FRIDAY’S first quarter-final will be the last match of the World Cup in the city of Maxim Gorky. Up until 1990, Nizhny Novgorod was previously called Gorky, after the eminent Russian writer and the game at the Stadium that looks over Gorky’s city would be the last at the World Cup for either France or Uruguay.
Gorky’s favourite sports were fishing and hunting but if he were to be still alive, even he would’ve been gripped by this game that has been dubbed as a contest between an immovable defence and an unstoppable attack.
The immovable defence is that of Uruguay, which has conceded just one goal — joint lowest with Brazil — in their run to the quarter-final. Marshalled by Diego Godin and Jose Giminez, both team-mates at club level as well — in a strong-drilled Atletico Madrid side, Uruguay are a tough lot to score against. Add to that the fact that they defend as a collective, they are a dreaded opposition and France coach Didier Deschamps didn’t hide from the task faced by his side.
“They are a team with so many qualities… so many assets,” said Deschamps at the pre-match press conference on Thursday. “They know how to defend as a unit. They work so hard and their strikers and wingers all contribute to that defensive structure. We will need to be patient against them but that’s not the only virtue we will need.”
Getting past that defence will be the mission for France’s unstoppable attack. In their last-16 match, France showed exactly how devastating they can be when going forward, especially with the mesmeric pace of Kylian Mbappe and the guile of Antoine Griezmann.
In their 4-3 win, Mbappe tore past the Argentina defence with clinical precision, leaving the opposition chasing his shadows and helping himself to two goals. But the question is whether Uruguay will give him so much space to exploit.