Upamecano Relishes Haaland Tussle Ahead Of France Versus Norway Clash
France defender Dayot Upamecano is preparing for a direct duel with Erling Haaland as Group I reaches a decisive stage, with both France and Norway sitting on six points from two matches and their meeting in Boston on Friday set to determine who finishes top and advances as group winners.
Haaland enters this World Cup clash in prolific form, having scored four goals across Norway's opening fixtures, including two against Iraq on matchday one and another brace versus Senegal on matchday two, and this scoring run places Haaland on the verge of notable tournament history.

If Haaland scores at least twice again in Boston, Haaland becomes only the third player to register 2+ goals in each of a first three World Cup appearances, matching Argentina's Guillermo Stabile from 1930 and Hungary's Sandor Kocsis from 1954, placing this France versus Norway meeting under additional statistical focus.
Norway have also shown attacking strength beyond Haaland's individual numbers, creating 10 big chances so far, the highest figure in Group I and already surpassing the nine big chances Norway produced during the team's previous World Cup campaign in 1998, which underlines the scale of the defensive task facing France.
Upamecano expects a demanding night physically and mentally against Norway, yet the France centre-back views the confrontation with Haaland as an opportunity, outlining that dealing with Haaland requires constant attention, sharp reactions and smart positioning rather than relying only on strength in individual duels or direct tackles.
"With Haaland, you always have to keep one eye on him, watch where he is, and also keep an eye on the player with the ball, even if you're not outnumbered. When he's behind me, and one of his team-mates makes a run down the wing, I know I'll have to take two or three looks to know where he's going, how he's positioning himself. We all know he's a player who's very quick off his feet, a bit like Kylian [Mbappe]. He only needs a split second to change direction. So, you always have to keep an eye on him. If you can't anticipate his ball control and prevent him from getting the ball, you have to try to force him wide. He's a player who likes physical contact, and so do I. But sometimes, you have to know how to manage the game, force him to one side and close down his goal angle. Haaland is more of a battle of movement than a true physical contest. You have to be ready on every step, watching where he is. He's not going to touch the ball 50 times, we all know that. He'll want two or three touches, but he'll play those two or three at 100%, so you have to be at 100%."
France defence on Haaland World Cup danger and Norway support cast
Upamecano highlights Haaland's speed, ability to change direction and preference for contact, yet also stresses that France cannot focus solely on one player, because Norway's attack features other threats who could exploit any defensive attention that centres too much on Haaland during this Group I encounter.
"Haaland is an incredible player, but don't forget [Alexander] Sorloth, with whom I played at RB Leipzig," Upamecano said. "[He is] very strong, very fast, and he hits hard." For France, success against Norway appears to depend on controlling Haaland's influence while respecting the wider danger created by Norway's in-form forward line.


Click it and Unblock the Notifications