Few national sides carry the weight of expectation quite like France does, really. Known around the world as Les Bleus, the France national football team Players has spent the last decade sort of setting the mark for depth, tactical discipline, and that kind of pure star power that international football can’t ignore. Two World Cup titles (1998, 2018), two European Championships (1984, 2000) and a run of three World Cup finals across three of the last four editions, have left the French federation turned into maybe the deepest talent pipeline in the world game.
But what makes France so hard to knock off their perch isn’t only the top tier sparkle. It’s the huge stack behind it, the almost stubborn bedrock. Where most nations build their XI around two or three world-class players, France can field an entire eleven, not just for hype, but for serious output against the best teams in Europe. Kylian Mbappé, Ousmane Dembélé, Michael Olise, William Saliba, plus this conveyor belt of academy graduates from Claire Fontaine, all of it gives Didier Deschamps and yes, his incoming successor a player pool that most federations only talk about.
At the 2026 FIFA World Cup, France arrived as the top-ranked team, finished their group on a perfect run, and kept moving until the semi-finals. Still, a tactically sharp Spain side ended the chase for a third star. This piece lays out the complete 2026 France national football team players list — by position, by role, and also by what’s next, as the country steps into a new managerial era.
In this article, you’ll learn:
- The complete 2026 France squad broken down by position
- Profiles of the goalkeepers, defenders, midfielders, and forwards
- Who captains France and why
- The coaching situation, including the highly anticipated post-Deschamps transition
- A predicted starting XI in Deschamps’ preferred 4-3-3
- The next generation of French stars
- France’s all-time greats, World Cup and Euro history, honors, market value, and playing style
France National Football Team Players List (2026 Updated)
France’s officially confirmed 26-man squad for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, announced by Didier Deschamps on May 14, 2026, is the most valuable roster at the tournament. Below is the core group of players who have defined this squad’s World Cup campaign.
| Player | Position | Club | Jersey Number |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kylian Mbappé (Captain) | Forward | Real Madrid | 10 |
| Mike Maignan | Goalkeeper | AC Milan | 1 |
| William Saliba | Defender | Arsenal | 17 |
| Jules Koundé | Defender | Barcelona | 5 |
| Dayot Upamecano | Defender | Bayern Munich | 4 |
| Ibrahima Konaté | Defender | Liverpool | 21 |
| Theo Hernandez | Defender | Al-Hilal | 22 |
| Lucas Hernandez | Defender | Paris Saint-Germain | 3 |
| Aurélien Tchouaméni | Midfielder | Real Madrid | 8 |
| Adrien Rabiot | Midfielder | AC Milan | 14 |
| N’Golo Kanté | Midfielder | Fenerbahçe | 6 |
| Manu Koné | Midfielder | Roma | 13 |
| Warren Zaïre-Emery | Midfielder | Paris Saint-Germain | 25 |
| Ousmane Dembélé | Forward | Paris Saint-Germain | 11 |
| Michael Olise | Forward | Bayern Munich | 7 |
| Bradley Barcola | Forward | Paris Saint-Germain | 19 |
| Désiré Doué | Forward | Paris Saint-Germain | 15 |
| Rayan Cherki | Forward | Manchester City | 18 |
| Marcus Thuram | Forward | Inter Milan | 9 |
Note: This list reflects France’s official, FIFA-confirmed 26-man World Cup squad. Notable names from earlier squads — including Eduardo Camavinga, Randal Kolo Muani, Christopher Nkunku, and Lucas Chevalier — were not part of the final tournament roster due to injury, form, or selection decisions, while Brice Samba, Robin Risser, Lucas Digne, Malo Gusto, Maxence Lacroix, Maghnes Akliouche, and Jean-Philippe Mateta rounded out the full 26.
France National Football Team Goalkeepers
| Goalkeeper | Club | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Mike Maignan | AC Milan | First-choice, No. 1 |
| Brice Samba | Rennes | Backup |
| Robin Risser | Lens | Third-choice, emerging talent |
Mike Maignan has been France’s undisputed No. 1 since Hugo Lloris’s international retirement, bringing elite shot-stopping and composed distribution that suits Deschamps’ possession-based build-up. Brice Samba offers reliable, experienced backup after years as a Ligue 1 mainstay, while Robin Risser — voted Ligue 1’s Best Goalkeeper at the 2026 UNFP Awards at just 21 — represents the next generation waiting in the wings behind Maignan.
