Coman Leaves France Training Session Ahead of Denmark Clash 

France's Kingsley Coman, right, and Australia's Awer Mabil fight for the ball during the World Cup group D soccer match between France and Australia, at the Al Janoub Stadium in Al Wakrah, Qatar, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2022. (AP)
France's Kingsley Coman, right, and Australia's Awer Mabil fight for the ball during the World Cup group D soccer match between France and Australia, at the Al Janoub Stadium in Al Wakrah, Qatar, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2022. (AP)
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Coman Leaves France Training Session Ahead of Denmark Clash 

France's Kingsley Coman, right, and Australia's Awer Mabil fight for the ball during the World Cup group D soccer match between France and Australia, at the Al Janoub Stadium in Al Wakrah, Qatar, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2022. (AP)
France's Kingsley Coman, right, and Australia's Awer Mabil fight for the ball during the World Cup group D soccer match between France and Australia, at the Al Janoub Stadium in Al Wakrah, Qatar, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2022. (AP)

Kingsley Coman has left France's training session on Thursday, two days before the defending champions face Denmark in Group D of the World Cup in Qatar.  

The forward walked off the pitch with no apparent injury in a session that was attended by all players, including Raphael Varane who missed the opening 4-1 win against Australia after failing to fully recover from a hamstring injury.  

Coman, 26, felt some muscle pain in a friendly match against a local team on Wednesday, Reuters understands. 

Didier Deschamps's team have been hit by injuries, with forward Karim Benzema being ruled out last Saturday and full back Lucas Hernandez leaving the tournament after sustaining a serious knee injury against Australia. 

France lead Group D on three points, two ahead of Denmark and Tunisia. 



Russell Suggests Mercedes Are Still After Verstappen

 Mercedes' British driver George Russell in the paddocks of the Red Bull Ring race track in Spielberg, Austria, on June 26, 2025, ahead of the Formula One Austrian Grand Prix. (AFP)
Mercedes' British driver George Russell in the paddocks of the Red Bull Ring race track in Spielberg, Austria, on June 26, 2025, ahead of the Formula One Austrian Grand Prix. (AFP)
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Russell Suggests Mercedes Are Still After Verstappen

 Mercedes' British driver George Russell in the paddocks of the Red Bull Ring race track in Spielberg, Austria, on June 26, 2025, ahead of the Formula One Austrian Grand Prix. (AFP)
Mercedes' British driver George Russell in the paddocks of the Red Bull Ring race track in Spielberg, Austria, on June 26, 2025, ahead of the Formula One Austrian Grand Prix. (AFP)

George Russell has suggested his contract renewal talks with Mercedes are being held up because the team are still keen to sign Formula One champion Max Verstappen.

The 27-year-old Briton, winner in Canada two weeks ago, is out of contract at the end of the season while four-times champion Verstappen has a deal with Red Bull until 2028, subject to get-out clauses.

Russell told Sky Sports television at the Austrian Grand Prix that Mercedes, constructors' champions eight years in a row from 2014-2021 and currently second to McLaren, wanted to return to the top.

"If you're going to be back on top, you need to make sure you've got the best drivers, the best engineers, the best pit crew, and that's what Mercedes are chasing," he said.

"So, it's only normal that conversations with the likes of Verstappen are ongoing. But from my side, if I'm performing as I'm doing, what have I got to be concerned about? There are two seats in every Formula One team."

Mercedes boss Toto Wolff made his interest in Verstappen clear last year as he sought a replacement for seven-times champion Lewis Hamilton.

In the end 18-year-old Italian rookie Kimi Antonelli was handed the opportunity and has been setting a string of age records, drawing strong support from fans.

Verstappen and Russell have had a series of headline clashes on and off the track over the past 12 months, with Mercedes likely to have concerns about pairing them together should the opportunity arise.

Russell told reporters separately that team boss Toto Wolff has assured him he was performing as well as anybody on the starting grid.

"I think there's only one driver that you can debate in terms of performance -- these are his words, these are not my words -- so that's why I have no concern about the future," he said.

"But there's two seats at every team and I guess he needs to think, who are those two drivers going to be for those two seats, and I guess that's what the delay is."

Verstappen, appearing in the main FIA press conference, was reluctant to talk about his future when asked if he would be driving for Red Bull next year.

"Do you want me to repeat what I said last year?... it's not really on my mind. Just driving well, trying to push the performance, and then we focus on next year."