France captain Kylian Mbappe fires his team into the lead in their quarter-final victory over Morocco

Los Angeles (United States) (AFP) - Kylian Mbappe and Ousmane Dembele were on target as France surged past Morocco 2-0 to book their place in the World Cup semi-finals on Thursday.

Mbappe curled in his eighth goal of the tournament on 60 minutes before Dembele doubled Les Bleus’ lead six minutes later to settle a clinical victory at the Gillette Stadium outside Boston.

The win sends the 2018 champions into the semi-finals for the third straight World Cup, where they will face either Spain or Belgium in Arlington, Texas next Tuesday.

“I think that is three consecutive semi-finals, so that’s already a good thing. It seems logical and natural, but you still have to achieve it,” France coach Didier Deschamps said.

“Obviously, I have great players, otherwise we wouldn’t get there, but it’s good.”

Mbappe was substituted in the 77th minute and said: “I have a minor ankle injury, but it’s fine.”

African champions Morocco had been tipped to pose a serious threat to France’s hopes of reaching a third consecutive World Cup final.

But Deschamps’ men were always in control against a limited Morocco side who failed to register a single shot on goal until an 83rd minute free-kick by Azzedine Ounahi was parried away by France goalkeeper Mike Maignan.

France though struggled to find a breakthrough, and missed the opportunity to take the lead on 28 minutes when Mbappe saw a penalty saved by Morocco goalkeeper Yassine Bounou.

Mbappe had won the penalty after being brought down by Noussair Mazraoui but was forced to wait several minutes before being allowed to take the kick after a protracted VAR check.

Morocco managed to hold out to half-time but it was always only a matter of time before France’s relentless pressure paid off.

Mbappe celebrates his eighth goal of the tournament in a comfortable defeat of Morocco

The breakthrough came on the hour mark, with Mbappe bending a brilliant right-foot shot past Bounou from the edge of the area.

Paris Saint-Germain star Dembele made the game safe in the 66th minute, striding forward menacingly from midfield before steering a low finish into the bottom corner.

Deschamps said he had never doubted Mbappe’s confidence in front of goal despite the penalty miss.

“When it’s Kylian, there’s no problem – he never doubts himself,” Deschamps said.

“It’s great; we’re where we wanted to be, so we’ll recover well and then we’ll see who our opponent is tomorrow,” Deschamps added, referring to Friday’s meeting between Spain and Belgium in Los Angeles.

- Referee chief hits back -

Spain, who have not conceded a single goal so far, eliminated Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal in the last 16 and will fancy their chances of overcoming Belgium, who thrashed United States 4-1 to reach the last eight.

On the other side of the draw, holders Argentina face Switzerland in Kansas City on Saturday after staggering into the quarter-finals.

The South Americans, aiming to become the first back-to-back champions since Brazil in 1962, advanced to the quarter-finals after an incredible escape against Egypt in the previous round, recovering from a 2-0 deficit to win 3-2.

The victory saw a string of refereeing decisions go in Argentina’s favour, prompting claims from Egypt coach Hossam Hassan that World Cup referees were unfairly favouring the South Americans due to “external” pressure.

Those claims were shot down by FIFA referees chief Pierluigi Collina on Thursday.

“Nobody can question the integrity of the FIFA World Cup match officials,” Collina said.

“Nobody can claim that FIFA Refereeing can be influenced by anyone …”

The winner of the Argentina-Switzerland clash will take on either Norway or England, who clash in Miami on Saturday.

England’s defence faces the unenviable task of having to contain Norway’s irrepressible striker Erling Haaland, who has been in blistering form on his team’s run to the last eight.

A relaxed Haaland said Thursday the pressure would be on England when the teams meet at the Hard Rock Stadium.

“I think there’s some clear favourites out there, England’s one of them,” Haaland told reporters.

“I think all of you should put every single pressure on the English lads.”