France Defenders
| Defender | Club | Strength | Preferred Foot |
|---|---|---|---|
| William Saliba | Arsenal | Elite positioning, aerial dominance | Right |
| Jules Koundé | Barcelona | Versatility, pace, ball progression | Right |
| Ibrahima Konaté | Liverpool | Physicality, recovery speed | Right |
| Dayot Upamecano | Bayern Munich | Aggressive defending, ball-playing | Right |
| Theo Hernandez | Al-Hilal | Attacking overlap, dribbling | Left |
| Lucas Hernandez | Paris Saint-Germain | Tactical intelligence, tackling | Left |
France’s back line is arguably the deepest in world football. William Saliba has developed into one of the best center-backs on the planet, pairing composure on the ball with elite defensive reading. Jules Koundé and Dayot Upamecano add further Champions League-tested quality, while Ibrahima Konaté’s physical profile makes him a reliable partner at the heart of defense. At full-back, Theo Hernandez remains one of the most dangerous attacking left-backs in the game, with Lucas Hernandez offering positional versatility across the back line.
France Midfielders
| Midfielder | Club | Playing Style | Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aurélien Tchouaméni | Real Madrid | Deep-lying playmaker, defensive shield | CDM |
| N’Golo Kanté | Fenerbahçe | Relentless pressing, ball recovery | CM |
| Adrien Rabiot | AC Milan | Box-to-box, aerial threat | CM |
| Manu Koné | Roma | Energetic, progressive carrying | CM |
| Warren Zaïre-Emery | Paris Saint-Germain | Two-way dynamism, youth energy | CM |
Deschamps has leaned on experience and balance in central midfield. Aurélien Tchouaméni anchors the base of the midfield with elite positional discipline, while N’Golo Kanté’s return to the fold brought back his trademark tireless pressing. Adrien Rabiot and Manu Koné add physicality and progressive ball-carrying, and Warren Zaïre-Emery, still only in his early twenties, has already established himself as one of the most technically gifted young midfielders in Europe.
Also read this: England vs Argentina Semifinal | Spain national football team games | Argentina national football team
France Forwards
| Forward | Club | 2026 World Cup Goals | Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kylian Mbappé | Real Madrid | 8 | ST |
| Ousmane Dembélé | Paris Saint-Germain | 5 | RW |
| Michael Olise | Bayern Munich | — | RW/AM |
| Marcus Thuram | Inter Milan | — | ST |
| Bradley Barcola | Paris Saint-Germain | — | LW |
| Désiré Doué | Paris Saint-Germain | — | AM/LW |
| Rayan Cherki | Manchester City | — | AM |
| Jean-Philippe Mateta | Crystal Palace | — | ST |
This is arguably the most talented forward line France has assembled since 1998. Kylian Mbappé entered the tournament needing just one goal to become France’s all-time record scorer — he broke it in the opener against Senegal and finished the tournament among the World Cup’s leading scorers. Ousmane Dembélé, the reigning Ballon d’Or winner following PSG’s Champions League triumph, gives France a genuine second superstar. Michael Olise, Désiré Doué, and Bradley Barcola — all products of the PSG production line and Champions League winners — provide explosive width and creativity, while Marcus Thuram offers a physical focal point in attack.
France National Football Team Captain
Kylian Mbappé has captained France since March 2023, taking the armband after Hugo Lloris’s international retirement. Now leading Les Bleus at his third World Cup, Mbappé has cemented his place as both the emotional and statistical leader of this generation.
Leadership qualities: Mbappé is known for being outspoken and demanding — both of himself and his teammates — often speaking candidly to the press about tactical shortcomings, as he did following France’s semi-final exit to Spain. That directness, paired with his standing as one of the sport’s biggest global stars, has made him a natural, if sometimes polarizing, leader.
