When the night of June 2006 fell over the German training camps, a whispered conversation reached Zinedine Zidane, pulling the French maestro out of retirement and back onto the world stage.
The news spread like a tide through Paris, where thousands of supporters gathered at Place de la Concorde, chanting his nickname "Zizou" as if invoking a saint.
Zidane, already a legend after the 1998 World Cup and the 2000 European Championship, had hung up his international jersey in 2004, but the enigmatic call promised a final chapter.
Surrounded by familiar faces — Lilian Thuram, Claude Makélélé, Franck Ribéry, and Patrick Vieira — the French squad set out to qualify, navigating a group that included Togo and a hard‑fought draw against Switzerland.
The group stage proved testing; two stalemates left France teetering, but a decisive win over Togo secured progression, while Zidane’s presence seemed to lift the entire team.
In the last‑16 clash with Spain, a moment of brilliance saw Zidane strike the decisive goal, a strike that reignited French hopes and silenced doubters.
The quarterfinal against Brazil tested the French resolve; a curling free‑kick from Zidane opened the scoring, and the side rode that momentum to a narrow victory.
A semifinal against Portugal brought another turning point: Zidane’s penalty sealed the win, but the match also foreshadowed the final’s drama.
The Final Act
The final in Berlin pitted France against Italy; Zidane converted a penalty early, only to be sent off after a headbutt on Marco Materazzi, a moment that would dominate headlines for years.
Though the red card tarnished the spectacle, the poetic aura surrounding Zidane’s performance endured, with many comparing his on‑field grace to a magical presence that transcended sport.