Norway's gamble backfires on the scoresheet; but the strategy may still pay off
Solbakken's decision to rest 10 starters, including Erling Haaland and Martin Ødegaard, handed France a comfortable 4-1 victory. Yet with the knockout rounds now looming, Norway may have sacrificed the battle to maximise their chances of winning the war.
The scoreline was brutal. The strategy was bolder still.
Norway's decision to field a second-string side against France in their final Group I match at the 2026 Fifa World Cup ended in a 4-1 defeat on Friday (26 June), surrendering top spot in the group and raising immediate questions over one of the tournament's most audacious tactical gambles.
But judging the decision solely by the result risks missing the bigger picture.
Manager Ståle Solbakken rested 10 of the 11 players who had started the dramatic 3-2 victory over Senegal, including Erling Haaland, Martin Ødegaard, Alexander Sørloth, Antonio Nusa and captain Ørjan Nyland. Haaland, the tournament's joint-second highest scorer with four goals, did not play a single minute.
France, by contrast, arrived almost at full strength. Ousmane Dembélé, Kylian Mbappé, Michael Olise and Désiré Doué all started as Les Bleus chased first place in the group.
They found it with ruthless efficiency.
A calculated sacrifice
Norway had already secured qualification for the Round of 32 after consecutive wins over Iraq and Senegal.
The only remaining prize was top spot. Solbakken chose instead to prioritise freshness over finishing first. It was a remarkable decision, making Norway only the fourth team in World Cup history to rotate 10 or more players in a starting XI during the same tournament, according to Opta.
Rather than risk injuries, fatigue or suspensions for his key players against one of the strongest attacks in the competition, Solbakken effectively accepted that the match was expendable if it improved Norway's chances once the knockout phase began. Erling Haaland himself had hinted at that mindset before kick-off. "I couldn't care too much about that game now... they're probably going to win against us. And they're probably going to win the whole tournament." It sounded defeatist at first. In hindsight, it reflected Norway's priorities.
France punish every weakness
France exposed Norway's heavily rotated side almost immediately. Mbappé rattled the crossbar inside 25 seconds before Dembélé took complete control of the contest, scoring in the seventh, 20th and 32nd minutes to complete the second-fastest World Cup hat-trick on record.
Thelo Aasgaard briefly gave Norway hope when he pulled one back just 81 seconds after France's second goal. Then came the turning point. Jørgen Strand Larsen stepped up with the opportunity to equalise from the penalty spot at 2-1 but saw his effort comfortably saved by Mike Maignan.
Instead of a level contest, Norway found themselves two goals behind again before half-time. Doué's stoppage-time header merely completed a scoreline that accurately reflected France's dominance.
The trade-off
The defeat undeniably carried consequences.
Norway surrendered first place in Group I and now face Ivory Coast in the Round of 32 instead of a potentially less demanding third-placed qualifier.
The heavy defeat also interrupted the momentum built by impressive victories over Iraq and Senegal.
Yet Norway also emerged with everything they had intended to protect. Haaland, Ødegaard and Sørloth remain fully rested. None of Norway's first-choice players picked up injuries. No player accumulated suspension concerns. Their strongest tactical setup remains largely unseen against elite opposition. Perhaps most importantly, Haaland enters the knockout stage with four goals in two matches and fresh legs.
A gamble grounded in history
Mass rotation at World Cups is exceptionally rare. Opta records only three previous occasions where a team made at least 10 changes within the same tournament. The results offer mixed lessons. Belgium rotated heavily in 2018 before finishing third. Brazil did the same in 2022 but exited in the quarter-finals.
Spain famously made sweeping changes in 2006 before laying the foundations for the generation that would eventually become world champions four years later.
History offers no guarantee that Solbakken's gamble will succeed. But it does suggest that managers willing to make such drastic decisions usually have one objective in mind: extending their tournament, not winning every group-stage match.
Judgement deferred until the knockouts
Norway lost the game they expected to lose. Whether they also lost the argument will only become clear in the knockout rounds.
From a purely tactical perspective, Solbakken exchanged three group-stage points for something he considered more valuable - a fully rested Haaland, a fully available Ødegaard and a first-choice team untouched by France's relentless attacking quality. That is an expensive trade if Norway fall to Ivory Coast.
But if Haaland returns fresh and decisive in the knockout stage, Friday's defeat may ultimately be remembered not as a failure, but as one of the tournament's most calculated strategic sacrifices.
For now, the scoreboard belongs to France. The real verdict on Norway's gamble has been postponed until the matches that truly matter.
