Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Deschamps poised to make coaching history for France

- John Leicester AP Sports Columnist

MOSCOW » Halftime at the 1998 World Cup final, France is 2-0 up against Brazil. In the locker room, Zinedine Zidane is flat on his back on the floor, legs raised on a bench, catching his breath after scoring both goals. But Didier Deschamps, the captain and a relentless bundle of energy, is bending Les Bleus’ ears, exhorting his teammates to keep up the pressure in the second half. “Guys, we are not going to relax one millimeter!” Deschamps yelled. “We’ve done the hard part. But there’s still another 45 minutes of madness!”

Twenty years later, almost to the day, Deschamps will again be barking orders on Sunday at a World Cup final, but this time as France’s coach. Victory against Croatia would be a crowning achievemen­t for the 49-year-old natural-born leader who could join Brazil’s Mario Zagallo and Germany’s Franz Beckenbaue­r as only the third person to win the World Cup as both player and coach.

Delivering a second star for the deep blue jersey he wore 103 times as a player would also be a button-it rebuttal to critics who argue that Deschamps is more of a lucky coach than a skilled one. That school of thought posits that any half-decent tactician could have done as well or better with France’s deep pool of talent that includes some of football’s most expensive players, headlined by Paris Saint-Germain’s electrifyi­ng teenager Kylian Mbappe.

But as great French chefs know, it takes more than just tip-top ingredient­s to make a winning recipe. Deschamps’ skill has been to get players who are stars at Europe’s biggest clubs to bury their egos and pull as a unit behind his guiding, almost socialist, philosophy that everyone is equal on the team or, as he puts it, the “collective.” He left behind hugely talented individual­s — Real Madrid forward Karim Benzema, PSG midfielder Adrien Rabiot, to name two — in picking 23 players.

Deschamps’ priorities were evident when he sat down for a long and intimate chat with a small group of reporters at the French Football Federation headquarte­rs a few weeks before naming his squad in May. He talked more about team-building than tactics.

“The ability to live together, the social side, is very important,” he said. “You always need to strike the right balance. You don’t want too much individual­ism, too much quality. The collective spirit has to trump everything. You need to find a good blend of experience­d players, leaders who have been through things, and the youngsters. There aren’t only negative sides in youth. They have that quality of enthusiasm. They’re a bit insouciant at times.”

Although ranging in age from 19-year-old Mbappe to veterans in their thirties like Chelsea striker Olivier Giroud, the team has visibly jelled, becoming more than the sum of its parts with a shared mantra of self-sacrifice that owes much to Deschamps.

There has not been a peep of complaint from players who have seen little or no action.

“We’ve got on so well that I could spend another month with them, because it’s gone so smoothly,” said center-back Samuel Umtiti, who scored the semifinal winner against Belgium. “We’re always laughing. There is always something to do.”

On the pitch, the team-first mentality has seen midfielder Paul Pogba, in particular, curbing his natural flamboyanc­e and excelling in a more restrained, deeper role. His defensive work has helped protect France and allowed Mbappe greater freedom to roam, run at defenders and do damage up front.

“It’s a World Cup. I want to win it. You have to make sacrifices,” Pogba said. “Defending is not my strong suit ... But I do it with pleasure.”

 ?? THANASSIS STAVRAKIS — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? France head coach Didier Deschamps celebrates after beating Belgium, 1-0, in the semifinals on Tuesday.
THANASSIS STAVRAKIS — ASSOCIATED PRESS France head coach Didier Deschamps celebrates after beating Belgium, 1-0, in the semifinals on Tuesday.
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