Bukayo Saka's hat-trick helped England seal their best World Cup finish since 1966, beating France 6-4 in a breathless third-place play-off that also saw Kylian Mbappe become the tournament's all-time leading goalscorer.


2026 World Cup

4-6

Match Report

Thomas Tuchel was booed by some England fans prior to kick-off, amid fierce criticism of his defensive tactics during Wednesday's semi-final defeat to Argentina.

But the Three Lions certainly did not sit back in Miami, even with Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham dropping to the bench. Declan Rice and Ezri Konsa struck to put them 2-0 up after 18 minutes, before Saka added two more goals late in the first half.

France came storming back after the interval, though, with Mbappe overtaking Lionel Messi – at least temporarily – as the World Cup's all-time leading scorer with his two goals, which came either side of a powerful finish from substitute Bradley Barcola.

Saka's 87th-minute penalty pulled England clear again, and even though Ousmane Dembele reintroduced some nerves in stoppage time, substitute Bellingham scored the clinching goal to ensure a losing end to Didier Deschamps's 14-year France reign.

The #ThreeLions' best-ever World Cup finish on foreign soil  pic.twitter.com/AUVdkZzAGB

— England (@England) July 18, 2026

The scoring started as early as the third minute, with Rice picking off a terrible pass from Desire Doue before raiding forward and drilling into the far corner from range. 

Rayan Cherki saw an effort swatted away by England's stand-in goalkeeper Dean Henderson, but Les Bleus continued to look ragged at the other end, and they were saved by the offside flag when Saka finished neatly across goal.

A near-identical move saw another Saka shot deflect behind, but England kept the pressure on and from the resulting corner, Rice's delivery was glanced into the far corner by Konsa.

And there was still more to come from the Three Lions. France's defence was all at sea for the third goal in the 37th minute, with Marcus Rashford inexplicably allowed to run clean through on goal from inside his own half. Rashford was initially thwarted by Mike Maignan, but he recovered to turn provider for Saka.

And Saka applied another pinpoint finish into the bottom-right corner in stoppage time, after Eberechi Eze's through-ball split the France backline straight down the middle.

Deschamps reacted by making four half-time substitutions, though Mbappe stayed on and moved level with Messi in the all-time World Cup goal charts – and ahead in the 2026 Golden Boot race – when he finished left-footed in the 48th minute.

France had hope of a comeback when Barcola slammed home at the near post six minutes later, and another fine link-up between Michael Olise and Mbappe led to the latter's record-breaking 22nd World Cup goal in the 66th minute.

Olise wasted two glaring chances to equalise for France, the second being a particularly poor finish from near the penalty spot, before Djed Spence capped his breakout tournament by darting forward to be fouled by Malo Gusto, allowing Saka to slot home from the spot. 

Dembele's cultured, left-footed finish gave France hope of one last push to force extra time, but a gutsy solo effort from Bellingham capped an incredible contest and made the bronze medal safe for England.  

7 - Jude Bellingham’s seven goals are the outright most ever by an England player at a single FIFA World Cup or UEFA European Championship tournament.

Heroic. pic.twitter.com/cWqwzTKBwe

— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) July 18, 2026

Mbappe overtakes Messi, but Saka outdoes France superstar  

Tuchel's ill-fated move to a back five after England took the lead against Argentina has been dissected at length, though the German has since said he does not regret that decision – a comment that clearly irked some of those in attendance in Florida.

And even with Tuchel making seven changes to his starting lineup, the Three Lions took out their frustrations on a lacklustre France side throughout the first half. 

Rice got the rout started with a goal and an assist, becoming the sixth England player to do both in a World Cup game and the third to do so in 2026, after Bellingham versus Panama and Harry Kane against Mexico.

No team has ever avoided defeat after trailing by four goals in a World Cup match, though France threatened to do exactly that when they came roaring back in the second half.

Mbappe's brace took him one goal clear of Messi in the all-time World Cup charts (22 to 21) and two clear for this tournament (10 to eight) ahead of Argentina's final meeting with Spain. He is the first player to reach double figures at a single edition since West Germany's Gerd Muller in 1970.

Many might have expected the France captain to leave with the match ball at that point, but that honour went to Saka – only the second England player to score a hat-trick in a World Cup knockout-stage match, after Geoff Hurst in the 1966 final.

There was also a piece of history for Bellingham, who became England's highest scorer at a single World Cup or Euros (seven goals) and finally killed off a manic contest. 

Line-ups

France XI: Maignan, Rabiot, Theo, Mbappe, Konate, Maxence Lacroix, Cherki, Olise, Gusto, Zaire-Emery, Doue

Subs: Digne, Brice Samba, Kante, Lucas, Dembele, Thuram, Upamecano, Jean-Philippe Mateta, Kounde, Tchouameni, Saliba, Manu Koné, Barcola, Maghnes Akliouche, Robin Risser

England XI: Ivan Toney, Dean Henderson, Rice, Rashford, Ngoyo, Eberechi Eze, Guehi, Morgan Rogers, Spence, Saka, Quansah

Subs: Henderson, Burn, Kane, Pickford, Stones, Ollie Watkins, Trevoh Chalobah, Elliot Anderson, Reece James, Gordon, Madueke, James Trafford, Bellingham, Nico O'Reilly