France’s semifinal against Spain was already going sideways before the first water break. The Spanish took the lead from the penalty spot, and then things got worse in a hurry.
William Saliba, the Arsenal center-back who has been a rock for Les Bleus throughout this tournament, went down with no one near him. It wasn’t a tackle. It wasn’t a collision. He just buckled, grabbed at his leg, and signaled to the bench that he couldn’t continue. The medical staff came on quickly, but the decision was clear within a minute. Saliba was done.
Maxence Lacroix replaced him. The former Wolfsburg defender is solid, but he’s not the guy who started every knockout match so far. Losing Saliba at this stage — with a trip to the final on the line — is a gut punch for a French side that has built its identity around defensive discipline.
The injury happened just after Spain converted the penalty, meaning France had to absorb two quick setbacks without time to regroup. Manager Didier Deschamps had to reshuffle his shape on the fly, and the backline looked unsettled in the minutes that followed.
No Contact, No Warning
What made the moment so jarring was that Saliba wasn’t in a duel. He was tracking a runner, took a stride, and his leg just gave way. Non-contact injuries in high-intensity moments like this tend to raise alarm bells — muscle tears, ligament issues, stuff that doesn’t heal in a few days. The team hasn’t released an official diagnosis yet, but early reports suggest this isn’t a minor knock.
For Arsenal supporters watching back home, it’s an unsettling sight. Saliba has been one of the best defenders in the Premier League when healthy, and any significant injury now could spill into next club season.
For France, the immediate problem is surviving the rest of this semifinal without him. Spain’s attack has been relentless all tournament, and asking a replacement center-back to step into that pressure cooker with no warmup is a brutal ask.
France will need to dig deep if they want to keep their tournament alive.

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