Jul 15, 2026, 06:46 IST
France’s 2026 FIFA World Cup campaign ended in disappointment on Tuesday night as Spain secured a composed 2-0 victory in the semi-finals, but Les Bleus head coach Didier Deschamps reserved some of his strongest post-match comments for the officiating. While acknowledging that Spain deserved to reach the final after controlling large portions of the contest, the outgoing France manager questioned whether Salvadoran referee Iván Barton was at the required standard to officiate a World Cup semi-final.
Deschamps questions referee after controversial penalty
Spain took the lead in the first half through Mikel Oyarzabal, who converted from the penalty spot after referee Iván Barton ruled that Lucas Digne had fouled Lamine Yamal inside the box. The incident immediately became one of the defining moments of the semi-final. Digne attempted to clear an awkward ball after controlling it on his chest, but Yamal sprinted in from his blind side and reached the loose ball first. As Digne swung his clearance, his boot struck the Spanish winger in the torso, prompting Barton to point straight to the penalty spot.Although the decision was supported under the Laws of the Game because contact was made against an opponent inside the penalty area after Yamal had reached the ball, it remained heavily debated, with many questioning both whether he had fully established possession before the collision and whether the ball’s contact with Yamal’s upper arm near the biceps in the build-up should have been penalised as handball. After the match, Deschamps made it clear that he did not agree with several aspects of Barton’s performance. “I’m asking you, and I’m not going to answer it,” Deschamps said through a translator. “I don’t want to come across as a whiner because we lost, but did tonight’s referee have the level to officiate a World Cup semi-final?”
“It’s an accumulation of things”
When asked whether his frustration centred solely on the penalty decision, the France manager indicated that his concerns stretched much further. “It’s not just the penalty in question, it’s an accumulation of things,” Deschamps said. Although he stopped short of detailing each incident individually, his comments reflected a broader dissatisfaction with the overall management of the match rather than one isolated decision.
Referee Ivan Barton, of El Salvador, speaks to France’s Kylian Mbappe after awarding a penalty shot to Spain during the World Cup semifinal soccer match between France and Spain in Arlington, Texas, near Dallas, Tuesday, July 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis)
The remarks followed another closely scrutinised refereeing performance at a tournament that has repeatedly generated debate over officiating standards, VAR interventions and decision-making consistency throughout the knockout rounds.
France admit Spain were the better team
Despite questioning the officiating, Deschamps did not attempt to attribute France’s elimination solely to the referee. Speaking to reporters after the match, he acknowledged Spain’s superiority on the night and admitted his side had fallen short technically. “Of course, there is a lot of disappointment,” Deschamps said. “The players are devastated because we had a lot of ambition, even though we also have to be realistic and acknowledge that today we were a notch below on the technical level against a team that controlled the game well.” “But first of all, it’s our fault, I don’t want to blame anyone.” His assessment reflected Spain’s dominance across much of the contest, with Luis de la Fuente’s side controlling possession, restricting Kylian Mbappé and Ousmane Dembélé to limited opportunities and adding a second-half goal through Pedro Porro to comfortably seal a place in the World Cup final.
A disappointing ending to Deschamps’ remarkable reign
The defeat also marked the end of an era for French football. Deschamps had arrived at the tournament seeking to guide France to a third World Cup title and his second as manager after leading Les Bleus to glory in 2018 and the final again in 2022. France entered the semi-finals having produced arguably the tournament’s most prolific attack, scoring 16 goals in six matches while remaining among the favourites to lift the trophy. Instead, Spain’s disciplined defensive structure and clinical finishing brought their campaign to an abrupt end. Deschamps, who is stepping down after the tournament, will now oversee France one final time in the third-place play-off before bringing his 14-year tenure as national team manager to a close. Even while expressing disappointment over several refereeing decisions, the veteran coach ultimately accepted that Spain had earned their place in the final. “There were some favourable calls too,” Deschamps added. “But today they were better.”