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World Cup 2018 Final: France vs. Croatia Live Updates

Croatia equalized with France on an Ivan Perisic goal in the 28th minute of the World Cup final in Moscow. We’re tied, 1-1.

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France scores their first goal. Michael Dalder/Reuters

How to watch: In the U.S., Fox and Telemundo have the broadcast at 11 a.m. Eastern, but you can stream it here.

29’: This Game’s Wide Open

The goal really livens things up just as France was hoping to slow them down. And now there’s a spring in the Croatians’ step again.

28’ CROATIA SCORES! We’re even!

Ivan Perisic gets the final shot after a series of headers brings a Modric free kick to him in the area.

27’: Yellow for Kante

Yellow card to Kanté, who clips Perisic’s heel as he breaks up the middle, dangerously. Worth keeping an eye on that; Kanté’s game sometimes involves — thrives — on fouls like that. But now he can’t do it.

22’: Here Comes the Rain

It just started to rain here after the goal, but the life has definitely gone out of the Croatian crowd a bit.

Victor Mather: Statistical oddity alert. France has a goal, but still no official shots. Because Griezmann’s blast was deflected in for an own goal, he does not get credit for a shot.

21’: Croatia Free Kick Handled

Croatia gets a similar opportunity with a free kick at the other end, but its header isn’t nearly as accurate, and Lloris collects for a goal kick.

18’: GOAL! FRANCE LEADS!

A foul gave Griezmann a free kick about 30 yards or so out on the left, and he fires in a ball that Mandukic heads over Subasic into his own net.

It’s always a risk there, but that is a disaster for Croatia, who has done everything right. And just as we noted, they failed to turn it into a goal. And now they’re in a hole, perhaps unfairly, and France can do what France has been doing: just tighten up, and not make any mistakes. Terrible luck for Mandzukic, though, who did his job and unwittingly put it into the side netting.

15’: Croatia Needs to Convert

Croatia really will want to turn all this possession and probing into something soon; if France fights through these first 15 or 20 minutes without paying a price by surrendering a goal, it most likely will find their feet. And Croatia may come to regret that.

Victor Mather: Anything missing from this game? How about a shot? There have been zero so far. Not zero shots on net ... zero shots of any kind with 15 minutes played.

14’: Putin in the House

Vladimir Putin is here today for the final. It’s only the second time he has turned up for a game at this World Cup. The first was the opener.

12’: France On Its Heels

A dozen minutes in and Mbappé’s only touch has been on defense. Griezmann may not have touched it at all yet.

10’: Croatia Controlling This Game So Far

Modric, using the outside of his right foot, opens up the French with a lovely cross-field ball to the overlapping Strinic, but Umtiti clears out his cross. Nice moment though, one of many for Croatia in the first 10 minutes in which they’ve had almost all of the ball.

Victor Mather: France’s defense has been forced to clear the ball seven times already. Croatia has just one clearance.

8’: Corner for Croatia

Strinic and Rakitic work a nice give-and-go there in the left corner, and Pogba has to come over to cut off the former when he gets the ball back in the area. Corner to Croatia.

Grioud wins it in front of Lloris, and the French try to break out.

6’: Croatia Leads in Attendance and Volume

The atmosphere in here today is much improved from some of the drab ones we had in the semifinals. That’s largely due to the Croatians, who have taken over several sections behind their goal and are, at times, simply pulsating as they jump up and down. The much smaller French contingent down the other end hasn’t had much to cheer yet.

5’: Croatia Keeps Attacking

Vrsaljko slips free for a moment deep down the right wing and fires in a cross, but again France is there to clear. Solving Varane and Umtiti will take better balls than that one, but getting it off at all is a positive for Croatia early.

Victor Mather: Say this about Croatia: The team is not afraid to shoot. Coming into this game it has 100 shots, third in the Cup behind Belgium (which has played one more game) and Brazil. But the accuracy has not been sensational: Only 26 of those shots were on target, far behind Belgium and Brazil.

3’: Varane Shuts It Down

Perisic probing down the left is the first real test for France, but Varane, so smooth, slides over and shuts it all down.

1’: Kickoff!

That ball out of bounds nearing the first-minute mark was the first French touch of the day. That’ll be fine with Croatia.

The Anthems

Kylian Mbappé was absolutely beaming during the French anthem. On a day when it would be understandable to be as tense as a 19-year-old could be, the joy on his face was wonderful. I wonder if it hints at a big day ahead for him. “I want to win the World Cup,” he had said this week. “I want to sleep with it.”

World Cup Final: The Man in Charge

Today’s referee is the Argentine Nestor Pitana, a veteran official with slicked back hair and the look of an Argentine army colonel. He generally brooks no fools but most assuredly wants to stay out of the action today.

The video-assistant referee is an Italian, Massimiliano Irrati.The teams are coming out of the tunnel. Almost time. Anthems next ....

Bring On the Checkerboards!

Some good news: France will be in blue today, allowing Croatia to wear its fantastic checkerboard jerseys for the first time since the group stage.

France vs. Croatia: The Odds

The oddsmakers clearly favor France in this game. France is considered 45 percent likely to win the game in regulation, with Croatia at only 23 percent (the other 32 percent of the time the game will go into overtime). As for the ultimate winner, it’s 65-35 for France.

The over/under, as it is for many international soccer games, is 2. At 5-1, Antoine Griezmann of France is the favorite to score the first goal. Trailing him are two other Frenchmen, Mbappé and Giroud.

