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Jun 26, 2018 at 3pm UK at Luzhniki Stadium
Attendance: 78,011

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FT

France and Denmark top Group C after goalless draw

France and Denmark play out the first 0-0 draw of the 2018 World Cup at the Luzhniki Stadium - a result which sees the Danes join Les Bleus in the last 16.

France and Denmark played out the first 0-0 draw of the 2018 World Cup at the Luzhniki Stadium this afternoon to finish as the top two in Group C.

Les Bleus were already through to the knockout stages and the point, combined with Australia's defeat to Peru, ensured that Denmark would join them as runners-up.

Didier Deschamps made six changes to his France starting lineup who again failed to justify why they are among the tournament favourites with a disappointing display.

Denmark's Mathias Jorgensen fouls France's Antoine Griezmann prompting referee Sandro Ricci to award the Denmark player a yellow card on June 26, 2018© Reuters

A half-hearted penalty appeal apiece was as exciting as the opening 25 minutes got in Moscow. Middlesbrough's Martin Braithwaite felt that he was felled as he burst into the box, while France wanted a handball against Mathias Jorgensen, when the ball struck the Huddersfield Town defender under the armpit.

Kasper Schmeichel was called into action by Olivier Giroud and Antoine Griezmann in the first half, but was never seriously stretched. Young defender Presnel Kimpembe could have troubled the Leicester City goalkeeper, but he could not direct his free header from Thomas Lemar's 17th-minute corner on target.

Knowing that a point would see them through, the Danes were content to sit back and hope that talisman Christian Eriksen, who had scored 17 goals in his last 20 internationals, could produce something spectacular.

France's Raphael Varane in action with Denmark's Pione Sisto on June 26, 2018© Reuters

The Tottenham Hotspur playmaker was on the periphary of the game, but did have arguably the best chance of the opening 45 minutes when Andreas Cornelius slid across a perfectly-weighted ball which was smothered by France goalkeeper Steve Mandanda, after hesitation from Eriksen.

Ousmane Dembele was one of the players given an opportunity by Deschamps but he failed to make an impression. The Barcelona forward at least showed some intent with a couple of long-range shots but the quality was badly lacking.

A second Peru goal against Australia in Sochi three minutes into the second half allowed the Danes to relax even more, and it quickly became clear that both teams were content to settle for the draw that would see their respective objectives achieved.

Denmark's Andreas Christensen in action against France on June 26, 2018© Reuters

Eriksen did try his best to liven up a stale encounter, testing Mandanda with a dipping free kick which bounced just in front of him and nearly fell to Cornelius on the rebound. A poor defensive header from Djibril Sidibe also set up the Spurs star for a half-volley that he dragged wide.

The 70th-minute introduction of Nabil Fekir brought some much-needed impetus to France's play, with the Lyon midfielder ruffling the side-netting with a speculative left-footed shot from a difficult angle, moments after replacing Griezmann who was once again well below his best.

Fekir aimed to break the deadlock again when he drifted in from the right and bent a shot towards the bottom corner which Schmeichel pushed away, and, despite his best efforts, this year's tournament witnessed its first goalless draw in 38 matches.

France and Denmark now wait to learn their last-16 opponents as the fate of Group D is decided this evening.

DENMARK (4-4-1-1): Schmeichel; Dalsgaard, Kjaer, Jorgensen,, Stryger; Braithwaite, Delaney (Lerager, 90'), Christensen, Sisto (Fischer, 60'); Eriksen; Cornelius (Dolberg, 70')

FRANCE (4-2-3-1): Mandanda; Sidibie, Kimpembe, Varane, Hernandez (Mendy, 50'); Kante, Nzonzi; Lemar, Griezmann (Fekir, 68'), Dembele (Mbappe, 78'); Giroud

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Paul Pogba and Hugo Lloris during a France training session in March 2018
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Tables
TeamPWDLFAGDPTS
1Arsenal14121133112237
2Manchester CityMan City14102240142632
3Newcastle UnitedNewcastle1586129111830
4Tottenham HotspurSpurs1592431211029
5Manchester UnitedMan Utd148242020026
6Liverpool1464428171122
7Brighton & Hove AlbionBrighton146352319421
8Chelsea146351717021
9Fulham155462426-219
10Brentford154742325-219
11Crystal Palace145451518-319
12Aston Villa155371622-618
13Leicester CityLeicester155282525017
14Bournemouth154471832-1416
15Leeds UnitedLeeds144372226-415
16West Ham UnitedWest Ham154291217-514
17Everton153571117-614
18Nottingham ForestNott'm Forest153481130-1913
19Southampton153391327-1412
20Wolverhampton WanderersWolves15249824-1610

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