International appearances: Mbappé has made roughly 100 appearances for France since his debut, a milestone he passed during the 2026 World Cup cycle.
Career achievements: A 2018 World Cup winner as a teenager, 2022 World Cup runner-up and Golden Boot winner, and now France’s all-time record goalscorer, Mbappé has surpassed Olivier Giroud’s long-standing mark of 57 international goals — reaching the milestone in the 2026 World Cup opener against Senegal. He also holds the record for most goals scored in World Cup knockout matches and is closing in on the all-time World Cup scoring charts, sitting second only to Lionel Messi in career World Cup goals.
France National Football Team Coach
| Coach | Since | Formation | Major Achievements |
|---|---|---|---|
| Didier Deschamps | July 2012 | 4-3-3 (flexible to 4-2-3-1) | World Cup winner (2018), Euro 2016 & World Cup 2022 runner-up, UEFA Nations League winner (2021) |
Didier Deschamps has managed France for 14 years, becoming only the third man in history to win the World Cup as both a player (1998) and a manager (2018). His tactical approach prioritizes defensive solidity and midfield control — a compact 4-3-3 that can shift into a 4-2-3-1 against stronger opposition — trusting his elite attacking talent to create and finish chances once the team wins the ball back.
The 2026 World Cup marks the end of the Deschamps era. He confirmed in early 2025 that he would step down once his contract expired following the tournament, and France’s semi-final exit to Spain effectively closed out his historic 14-year reign, with the third-place play-off against England serving as his final match in charge.
The next era: Zinedine Zidane. According to multiple reports, France legend and former Real Madrid manager Zinedine Zidane has reached a verbal agreement with the French Football Federation (FFF) to succeed Deschamps once the World Cup concludes, with formal confirmation expected shortly after the tournament. Zidane — a World Cup winner as a player in 1998 and a three-time Champions League-winning manager with Real Madrid — is expected to lead France through Euro 2028 and the 2030 World Cup cycle.
France Starting XI (Predicted 2026)
Formation: 4-3-3
| Position | Player |
|---|---|
| GK | Mike Maignan |
| RB | Jules Koundé |
| CB | William Saliba |
| CB | Dayot Upamecano |
| LB | Theo Hernandez |
| CM | Aurélien Tchouaméni |
| CM | Warren Zaïre-Emery |
| CAM | Désiré Doué |
| RW | Ousmane Dembélé |
| ST | Kylian Mbappé |
| LW | Michael Olise |
This XI represents Deschamps’ preferred blend of defensive solidity through Saliba and Upamecano, control via Tchouaméni, and explosive attacking talent across the front line. Expect Zidane, once officially in charge, to lean further into possession-based, technically-driven football — a system that should suit this generation of PSG and Bayern-schooled attackers even more.
France National Football Team Young Players to Watch
| Player | Club | Why They’re Exciting |
|---|---|---|
| Désiré Doué | Paris Saint-Germain | Champions League winner with elite dribbling and vision; already a Ballon d’Or conversation name |
| Rayan Cherki | Manchester City | Creative playmaker with a rare ability to unlock defenses in tight spaces |
| Bradley Barcola | Paris Saint-Germain | Blistering pace and direct running that terrifies opposing full-backs |
| Warren Zaïre-Emery | Paris Saint-Germain | Two-way midfielder with maturity and engine well beyond his age |
| Michael Olise | Bayern Munich | One of Europe’s most in-form wingers, a genuine Ballon d’Or contender |
France’s academy pipeline — anchored by Clairefontaine and PSG’s youth setup — continues to produce generational talent at a rate no other footballing nation can match. With Deschamps departing and Zidane incoming, this young core is expected to form the spine of the France team through the 2030 World Cup cycle.
France National Football Team Best Players of All Time
| Player | Position | Caps | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kylian Mbappé | Forward | ~100 | 58+ (all-time record) |
| Olivier Giroud | Forward | 137 | 57 |
| Thierry Henry | Forward | 123 | 51 |
| Michel Platini | Midfielder | 72 | 41 |
| Zinedine Zidane | Midfielder | 108 | 31 |
| Antoine Griezmann | Forward | 138+ | 44 |
| Hugo Lloris | Goalkeeper | 145 (most-capped) | — |
| Didier Deschamps | Midfielder | 103 | 4 |
Mbappé’s rise to the top of the all-time scoring charts — achieved in fewer than 100 caps — marks one of the fastest goalscoring records in football history. Hugo Lloris remains the most-capped player in French history with 145 appearances, a benchmark Mbappé could realistically challenge given his age and continued involvement with the national team.
