A year ago
France adjusted their Reality Cup bunch stage crusade with an unconvincing 1-0 loss against Tunisia, yet went through as champs of Gathering D.
Didier Deschamps rolled out nine improvements from the group which beat Denmark with best position guaranteed, with just Raphael Varane and Aurelien Tchouameni keeping their beginning spots. That implied open doors for periphery players, including veteran goalkeeper Steve Mandanda and debutant Axel Disasi.
It was a disconnected first hour from the defending champs, however, and Tunisia's opener - scored by Wahbi Khazri - was something like they merited. France went to record-breaker Kylian Mbappe as they hoped to recuperate an outcome, and thought they had balanced at the demise just for Antoine Griezmann's objective to be denied following a VAR check.
Tunisia had the ball in the net inside 10 minutes, with Nader Ghandri volleying home, yet the offside banner saved Les Bleus. It was an incoherent first half from the dominant title holders, however, and the dark horses kept on pushing after the break realizing a last-16 spot wasn't impossible.
In practically no time before the hour mark, they made their leap forward as Wahbi Khazri tracked down the corner with his last touch prior to being subbed. France went to the mounted force as they pursued a balancer, with Mbappe, Griezmann and Ousmane Dembele leaving the seat.
France supervisor Didier Deschamps rested a few central participants including Mbappe, Griezmann, Rabiot and Dembele (who all had a major effect late on off the seat), while Giroud, Lloris and Upamecano didn't highlight by any means.
The French idea they had balanced through Griezmann with 14 seconds of the eight minutes of stoppage time to go however VAR chalked the objective off for offside and Tunisia got the success.
Still waiting for their first goal of the 2022 edition, Tunisia are on the brink of an early exit from the globe's biggest footballing tournament after coming up short in a 1-0 loss to Australia on Saturday, which saw the Socceroos leapfrog their fellow Group D rivals in the standings.
Mitchell Duke's smartly-taken header with 23 minutes on the clock was all that it took for Australia to cement their position in the top two, leaving Tunisia .
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