Didier Deschamps has insisted he is not concerned by the appointment of Argentinian officials to oversee the World Cup quarter-final between France and Morocco on Thursday, with a repeat of the 2022 final against Argentina still possible. “We have to deal with it,” he said. “I trust the referees. Our opponent is Morocco, not the referee.”The France head coach, though, is not a natural diplomat. This was a characteristically combative display from Deschamps, who spent at least 90 seconds at the end of his press conference explaining why he really did not have time to answer one final question, before reluctantly answering, grumpily. He couldn’t resist a jibe at those, many in the north African media, who had criticised the French official François Letexier’s performance during the last-16 game between Argentina and Egypt on Tuesday.“Let’s hope ours are as good as Monsieur Letexier was,” he said. He was also scornful of questions from a Moroccan journalist about a penalty that might have been awarded for a possible foul on Sofiane Boufal in the World Cup semi-final between the sides in 2022.Integrity has been a recurring theme recently and the appointment of Facundo Tello to referee the game with two Argentinian assistants, an Argentinian reserve assistant and an Argentinian fourth official raised eyebrows. “There’s been a certain bitterness for a few years now since the last final, but that’s part of the game,” the France reserve goalkeeper Robin Risser said, although he sought to play down an issue that has erupted on social media. “If these referees are there, it’s because they’re up to the level of the competition.”At the same time, the repercussions of the bruising last-16 win against Paraguay have carried on, with Celeste Amarilla, a senator for Paraguay’s Liberal Radical party, deleting social media posts in which she racially abused Kylian Mbappé, whose penalty won the game for France, but demanding an apology for the Real Madrid forward dismissing her as “a despicable woman” who was “unworthy of your position”. The Paraguayan government and Infantino condemned Amarilla, and French prosecutors are investigating.France’s players had shown remarkable self-control against Paraguay, and their federation had indicated its disdain for the machinations that led to the USA forward Folarin Balogun’s one-match ban for his red card against Bosnia and Herzegovina being suspended by appealing against a yellow card shown to Michael Olise. The Bayern Munich forward was booked after the Paraguay midfielder Matías Galarza threw himself to the ground clutching his face when replays clearly showed Olise had done no more than grab his shirt.Deschamps confirmed, though, that Fifa has said the yellow card stands; there was no invoking of article 27 of the disciplinary code as there had been in the case of Balogun, seemingly after the intervention of Donald Trump.France’s head coach was keen to underline how difficult an opponent Morocco will be. “They don’t have the profile of Paraguay,” he said. “We will need to be very effective because this Morocco is of very high quality. The level rises as you climb the mountain. Mindset doesn’t win matches but it can make you lose them.”skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionGiven he will leave the France job after this tournament, the quarter-final could be Deschamps’s farewell. “The goal is to do everything to make sure it goes well,” he said. “That is the only thing driving me.”
France’s Deschamps unruffled by Argentinian officials helming Morocco quarter-final
A repeat of 2022’s Argentina v France final is still possible but Didier Deschamps said of the all-Argentinian officiating team: ‘We have to deal with it. I trust the referees’










