France head coach Didier Deschamps made pointed comments on July 9 about the all-Argentine referee crew assigned to his team’s World Cup 2026 quarter-final against Morocco, saying he hopes the officials perform as well as François Letexier did during Argentina’s earlier match against Egypt. The remark, diplomatic on the surface, carries unmistakable subtext about officiating quality at a tournament already plagued by refereeing scrutiny.

The referee assignment raising eyebrows

The quarter-final between France and Morocco will be officiated by an entirely Argentine crew. Facundo Tello takes the whistle as main referee, with Juan Pablo Belatti and Gabriel Chade serving as assistant referees. Darío Herrera fills the fourth official role, and Cristian Navarro rounds out the team as reserve assistant.

Egypt filed complaints about Letexier’s officiating during the Argentina vs. Egypt match on July 7, alleging key decisions went against them. Deschamps’ comment about hoping Tello’s crew matches Letexier’s quality reads less like praise and more like a carefully worded chess move.

Deschamps himself tried to redirect attention, declaring that France’s focus is entirely on Morocco and not on the officials.