Spain punched its ticket to the World Cup Final with a controlled, ruthless 2-0 win over France, turning a tense semifinal into a statement performance. It was a night built on sharp defending, clean finishing, and a big-time response whenever France tried to stir things up.
For Spain, this was the kind of result that changes the mood of a tournament. The team reached only its second World Cup Final in history, and it did it by looking calm under pressure and dangerous whenever the ball moved into the final third.
The opener came after France made a costly mistake deep in its own box. A Spanish cross created a messy sequence, Lucas Digne misjudged the play, and Lamine Yamal’s pressure helped force the foul that sent the referee straight to the spot.
Mikel Oyarzabal took it from there and buried the penalty with confidence. France goalkeeper Mike Maignan guessed correctly and still had no answer, as the shot found the side net and gave Spain the early lead it wanted.
Once Spain went ahead, the rest of the first half started to tilt in its favor. France tried to build momentum and create chances, but Spain stayed organized and kept Unai Simón from facing anything too dangerous.
The second half opened with France showing more urgency, but Spain kept slamming the door shut. The match turned again in the 58th minute when Pedro Porro made a smart run and caught the French defense flat-footed.
Desire Doue, who had just come on for France, failed to track Porro after the ball was laid off to Dani Almo. Almo quickly returned it to Porro, leaving him with only Maignan to beat, and the Spanish defender finished the chance to make it 2-0.
That goal forced France into chase mode, and the pressure only increased from there. Spain answered with composed clearances, strong tackles, and a back line that never seemed to blink when the clock started working against France.
Kylian Mbappé still had a chance to drag his side back into it late, but the moment slipped away. His free kick just before stoppage time sailed over the bar, which summed up France’s night pretty well, close calls without the final touch.
The shutout carried extra weight because it was Spain’s sixth in the same World Cup tournament, a remarkable defensive run that helped define the team’s march to the final. France, meanwhile, saw its knockout frustration deepen in a way that stung even more because of how little space Spain gave it.
Spain’s history at this level makes the moment even bigger. The 2010 champions are now back on the sport’s biggest stage, and they’ll meet the winner of the other semifinal with the title on the line.
For a team that has mixed confidence, young talent, and a cold-blooded edge, this was one of those nights that sticks. France had the star power, Spain had the answers, and the scoreboard told the whole story by the time the final whistle arrived.