France National Football Team FIFA World Cup Record
| Year | Result |
|---|---|
| 1930 | Group Stage |
| 1958 | Third Place |
| 1998 | Champions 🏆 |
| 2006 | Runner-up |
| 2018 | Champions 🏆 |
| 2022 | Runner-up |
| 2026 | Semi-final (3rd/4th place play-off) |
France have now reached the semi-finals or better in four of the last six World Cups they’ve contested — a run of consistency virtually unmatched in the modern game. The 2026 edition saw France top Group I with a perfect record, beat Sweden, Paraguay, and Morocco en route to the last four, before falling 2-0 to Spain in the semi-final.
France UEFA European Championship Record
| Year | Result |
|---|---|
| 1960 | Fourth Place |
| 1984 | Champions 🏆 (hosts) |
| 1992 | Group Stage |
| 1996 | Semi-final |
| 2000 | Champions 🏆 |
| 2004 | Quarter-final |
| 2008 | Group Stage |
| 2012 | Quarter-final |
| 2016 | Runner-up (hosts) |
| 2020/21 | Round of 16 |
| 2024 | Semi-final |
France’s two European Championship titles came in 1984 (as hosts, led by Michel Platini’s record-breaking nine goals) and 2000, when Les Bleus completed a rare World Cup–Euro double.
France National Football Team Honors
| Competition | Titles |
|---|---|
| FIFA World Cup | 2 (1998, 2018) |
| UEFA European Championship | 2 (1984, 2000) |
| UEFA Nations League | 1 (2021) |
| FIFA Confederations Cup | 2 (2001, 2003) |
France’s trophy cabinet places them among an elite handful of nations to have won the World Cup, the continental championship, and a global intercontinental title — a distinction shared with very few countries.
France Squad Market Value
According to Transfermarkt valuations reported around the 2026 World Cup, France fielded the most valuable squad of all 48 competing nations, with a combined value of roughly €1.52 billion (~$1.76 billion) — well ahead of second-placed England (€1.36bn) and Spain (€1.22bn).
| Player | Estimated Market Value |
|---|---|
| Kylian Mbappé | ~€200M+ |
| Michael Olise | ~€150M |
| Désiré Doué | Top-20 nationally |
| Ousmane Dembélé | Top-20 nationally |
| William Saliba | €100M+ |
| Warren Zaïre-Emery | €80M+ |
| Aurélien Tchouaméni | €80M+ |
| Bradley Barcola | €70M+ |
| Jules Koundé | €70M+ |
| Dayot Upamecano | €60M+ |
Sixteen of France’s 26-man World Cup squad were valued above $50 million, with six players surpassing the $100 million mark — a depth of individual value no other footballing nation could match heading into the tournament.
France National Football Team Statistics (2026)
- FIFA Ranking: No. 1 in the world (as of April 2026)
- Most Caps: Hugo Lloris — 145
- All-Time Top Scorer: Kylian Mbappé — 58+ goals (overtook Olivier Giroud’s 57 during the 2026 World Cup)
- Biggest Win: France 14–0 Gibraltar (November 2023)
- Biggest Defeat: Denmark 17–1 France (October 1908)
- Home Stadium: Stade de France
- World Cup Appearances: 17 (first in 1930)
- European Championship Appearances: 11 (first in 1960)
Note: Detailed all-time aggregate figures (total matches, wins, draws, losses, and goals scored across France’s full 120-year history) fluctuate by source and are best verified directly via FIFA or the French Football Federation for the most current tally.
France National Football Team Playing Style
Tactical formation: Deschamps’ France primarily operates out of a 4-3-3, shifting into a 4-2-3-1 against elite opposition to add defensive solidity in midfield.
