Matches took place from 22 to 30 November 2022. All times listed are local,
AST (
UTC+3).
France vs Australia The teams had previously faced each other five times, including once in the World Cup, a
2–1 France victory in
2018 en route to the title. They also met in
Australia's 1–0 win against the reigning world champions (having previously won the
1998 World Cup) at the
2001 FIFA Confederations Cup.
Craig Goodwin gave Australia the lead in the ninth minute, when he finished at the back post high into the net after a low cross from the right by
Mathew Leckie.
Adrien Rabiot equalized for France when he headed to the net from a
Théo Hernandez cross from the left. France took the lead five minutes later after
Olivier Giroud's side footed shot found the back of the net from a low cross from Rabiot from the left.
Jackson Irvine had a chance to equalize in first half stoppage time, but headed onto the post. In the 68th minute,
Kylian Mbappé scored France's third goal with a header from six yards out to the left corner, after a cross from
Ousmane Dembélé on the right. Giroud got his second with another header after a Mbappé cross from the left to make it 4–1. Giroud's second goal equalled
Thierry Henry's all-time scoring
record of 51 goals for France. France's win marked the first time since
2006 that the defending World Cup champions won their opening game. On the other hand, Goodwin's goal was the fastest France had conceded in the tournament since
1982. French defender
Lucas Hernandez suffered a
torn ACL after 13 minutes of the match, ruling him out for the remainder of the tournament. He would be substituted by his brother Théo during the match.
Tunisia vs Australia The teams had previously faced each other twice, most recently in
Tunisia's 2–0 win at the
2005 FIFA Confederations Cup. Australia beat Tunisia 1–0 as a result of a
Mitch Duke header in the 23rd minute to secure their first win in a World Cup match since they
defeated Serbia 2–1 in
2010. This was also Australia's first clean sheet since they
drew 0–0 with Chile in
1974.
France vs Denmark The teams had met 16 times previously including thrice in the World Cup, all in the group stage with three different results; France
won 2–1 in
1998, Denmark
won 2–0 in
2002 and the teams
drew 0–0 in
2018.
Kylian Mbappé scored two goals either side of an
Andreas Christensen equalizer to secure France a 2–1 win and qualify them for the
knockout stage, thus becoming the first defending champions since
Brazil in
2006 to advance past the first round. Among European countries, they were the first World Cup holders to qualify for the knockout stage since
Germany in
1994.
Australia vs Denmark The teams had met in 4 previous encounters including once in the World Cup, a
1–1 draw in
2018. Australia won the game 1–0 to finish second in the group. The only goal of the match was scored by
Mathew Leckie in the 60th minute with a low left-foot finish to the bottom right corner of the net. This result meant that Australia progressed to the
knockout stage for the second time in their World Cup history, the first time since
2006 and the first time they did it as a member of the
AFC. This was also the first time that Australia had won two consecutive matches, scored in every group stage game, and kept a clean sheet twice in a World Cup.
Tunisia vs France The two teams had faced each other four times, most recently in 2010 friendly, a 1–1 draw. A Tunisian goal in the 8th minute was disallowed for offside, but
Wahbi Khazri put Tunisia into the lead in the 58th minute with a low shot to the bottom right corner. At that stage, Tunisia was in a position to qualify from the group. However, two minutes later
Australia went in front against
Denmark in the other match taking place at the same time, which put Tunisia outside of the qualifying positions. In added time,
Antoine Griezmann seemingly scored to make it 1–1 for France with a volley, but the goal was ruled out by the
VAR for offside, despite the ball having come off a Tunisian player just before. Australia went on to beat Denmark, which meant that Tunisia finished third in the group and failed to reach the knockout stage for the sixth consecutive World Cup. Viewers tuning in to French television for the match missed that the French team had lost the game 1–0.
TF1 switched to an ad after Griezmann had seemingly levelled the game late in stoppage time, causing French viewers to miss the pitchside monitor consultation that led VAR to rule that Griezmann had been offside. French football supporters awoke in shock the following morning to belatedly discover that the game had not ended in a draw at all, but in a surprise defeat for the reigning world champions. The incident brought to mind the time British broadcaster
ITV cut for an ad break and missed
Steven Gerrard scoring
England's opening goal at the
2010 FIFA World Cup. ==Discipline==