Didier Deschamps
France coach Didier Deschamps,
who has kept tinkering with his squad since the start of the European
Championship, will be forced to rejig once again
when the hosts face Iceland for a place in the semi-finals.
when the hosts face Iceland for a place in the semi-finals.
With centre back Adil Rami and holding midfielder N'Golo Kante
suspended, Deschamps, who has been praised for shrewd tactical moves in
the tournament, is looking for the best options for Sunday's game at the
Stade de France.
Rami may not be sorely missed after looking shaky at times, most
notably when right back Bacary Sagna was shouted at him in a laboured
2-1 win over Ireland in the round of 16.
But Deschamps, who lost his most reliable central defender in Raphael
Varane through injury in the build-up to the finals, will have to field
an untested pair at the heart of his back line.
Samuel Umtiti seems to have the edge over Eliaquim Mangala and could win his first cap by teaming up with Laurent Koscielny.
"Everybody in the group is ready to do the job, no worries," veteran
left back Patrice Evra said on Thursday when asked whether it would be a
risk for Deschamps to go for Umtiti.
To replace Kante, who has established himself as one of France's most
valuable players, Deschamps is expected to go for Yohan Cabaye. The
Crystal Palace player was the first choice in that role at the 2014
World Cup in Brazil, where France bowed out to eventual champions
Germany in the quarter-finals.
Les Bleus have yet to deliver
an entirely convincing performance in the tournament but Deschamps has
made all the right decisions, notably against Ireland, when Antoine
Griezmann turned the match with two goals after the France coach pushed
him closer to Olivier Giroud up front for the second half.
When France laboured in a 4-2-3-1 formation in the first half of
their group game against Albania, Deschamps was also quick to react,
sending on Paul Pogba and reverting to a 4-3-3 formation which
eventually wore down Albania's defence for a 2-0 win.
To play an Iceland team likely to shut shop at back, the France coach
could be tempted to revert to a 4-2-3-1 system, in which case speedy
winger Kingsley Coman, fit to play after receiving a knock on his ankle
against Ireland, could be in the starting lineup.
France, who have often looked sluggish early in their games, will try
to start strongly for a change against an Iceland side who proved just
how dangerous they were by advancing with a shock 2-1 win over England.
"Our opening minutes are very bad, we must improve in that department
because we're not going to get away with it every time," Griezmann
said.
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