Pressing strategy: France press selectively rather than relentlessly, choosing moments to trigger a high press — particularly through Dembélé, Olise, and Mbappé — rather than sustaining it for the full 90 minutes.
Possession game: With Tchouaméni anchoring and technically gifted players like Zaïre-Emery and Doué in support, France can control tempo and possession when required, though Deschamps has traditionally preferred a more direct, transition-based approach.
Defensive setup: Built around the Saliba-Upamecano/Konaté center-back pairing, France’s defense is widely regarded as one of the most physically dominant and positionally disciplined in world football.
Attacking strengths: Explosive individual quality on the counter-attack, exceptional 1v1 ability out wide through Dembélé, Olise, and Barcola, and a lethal focal point in Mbappé make France dangerous in transition as much as in structured possession.
Set-piece effectiveness: With aerially dominant center-backs and reliable delivery from wide areas, France remain a genuine set-piece threat at both ends of the pitch.
France National Football Team Future Prospects
FIFA World Cup ambitions: Despite falling short in the 2026 semi-final, France’s young core — Doué, Barcola, Zaïre-Emery, Olise — positions them as favorites heading into the 2030 World Cup, likely under new manager Zinedine Zidane.
UEFA Euro goals: Euro 2028 in the UK and Ireland will be Zidane’s first major tournament in charge, offering an early opportunity to stamp his identity on the team.
Emerging stars: Robin Risser in goal, and a deep pool of academy talent behind the current forward line, suggest France’s production of elite players shows no sign of slowing down.
Long-term squad development: With Mbappé still only in his late twenties and a golden generation of PSG-developed attackers just entering their prime, France appear well-positioned to remain a top-two or top-three footballing nation through the rest of the decade — provided the Deschamps-to-Zidane transition is managed smoothly.
Conclusion
The France national football team players keep on setting the pace ,for excellence in international football. They’ve got this very world-class mix of seasoned figures like Kylian Mbappé, Mike Maignan, William Saliba, and Aurélien Tchouaméni, and then also a load of bright, young players such as Désiré Doué, Bradley Barcola, Warren Zaïre-Emery, and Rayan Cherki . So, Les Bleus basically have one of the deepest and also most balanced rosters across world football, which is kind of rare when you think about it.
Even if France just missed grabbing yet another FIFA World Cup crown in 2026 , they again showed why they are still counted among the global elite. The shift from Didier Deschamps toward a new leadership style gives the whole group fresh chances, and the country’s well-known youth pipeline keeps feeding in talented new faces, step by step, for years ahead.
So if you’re hunting for the latest France squad, player profiles, captain, coach, or even the future stars, the French national team stays tied to ambition, quality, and consistency. With a strong spine now entering its best period, and the next generation already doing real work on the pitch, France should be set to push hard for big trophies in the upcoming FIFA World Cups and UEFA European Championships.
Key Takeaways
- France has one of the most talented football squads in the world.
- Kylian Mbappé leads the team as captain and its all-time top scorer.
- The squad combines experienced stars with exciting young players.
- Strong youth development keeps France competitive every year.
- France remains a serious contender for future World Cups and UEFA Euro titles.
FAQs
1. Who is the captain of the France national football team?
Kylian Mbappé has captained France since March 2023, leading the team at his third World Cup in 2026.
2. Who is the best player in the France national football team?
Kylian Mbappé is widely regarded as France’s best player and is now the country’s all-time record goalscorer, though Ousmane Dembélé — the reigning Ballon d’Or winner — is a strong second contender.
3. Who is the coach of France in 2026?
Didier Deschamps coached France through the 2026 World Cup, his final tournament after 14 years in charge. Zinedine Zidane is expected to be officially confirmed as his successor shortly after the tournament concludes.
4. How many World Cups has France won?
France has won the FIFA World Cup twice — in 1998 and 2018.
5. Who is France’s all-time top scorer?
Kylian Mbappé, who surpassed Olivier Giroud’s record of 57 goals during the 2026 World Cup opener against Senegal.
6. Which club has the most France national team players?
Paris Saint-Germain, with five players in France’s 2026 World Cup squad — the most of any club.






