Daily Dispatch

Socceroos seek some French toast

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FRANCE head into their World Cup opener against Australia in Kazan today sweating on the fitness of fullback Djibril Sidibe and under pressure to deliver an emphatic win to erase doubts about the cohesion of a team of brilliant individual­s.

Monaco right-back Sidibe has been battling to recover from a knee injury, putting a query over one of the few positions in which France lacks ample depth.

Six-cap defender Benjamin Pavard, who has played mostly as a centreback for Bundesliga side Stuttgart, is likely to fill the role on his World Cup debut against a Socceroos side that is something of an unknown quantity under new coach Bert van Marwijk.

There is further uncertaint­y over the make-up of France’s forwardlin­e for the Group C encounter at Kazan Arena, with coach Didier Deschamps facing tough choices on his front three.

He fielded experience­d Chelsea striker Olivier Giroud with the substitute­s team in training on Wednesday, suggesting explosive 19-yearold Kylian Mbappe and Barcelona winger Ousmane Dembele could form a powerful trio with Antoine Griezmann.

Having captained Les Bleus to the 1998 World Cup triumph on home soil, Deschamps knows a thing or two about global success and is blessed with one of the strongest squads among the 32 in Russia.

Their sheer depth of talent has made them among the tournament favourites, yet scepticism lingers over the manager’s ability to get the best out of his stars.

Barring Mbappe’s goal in the 1-1 draw against the United States, there was little to like about France’s disjointed play in their last warmup match and Australia will offer a tougher propositio­n than the Americans, according to Deschamps.

Australia will also be desperate for a positive start, given their last two World Cup campaigns in Brazil and South Africa were all but ruined by first-match drubbings.

On paper, they are paupers to France’s footballin­g royalty, have little firepower upfront and their modest defence faces a huge task to fend off their opponents’ raids.

Despite all that, the Socceroos have assembled in Kazan with no shortage of bravado.

They worked hard in their pretournam­ent camp in Turkey to build fitness and structure, and maximise their hopes of emerging from a tough group featuring 11th-ranked Peru and 12th-ranked Denmark. —

 ?? Picture: AFP P ?? RUNNING IN TANDEM: France’s defenders Djibril Sidibé, left, and Samuel Umtiti warmup during a training session at the Glebovets Stadium in Istra, last week ahead of the Russia 2018 World Cup tournament
Picture: AFP P RUNNING IN TANDEM: France’s defenders Djibril Sidibé, left, and Samuel Umtiti warmup during a training session at the Glebovets Stadium in Istra, last week ahead of the Russia 2018 World Cup tournament

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