Tuesday
An ESPN commentator has cited the most famous line from Alexander Dumas’s Three Musketeers in excited anticipation of tomorrow’s match between France and Spain, held (of all days!) on France’s national holiday. Although Graham Hunter, who was embedded in the Spanish team, is predicting a Spanish victory, he sees the French as formidable:
Tuesday’s World Cup semifinal, on Bastille Day, will carry the narrative that France’s four musketeers (Michael Olise, Ousmane Dembélé, Desiré Doué, Kylian Mbappé) make coach Didier Deschamps’ team stick-on winners.
Excited by the comradely “vibes” he witnessed in the Spanish camp, however, Hunter then appropriates the Musketeer motto for La Roja:
Their opponents have their own powerful “all for one” mentality that can push them on to New Jersey, and their second World Cup final.
When the motto appears in the novel, D’Artagnan is still an apprentice musketeer, which makes the application all the more appropriate as the French could be seen as having 3+1 Musketeers, given that Doué has been sharing the fourth position with Bradley Barcola. In any event, the four in the novel are about to embark on their most dangerous mission yet.
They have become involved in a high stakes political battle involving the king, the queen, the queen’s British lover, the powerful Cardinal Richelieu, the evil Milady de Winter, and the queen’s handmaid, who has been kidnapped. D’Artagnan has just pulled off a bit of trickery comparable to a Lamine Yamal juke or an Olise pass, following which comes the line everyone knows:
“And now, gentlemen,” said D’Artagnan, without stopping to explain his conduct to Porthos, “All for one, one for all—that is our motto, is it not?”
“And yet—” said Porthos.
“Hold out your hand and swear!” cried Athos and Aramis at once.
Overcome by example, grumbling to himself, nevertheless, Porthos stretched out his hand, and the four friends repeated with one voice the formula dictated by D’Artagnan:
“All for one, one for all.”
“That’s well! Now let us everyone retire to his own home,” said D’Artagnan, as if he had done nothing but command all his life; “and attention! For from this moment we are at feud with the cardinal.”
For all the fellowship that Hunter finds on the Spanish side, it appears that France similarly sees itself as a team rather than as a group of talented individuals. Fears that France would get in its own way or implode like the 2002 team have been unfounded. Rather than Mbappé’s ego disrupting the team, it appears that he has instead embraced the collective.
The French team’s collectivity has further been strengthened by the racist attacks on its “Black-Blanc-Beur [North African]” makeup, first from a Paraguayan legislator and then from a former Spanish prime minister. (The current Spanish prime minister criticized the comments.) Finally, the team has rallied around coach Didier Deschamps, who lost his mother during the group stages and who has announced he is stepping down at the end of the tournament.
With the blue of the Musketeer doublets vs. the red tabards of the Cardinal’s guards, the novel even anticipates the colors of the semi-finalists. Let what many are calling “the final before the final” begin.










