At first glance, France bring the tournament's most dangerous attack, while Spain arrive with the strongest defensive record. That contrast shapes everything. Les Bleus want space and acceleration; La Roja prefer control, short passing and a slower squeeze around the ball.
Deschamps will probably allow Spain more possession than most coaches would tolerate. It suits France. Their front line can remain dangerous without constant territorial control, especially when Mbappé attacks the channel between fullback and centre back. Spain cannot simply camp high and hope for the best.
Spain should respond by stretching the pitch with Yamal and an overlapping right back, then trying to pin France's wide players deeper. The midfield duel may decide whether the match breathes or suffocates. Rodri and his partners want rhythm; France will look for disruption and vertical releases.
The match rhythm could produce bursts rather than constant pressure. Both teams can generate shots quickly after turnovers, but neither likes giving away cheap set pieces. Corners may come in clusters when one side is forced back, while Barton's whistle could punish tactical fouls around midfield.
Recent rivalry momentum belongs to Spain, and Yamal's message was blunt: "We're not afraid at all." Yet knockout football has a funny way of ignoring neat narratives. France carry greater direct power, Spain the calmer possession game. One mistake near either penalty area could flip the semifinal.