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France’s diverse football factory and the struggle for national unity

The French football federation hopes a World Cup win could soothe a divided nation
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{"text":[[{"start":7.45,"text":"The Four Seasons hotel opposite Boston’s Public Garden is starting to feel like home to the French team. World Cup squads traditionally prefer calmer locations, but players nowadays have different tastes, French Football Federation president Philippe Diallo told me on Saturday. With the team scattered for a day of family time, Diallo talks over morning coffee in a dining room empty but for a hefty Boston cop, part of France’s security team, grabbing a late breakfast."}],[{"start":7.75,"text":"Les Bleus hope to spend several more weeks here. That would start with beating Sweden in the second round on Tuesday and going deep in the tournament. Diallo marvels at the attack featuring France’s all-time top goalscorer Kylian Mbappé, world footballer of the year Ousmane Dembélé and Michael Olise, whom he calls a possible future winner of Dembélé’s prize. Yet Diallo is measured. “Football is made of surprises. It’s up to us to avoid a bad surprise.”"}],[{"start":null,"text":"

Zaid Ismael of Iraq and Michael Olise of France compete for the ball during the match, with Olise leaping and Ismael reaching forward.
"}],[{"start":36.35,"text":"The federation’s president since 2023, he unites two different worlds. He passed through the obligatory grande école, Sciences Po university in his case, that is the entry ticket to the French ruling class, but also played football in Nantes’ youth academy. And, unusually among France’s overwhelmingly white elite, he is the son of a boxer from Senegal. That background helps him manage relations between the diverse national team and a divided nation that may elect a far-right president next year. "}],[{"start":67.6,"text":"France’s talent pool is certainly unmatched. Les Bleus reached four of the last seven World Cup finals, winning in 2018 and runners-up last time. Dozens of the 98 French-born players at this tournament represent their parents’ countries of origin, including Algeria, Haiti and DR Congo."}],[{"start":87.5,"text":"That talent emerges from a pyramid of 2.4mn amateur footballers, Diallo says, playing on publicly funded sports complexes. The federation is spending nearly €140mn this year on the amateur game. Diallo notes that 99 per cent of his budget comes from private sources such as sponsorship deals and television rights — another benefit of Les Bleus’ excellence."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
Philippe Diallo stands in front of a soccer goal net during the Norway vs. France match at the 2026 Fifa World Cup.
"}],[{"start":111.4,"text":"Diallo says their success is also a powerful social force. “In a country that is sometimes divided, the French team unites all French people, at least during a World Cup,” he says. Yet parts of the French public remain wary of a national team mostly made up of expatriate multimillionaires from diverse backgrounds. "}],[{"start":131.05,"text":"And uniting France is probably harder than winning the World Cup. Several players have spoken out against the far-right Rassemblement National party. “I know what it means, and what kind of consequences it can have for my country when those kinds of people take control,” Mbappé told Esquire magazine just before the World Cup. The party’s president, Jordan Bardella, responded with mockery, posting on social media: “I know what happens when Kylian Mbappé leaves PSG: the club wins the Champions League!”"}],[{"start":162.5,"text":"Diallo says players are “citizens” with “freedom of expression”. But he has asked them to use this freedom during the tournament “to unite the French” because talking about politics “runs the risk of dividing”. Once back at their clubs, he says, they can have a “broader expression”. "}],[{"start":179.25,"text":"The modern team’s foundational crisis was the 2010 World Cup, when the players, in conflict with the coach, Raymond Domenech, went on strike mid-tournament. The response at home turned nasty, with some charging the players of immigrant origin with disloyalty to France. The affair is dissected in a new hit Netflix documentary The Bus."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
Raymond Domenech stands on a soccer field holding a paper, addressing a large group of journalists and cameras.
"}],[{"start":200.55,"text":"Diallo says the “sombre episode” remains a warning to today’s Bleus. “France is seen by part of the world through its football team. Going into the World Cup, I told the players, ‘We have a great team and should be ambitious. But we must also show behaviour worthy of France off the field. You are in a certain way the showcase of France.’” "}],[{"start":221.9,"text":"Continued success on the field would help at home. “We haven’t been out of the top three of the Fifa rankings since 2018,” notes Diallo, though France did in fact fall to fourth for short periods during 2021 and 2022. He says he is witnessing the quest for excellence this tournament, in the detailed preparations of French coach Didier Deschamps and his staff. “It’s practically timed to the minute, including the taxi time of planes.”"}],[{"start":null,"text":"
Kieran Tierney and Ayyoub Bouaddi compete for the ball during a World Cup match, with both players closely contesting possession.
"}],[{"start":251.70000000000002,"text":"To maintain excellence, France must persuade its best talents of immigrant origin to play for France, rather than for their ancestral national teams. Until now, only second-tier French players chose African teams. But in a shock for the federation, 18-year-old Ayyoub Bouaddi, captain of France’s under-21s, decided to play this tournament for Morocco. Diallo says: “He’s a formidable player. He made another choice, which I respect. Bouaddi wouldn’t have played this World Cup with France.” "}],[{"start":282.5,"text":"Diallo says Morocco has made “more aggressive approaches, in quotation marks, to recruit players” ahead of co-hosting the 2030 World Cup. He muses that players might make such decisions “out of respect for their parents”, and says the Bouaddi affair has taught him “to reflect particularly on these binationals, and maybe to accompany them better”."}],[{"start":303.95,"text":"Even without Bouaddi, France are currently the bookmakers’ favourites to win the tournament. Diallo describes Les Bleus as “ambitious” yet “humble”, because “football is not an exact science”. A victory could unite the nation, at least for a night."}],[{"start":319.75,"text":"This article has been updated to clarify France’s past positions in the Fifa rankings"}],[{"start":332.05,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1783092877_7856.mp3"}

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