Striker Olivier Giroud, who has grabbed his chance for
automatic selection, will be a key figure on Tuesday when France seek
victory over Finland and a probable place in next month's playoffs for
the World Cup finals.
Giroud, 27, is set to make his third consecutive start, at Karim
Benzema's expense, after helping les Bleus end a five-match goalless run
when he led them to a 4-2 victory in Belarus last month.
The Arsenal frontman, who has won most of his 23 caps as a
substitute, then scored two goals and played a leading role on Friday
when France whipped Australia 6-0 in a friendly.
As world champions Spain, who are three points ahead in Group I,
host Georgia, France look almost certain to face a two-legged playoff to
book a place in next year's tournament in Brazil.
France aim to extend their recent winning run that started in
Belarus where coach Didier Deschamps benched Benzema to field Giroud.
"Against Australia, we showed the same things that we had showed in
Belarus, a lot of enthusiasm, the will to do well, and that's what will
count in the next games," Giroud told reporters.
"We have to get used to victory, to love victory more and more and
to hate defeat. What we've done against Australia gives us a lot of
hopes for the future.
"I have trust in this team, I have a lot of hopes."
France had not scored for five games before Giroud was picked ahead of Benzema.
He added: "I've played for France for two years. When I got the
chance to start, it always went well. I've always been patient and I'm
proud of that.
"I have said that I wanted to play more and it's good for France that I can compete with Karim."
Benzema came off the bench at halftime to score the sixth against
Australia and end his 15-month international goal drought, but Giroud
had already gained ground.
Should he shine again at Stade de France, Giroud will feel almost
sure of keeping his place next month as Deschamps builds unity and
confidence.
"The collective performance was very good against Australia and the
eleven would deserve to start again on Tuesday. It won't be the case,
but I will maintain the hard core," said Deschamps.
"The two games are all about what we can expect in November," he added.
"If we had to play a decider now, I know what I would do. When all
the players are good, I have to make choices and it's more complicated.
"But I'm not going to complain about it."
Finland are expected to give France a more thorough test than a weak
Australia. Third in Group I with nine points, the Nordic team have
conceded six goals in seven games and held Spain 1-1 last month.
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