France’s 2026 World Cup squad dropped on May 15, and the biggest talking point isn’t who made the cut. It’s the sheer volume of elite midfield talent Didier Deschamps now has to juggle across a tournament spanning three countries.

The squad features N’Golo Kanté, Adrien Rabiot, Aurélien Tchouaméni, Manu Koné, and Warren Zaïre-Emery. Five midfielders who could each start for virtually any national team on the planet, all competing for what amounts to two or three spots in a single lineup.

The veterans vs. the next generation

Kanté remains the most decorated midfielder in the group, bringing a tactical intelligence that doesn’t age the way pace does. His inclusion signals that Deschamps still values the kind of defensive discipline that can lock down knockout-round matches.

Rabiot represents something closer to a hybrid option, capable of operating in a deeper role or pushing forward. Tchouaméni has evolved into one of the most complete midfielders in European football, combining the physical presence of a traditional number six with the passing range of a number eight. Koné brings energy and pressing intensity, and Zaïre-Emery is the youngest of the bunch.