France’s Starting Lineup

No changes in the French team, which is not a surprise; Didier Deschamps has more or less stuck with the same starting XI throughout the tournament. Expect them to line up in the same 4-2-3-1 too, with Giroud up front as the tip of the spear and Griezmann, Mbappé and Matuidi buzzing around him.

Goalkeeper: 1 Hugo Lloris (Tottenham)

Defenders: 21 Lucas Hernandez (Atletico Madrid), 2 Benjamin Pavard (Stuttgart), 5 Samuel Umtiti (Barcelona), 4 Raphael Varane (Real Madrid)

Midfielders: 13 N’Golo Kante (Chelsea), 14 Blaise Matuidi (Juventus), 6 Paul Pogba (Manchester United)

Forwards: 9 Olivier Giroud (Chelsea), 7 Antoine Griezmann (Atletico Madrid), 10 Kylian Mbappé (Paris St Germain)

Croatia’s Starting Lineup

Croatia sticks with familiar faces. Brozovic did a lot of the support work against England to allow Rakitic and Modric the freedom to work. Perisic and Rebic will need to be active on the wings again, to try to spread out the French and create some gaps. Many have tried, though; accomplishing that is a bit of a bigger ask.

Goalkeeper: 23 Danijel Subasic (Monaco)

Defenders: 21 Domagoj Vida (Besiktas), 3 Ivan Strinic (Milan), 6 Dejan Lovren (Liverpool), 2 Sime Vrsaljko (Atletico Madrid)

Midfielders: 10 Luka Modric (Real Madrid), 7 Ivan Rakitic (Barcelona), 11 Marcelo Brozovic (Inter Milan)

Forwards: 4 Ivan Perisic (Inter Milan), 18 Ante Rebic (Fiorentina)

17 Mario Mandzukic (Juventus)

Forward Nikola Kalinic of A.C. Milan is the only one who definitely will NOT play today; he’s listed as absent on the Croatia teamsheet.

France Won’t Underestimate Croatia

Kylian Mbappé, 19, was sounding all the right notes of caution about Croatia on Friday.

“Even when you think they’re going to lose, or going to crack, they always have the mentality to come back,” he said. “It’s a team that plays with a lot of intensity.”

Croatia a Surprise Finalist

Croatia, a nation of 4.5 million people that gained independence in 1991, would not be the smallest country to win the World Cup (that title remains Uruguay’s, probably for the foreseeable future). But it probably would be the biggest shock in World Cup history. Even Uruguay, winners in 1930 and 1950, could make a reasonable claim to have been the best team in the world when it won. But there has not even been what anyone considers a surprise finalist since Czechoslovakia in 1962.

Mbappé Has His Priorities in Order

France’s Kylian Mbappé on winning the Ballon D’Or as the world’s best player. “I couldn’t care less about that,” he said. “I want the World Cup. I want to sleep with it.”

Who Is Zlatko Dalic?

It is a fair assumption that few world soccer fans could have picked Croatia’s manager, Zlatko Dalic, out of a lineup before the tournament. Though he had a long professional career as a defensive midfielder, mostly with the Croatian clubs Varteks and Hadjuk Split, his coaching career was unremarkable. His three previous posts before taking the Croatia job were with two Saudi clubs and another in the United Arab Emirates.

But when Croatia fired the coach who had led it through most of qualifying, Ante Cacic, after a string of poor results imperil the team’s chances of qualifying for Russia, Dalic was tasked with leading the team over the line. He has guided it with a light touch here, making few lineup changes and acknowledging that he has deferred to his players. (Asked why he had not subbed in the 90 minutes against England in a grueling semifinal, despite his players’ coming off consecutive extra time games, Dalic admitted, “I wanted to substitute, but nobody wanted to be subbed.”)

Another Chance for France

This is France’s second major final in a row. It reached the final of the European Championship on home soil in 2016, but lost to Portugal on a late goal in extra time, 1-0. Some people point to that defeat — a bitter disappointment after they methodically moved through the field to the final — as the danger of Manager Didier Deschamps’s conservative instincts. Should France fall again today as the favorite, expect the first fingers to be pointed his way.

France vs. Croatia: A Friendly Rivalry

Don’t be surprised if there are plenty of hugs and friendly greetings in the tunnel before the match: Antoine Griezmann and Sime Vrsaljko are teammates at Atlético Madrid, and so are Raphael Varane, Luka Modric and Mateo Kovacic at Real Madrid. Mario Mandzukic and Blaise Matuidi play together at Juventus (where Paul Pogba was employed before joining Manchester United), and Croatia goalkeeper Daniel Subasic and France’s Djibril Sidibe are at Monaco, where until last year they watched the rise of Kylian Mbappé.

An Extra Game for Croatia

With three extra-time victories in the knockout rounds, Croatia has effectively played one more full game than France here.

Hugo Lloris Won’t Wander

There may be no better example of France’s safety-first mentality than the play of goalkeeper Hugo Lloris. A roaming player deft with his feet for his club, Tottenham Hotspur, he is under orders not to wander for France. He has been credited with only 11 saves in six games, but that several of them were memorable game-changers — against Belgium’s Toby Alderweireld in the semifinals, against Uruguay’s Martin Caceres in the quarterfinals — says a lot about the success of the strategy.

Graphic

Hear a Mash-up of Every ‘Goooooool’ From the World Cup

We have combined all 163 impassioned cries by Telemundo's announcers into one lung-bursting goal call.

OPEN Graphic

Spot the Ball: The Semifinals

France eliminated Belgium. Croatia eliminated England. We eliminated the balls from these World Cup semifinals pictures. See if you can guess where they were.

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