Talent!
This was pure talent!
Every fan who witnessed this goal had only one thought.
De Rocca's ball control was simply extraordinary!
Even under physical pressure, he maintained perfect control of the ball. He completed the skill to beat his man-marking. And facing the goalkeeper at the end, he stayed true to his style—beating him before facing an empty net.
If this wasn't talent, what was?
On the sideline, Tabárez watched De Rocca's goal and felt like he was watching the Copa América.
This was how South American players played football—
Tactics?
What tactics?
The tactic was: give me the ball and watch me perform what we call a "Maradonian solo run."
The difference was that those players rarely succeeded.
However, De Rocca had succeeded. And his goal perfectly embodied what Tabárez had told his players before the match: "De Rocca's footwork is no worse than any Brazilian's" and "He doesn't play like a European."
Football often had regional stereotypes.
Europeans: rigid players, tactical cogs with little creativity.
South Americans: naturally gifted with strong individual creativity but poor tactical discipline.
Africans: average football intelligence but explosive physicality.
Asians: few who could really play the game.
On the field, Uruguay's attacking players were equally stunned by De Rocca's sequence of skills.
Even Suárez was left speechless. A player of Julien's height could play like that?
The key was that those beaten by De Rocca weren't nobodies!
Godín, the core of Atlético's "iron defense."
Álvaro Pereira, Inter's versatile left-sided utility player.
Forlán called out to Suárez and Cavani: "You two need to interchange positions more. They're basically man-marking us, so keep moving. I'll find you with passes—be decisive when shooting."
Suárez and Cavani nodded.
In the national team, Forlán was the elder statesman.
In 2010, Forlán had almost single-handedly carried Uruguay to the World Cup semifinals, becoming the first Golden Ball winner whose team didn't finish in the top three.
Unfortunately, that was peak Forlán, but he hadn't yet been joined by peak Suárez and Cavani.
Still, Suárez had provided one of that World Cup's most iconic moments: his handball to deny a certain goal, followed by Gyan's penalty miss, leading Uruguay to a dramatic penalty shootout victory over Ghana.
The match continued.
Deschamps' tactics remained defense-first, with attacks depending solely on individual brilliance from the front players.
Uruguay clearly strengthened their defensive focus on De Rocca's side.
This opened up opportunities for Ribéry. But Uruguay's attacking threat remained strong, basically pinning France back in their own half.
Boom!
Cavani unleashed a thunderous shot from the edge of the box. At Napoli, he was famous for his long-range strikes and surging runs.
The ball flew toward goal, and Lloris made a flying save.
The ball was parried away.
Suárez was first to react, rushing for the rebound. Varane desperately tried to block him but couldn't hold on.
However, as Suárez charged forward those two steps, he not only drew Varane's attention but also that of the grounded Lloris.
Neither noticed another figure rushing in from the other side.
Forlán!
A delicate side-foot finish.
The ball hit the net!
The referee pointed to the center circle, signaling a valid goal.
22 minutes in, Uruguay had equalized.
Forlán celebrated excitedly, embracing Suárez, Cavani, and the others.
Deschamps shook his head.
The defense still needed work, this French team was still too weak.
The only consolation was that he had enough time to adjust the squad.
There were no major tournaments on the immediate horizon.
The national team's only task was World Cup qualifying—reaching the finals.
At that moment, watching the broadcast from his Paris home, former coach Blanc had a similar reaction to Deschamps, he was just shaking his head at the goal conceded.
Though he was no longer France's head coach, the habits of leadership made him instinctively turn on the television to watch the match.
He trusted Deschamps. But he also knew that France's national team was indeed in a rebuilding phase, it would be an extremely difficult period.
He didn't know where Deschamps would take this French team.
Blanc felt that during his tenure, while he hadn't achieved his targets as the European Championship semifinal had only come through De Rocca's self-sacrifice, he felt that he could still be somewhat proud.
Proud of cleaning up the national team's problems and promoting a top talent like Julien De Rocca.
That was his greatest contribution to France during his coaching career.
In Blanc's eyes, the current French team still had only De Rocca as a genuine threat.
Ribéry was no longer a pure winger, he was dropping deeper and functioning more as a playmaker.
Center-forward Giroud had almost no independent attacking ability.
Suddenly, excited commentary burst from the television.
"De Rocca's counterattack! This is his most comfortable way to receive the ball—only Pereira stands between him and goal. It's a pure test of speed!"
At the Océane Stadium, all the French fans along the right flank were on their feet. Their eyes locked onto De Rocca.
Uruguay attacked, France won the ball back, and Julien received a pass from veteran Réveillère, charging down the touchline in a straight sprint!
With burst mode activated, his stamina dropped rapidly.
But he was also pulling further ahead of Pereira. Julien glanced toward the center, looking for a chance to cut inside. Suddenly, he caught sight of a figure in his peripheral vision catching up from behind.
It was Cavani!
The Uruguayan striker's greatest asset was his tireless running which was visible in both defense and attack.
Julien deliberately slowed his pace.
Just as Cavani closed in and was about to make contact, he suddenly stopped sharply, cutting the ball inside.
Cavani immediately turned and reached out to intercept.
Julien nudged the ball forward and exploded past him, creating separation.
Cavani didn't give up his defensive pursuit, and kept chasing despite being several steps behind.
Meanwhile, Godín stepped out to defend, joined by Pereira and Arévalo—Palermo's "bulldog"—all converging to surround him.
These were all players stronger in defense than attack.
Julien found himself quickly encircled.
Facing nearly four defenders in the trap, he didn't slow down but instead charged toward Godín before they could complete their encirclement.
Godín didn't back down, moving toward De Rocca, but Julien's foot speed was quicker.
And he had a second burst of acceleration!
Godín hadn't expected the sudden increase in pace and was a step slow.
That single step allowed De Rocca to slip through the gap between him and Arévalo.
Arévalo quickly grabbed his jersey. But Julien had already released the pass!
While everyone's attention was focused on him, Giroud had dropped back a step, creating space between himself and PSG center-back Lugano.
Despite his age, Lugano couldn't match the first step.
Boom!
With the space created, Giroud didn't waste De Rocca's brilliant pass, sending the ball through Muslera's fingers and into the net.
Last season's Ligue 1 top scorer showed his class!
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