France never doubted they would go through despite Kylian Mbappe missing a penalty and having wasted several chances in the first half in their World Cup quarter-final clash against Morocco, coach Didier Deschamps said on Thursday.
Mbappe had his 28th-minute penalty stopped by Yassine Bounou but Les Bleus continued to press and came close on the brink of halftime when Lucas Digne's long-range attempt crashed onto the bar.
France, however, showed no signs of frustration as they patiently poked the ball around waiting for Mbappe, Michael Olise, Desire Doue or Ousmane Dembele to find the space they needed.
"We lacked efficiency and had this penalty saved in the first half, several chances, but there was never any doubt, especially not Kylian," Deschamps told a press conference after the 2-0 win sent them through to face either Spain or Belgium for a place in the final, which would be Les Bleus' third in a row after their 2018 triumph and the 2022 heartbreak.
"We have done everything right to pin them. We suffocated them and made them run. Then they were just tired."
Since Deschamps took charge in 2012, France have reached the last four of a European championship or a World Cup five out of seven times - missing out at the 2014 World Cup and the 2020 Euros, played in 2021.
"Having good players is fundamental," said Deschamps.
"A staff's success comes through its players, although I must be doing a few things right as well. Beyond today's result, players like Warren (Zaire-Emery), who had not played a minute before, came on and made a thunderous impact.
"It is a human adventure, too. I chose them, and I live alongside them every day with great pleasure."
The squad will do everything to stay together until 19 July, when the final will be played in New York, but they are keeping their feet on the ground despite the hype surrounding them.
"What changed compared to 2018 and 2022? In 2018, nobody expected us to succeed," said Deschamps.
"In 2022, we were the defending champions and very often the defending champions are out in the last 16. This time, everybody has been expecting us (to win) before the first ball of the tournament.
"But my players are used to this and they will not get carried away. Right now we're not looking beyond 14 July (the day of the semi-final) and it's a good date (Bastille Day)."
FIFA World Cup 2026 / Didier Deschamps / France Football Team
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