the bedding-in period that followed: is this attack genuinely elite, or merely deep? By the close of a first half in which Ousmane Dembélé scored three times against a rotated Norway, the answer was no longer in doubt. The 4-0 result, sealed before the interval and managed through the second, sent Didier Deschamps's side to the top of the group and turned the conversation away from French mood and toward everyone else's problem.
The performance offered the cleanest evidence yet that this France side has something the previous iterations often lacked at major tournaments: a forward line whose movement, width and unpredictability cannot be solved by a single tactical adjustment. The defensive question — whether any side in the field has the organisation and the personnel to slow them down — is now the tournament's central tactical problem.
A first half that settled the contest
Norway, already assured of progression in the group standings and with one eye on the next round, rang the changes. The decision was understandable; the cost was visible inside the first 45 minutes. France, by contrast, played with the urgency of a team that wanted the top seed and the easier bracket that comes with it.
Dembélé opened the scoring with the kind of goal that has become his signature at this level: a wide position taken to the byline, a body feint that commits the defender, and a cut-back or low finish on the near post. The second, before the half-hour mark, came from a central starting position and a run that split two centre-backs. The third, completing the hat-trick inside 38 minutes, was the product of a transition sequence in which the Norwegian midfield simply could not recover its shape. A fourth goal, scored by another French attacker, settled the contest before the break.
The relevant detail is not the number of goals but their variety. One came from a wide isolation, one from a central penetration, one from a counter-attack in transition. That is the dimension that makes France difficult to scout: there is no single pressing trigger to suppress, no single channel to overload.
The Norwegian view, in fairness
It would be wrong to read the result as a referendum on Norwegian quality. Ståle Solbakken's side arrived at this match with the group's primary objective already met and chose to rest key players with the knockout rounds in mind. A second-choice back line, missing its two first-choice centre-backs and its first-choice right-back, faced the most fluid attack in the competition and held, briefly, before the dam broke.
Norway's tactical identity at this tournament has been built on a deep block, vertical control from the goalkeeper, and quick releases to Erling Haaland. Without the spine of the side, that identity does not survive. The framing of the match as a French statement is fair; the framing of it as a Norwegian collapse would not be.
The defensive problem no one has solved
This is the structural question the rest of the field now faces. France's attacking shape under Deschamps has evolved into something closer to a 4-2-3-1 in possession and a flexible 4-3-3 in transition, with Dembélé operating from a wide-right starting position but with licence to roam into the half-spaces. The players behind him — the second striker and the attacking midfielder — rotate aggressively, which forces the opposing back line into continuous decision-making.
The traditional answer to that kind of variety is a deep, narrow block that protects the centre of the pitch and forces play into wide areas where recovery runs can compensate. France, with Kylian Mbappé's willingness to operate in tight spaces and Dembélé's ability to beat a man one-on-one, has the tools to unblock that kind of shape. The alternative answer — a high press designed to disrupt the build before the front four can settle — requires a midfield three with the legs and the coordination to do it for ninety minutes. Few teams in the field have that profile.
The honest answer, after this group stage, is that no side has yet demonstrated it can do both for a full match against this attack.
What remains uncertain
The performance came against a side that did not field its first XI. The defensive question is sharper when the opposition is at full strength — Brazil, England and Spain all have forward lines capable of punishing a high line in transition. France's own defensive transitions, occasionally exposed in qualifying, are a variable that matters as much as the attack when the knockout rounds begin.
The second variable is Dembélé himself. A hat-trick against a rotated back line is not the same data point as a decisive performance against a deep block. What the match confirmed is the ceiling; what it did not confirm is the floor. The next round, against a side playing for its tournament life, will.
This publication framed Dembélé's hat-trick as a structural question about France's attack rather than as a single-match story; the wire coverage led on the scoreline and the group-stage consequence.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/monexussportswire/2026-06-26T21:10
