Soccer-Spain bank on midfield control to contain French Fab Four


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - France Training - Bentley University, Waltham, Massachusetts, U.S. - July 6, 2026 France's Kylian Mbappe during training IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Winslow Townson

DALLAS, Texas, July 13 (Reuters) - France ⁠may arrive with a fearsome front four and enough attacking firepower to make defenders sleep badly, but Spain's ⁠plan for their World Cup semi-final is rather more territorial: keep the ball, dictate the rhythm and make ‌the danger flow the other way.

Winger Alex Baena said Spain obviously respected one of the tournament's most potent teams, spearheaded by an attacking line of Kylian Mbappe, Michael Olise, Ousmane Dembele and either Desire Doue or Bradley Barcola. But the Spaniard insisted they would not spend Tuesday's clash simply waiting ​for the storm.

"The four up front are having a great tournament and we ⁠will have to keep an eye on them. ⁠But we will try to make them watch us more than we watch them," Baena told reporters on Monday.

"Our strength ⁠is ‌having the ball, having a lot of possession to attack and to make sure they attack us as little as possible. Hopefully, tomorrow it will be like that too."

That line neatly captured Spain's approach when they came out ⁠victorious in the Euros and Nations League semis against Didier Deschamps' team.

Baena ​said possession would again be Spain's first ‌form of defence and their clearest route to control, but warned that history would not do any tackling ⁠for them.

"It is true ​that we come from two matches in which we beat them, and that suited us, but every match is a world of its own," he said. "They are having a spectacular tournament."

TRAVEL SCHEDULE

The subplot to Spain's tactical confidence is a travel schedule that has left them covering ⁠considerably more ground than France before the semi-final.

Spain opted to stay in ​Chattanooga, Tennessee in the group stage, where no World Cup matches were played and had to travel to three different time zones for their matches while France have kept their base in Boston throughout and will play their first match outside the Eastern ⁠Time zone, having travelled some 16,000 kilometers less than their opponents.

However, full back Pedro Porro played down concerns over fatigue.

"From the outside you see it, but in our day-to-day life we travel up and down and we don't see the kilometers we do," Porro said. "We have been able to recover for this match."

Baena was more open about the strain.

"It is true that ​we are a little tired from so much travel," he said. "We have travelled much more ⁠and done more kilometers than them and, in the end, when you get close to the end, you notice it a ​bit.

"But I think we are all fine, with a lot of excitement and ‌a lot of desire. It is respect for one of the ​best teams in the tournament and in the world," he said. "We hope it will be a very, very even match and that it will be decided by small details."

(Reporting by Fernando Kallas, editing by Ed Osmond)

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