Paraguay vs France: The Late Twist the Line Never Saw Coming

There are matches where the market reads the script early and never looks back. Paraguay against France in the Round of 16 is one of them: Les Bleus priced as near-certainties, the South Americans cast as brave passengers. I would counsel a moment of patience before signing off on that verdict.
The reason is simple and arrived only hours before kickoff: Aurelien Tchouameni is out. The line, quite literally, has not had time to digest it — and that is precisely where a composed observer finds his opening.
A pivot without its anchor
Tchouameni is France's positional conscience, the man who tidies up while the artists play. His replacement, Manu Koné, is a fine footballer of an entirely different temperament — a carrier, a dribbler, a player who loves to break forward.
Pair him with Adrien Rabiot and France's backline suddenly sits behind a more adventurous shield. Add William Saliba managing a back complaint, and the rare vulnerability appears exactly where Paraguay intend to strike: on the counter, in transition, in the spaces a disciplined pivot would normally close.
The art of the honest siege
Gustavo Alfaro's side just held Germany for 120 minutes and won on penalties. That was no accident but a deliberate exercise in low-event football, executed with the calm of craftsmen who know their trade.
Diego Gomez returns from suspension to restore control and progression to a midfield that sorely missed him. Miguel Almiron and Julio Enciso provide the outlet; Orlando Gill, the shootout hero, guards the door. This is a team built to keep margins minimal.
The psychology also favours the underdog. Paraguay play with house money, having already exceeded every expectation; France carry the burden of a nation for whom anything short of the quarter-finals is a disaster. In knockout football, that pressure — absent an early goal — breeds frustration.
Where the value quietly sits
Let me be clear: I am not backing Paraguay to win, nor am I foolish enough to dismiss Kylian Mbappe, six goals deep into this tournament and in imperious rhythm. The gulf in individual class is real and deserves respect.
But the +1.5 handicap does not ask Paraguay to win. It asks them to do what they have done all tournament: stay compact, stay disciplined, and keep any defeat to a single goal. Against a France side missing its midfield anchor, that is a far more modest request than the price implies.
Kickoff on 4 July 2026, 21:00 UTC in Philadelphia. Expect patience, expect frustration, and expect Paraguay to make every yard expensive.





















