France vs Romania match report: Dimitri Payet's late stunner smooths over the cracks for nervous hosts in Paris

France 2 Romania 1

Jack Pitt-Brooke
Stade de France
Friday 10 June 2016 22:03 BST
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Dimitri Payet wheels away in celebration after striking late for France
Dimitri Payet wheels away in celebration after striking late for France (Getty)

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All the emotion that was invested into this match, all the expectation for something spectacular, was repaid in multiples by Dimitri Payet. There are 66million people desperate for this France team to succeed but none could have expecting the first game of Euro 2016 to go quite like this.

In the final minute of normal time France were preparing to draw the curtains on a 1-1 draw, a disappointing performance and a poor point against Romania at the Stade de France. They had failed to live up to the billing as favourites, the hopes as hosts and even the ludicrous glitz of the opening ceremony. It would have been a night for questions, nerves and regret.

And then Payet picked up the ball 20 yards from goal and decided he did not want to go home feeling like that. So with his first touch he shifted the ball inside with his right, and with his second he smacked it into the top corner with his left. If there are many better goals or better moments than this over this next month it will be a very special tournament. Once the celebrations had died down Payet was substituted by Didier Deschamps, in floods of tears and unable to continue.

Payet, of course, had been the eleventh member of Deschamps’ team to be selected, having just beaten Anthony Martial to a place in the starting eleven. This goal, and his whole performance, were a vindication of that decision but also of Payet’s special status as a player who has the skill and audacity to change games at will. In one sense he has been doing this all season, brilliant goals at crucial moments for West Ham United. But this was the biggest game of his career and he produced something for which he will always be remembered.

But if Payet deserved this win, a win that gives France a real foothold in Group A, then Deschamps, and his team-mates, probably did not. For far too much of this evening France looked like a team who were struggling under the weight of their twin-burdens of hosts and favourites. This was always going to be an emotional night and when Didier Deschamps said beforehand that he wanted his players to use the emotion, but also distance themselves from it, it sounded like a very difficult task.

So it seemed to prove for France who looked so overcome by emotion at the start of the game that they completely failed to switch on. Romania did not offer very much going forward, for all their effort, and yet they had two brilliant chances to score, one at the start of each half. Just three minutes in France ought to have been punished for a collective failure to concentrate.

Nicolae Stanciu whipped in a corner, Florin Andone flicked it on at the near post and Bogdan Stancu looked surprised when the ball fell to him at the far post. From three yards out he could only shoot straight at Hugo Lloris, sat on the floor, wasting their best chance of the whole night.


Olivier Giroud celebrates scoring France's first goal of Euro 2016 

 Olivier Giroud celebrates scoring France's first goal of Euro 2016 
 (Getty)

Romania’s plan was to play on the break and while they did not park the whole bus, there were always enough yellow shirts in the middle pitch to frustrate France’s own narrow 4-3-3. Deschamps had all the firepower at his disposal but for the first half at least his players struggled to get the most out of each other.

With no natural wide players on the pitch France were struggling for space and Payet was the only man intelligent enough to realise it was to be found out wide. He made France’s first good chance with a cross from the left with Olivier Giroud headed wide from close range. Antoine Griezmann went close from a Bacary Sagna cross before, just before the break, Giroud headed wide from a Payet corner.

France’s only good spell of play in the whole game came early in the second half, when Payet took control, getting on the ball and playing in dangerous spaces. First he played through Giroud, who shot at Ciprian Tatarasanu. Then he drafted down the left and stood up a cross which Pogba volleyed at the goalkeeper. Then, finally, he crossed from deep, inviting Giroud to head France into the lead.

There was relief mixed with joy in the celebrations, not least for Giroud, but if they felt that they had overcome their nerves then it did not last for very long. Because they gifted Romania a way back into the game just six minutes later.

There was no real threat to their goal from a bouncing ball but as Stanciu tried to run onto it Patrice Evra stood too close, hanging his leg out. Stanciu took the invitation to go down and after some painful consideration Viktor Kassai gave the penalty. Stancu sent Lloris the wrong way. The noise was gone and the nerves were back.

Deschamps threw on Kingsley Coman and Anthony Martial in a belated search for width and pace but ultimately the man who could turn the game was already on the pitch. There were 50 seconds of normal time left when Payet realised that it did not have to end like this, so he turned it with one swing of his boot.

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