Paris is preparing to deploy thousands of police to secure the massive street parties if France wins Sunday's World Cup after years of attacks targeting crowds and other so-called "soft" targets.
The weekend is likely to be further complicated by Saturday's Bastille Day festivities which have been known to get rowdy, at times leading to skirmishes with the police.
Few French can think of the traditional national holiday parties and firework displays without recalling the 86 people mown down by a van in the Mediterranean coastal resort of Nice on July 14, 2016.
More recently, one person was killed and four others wounded when a man went on a stabbing spree in a lively Paris neighbourhood last May.
The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for both attacks.
"The goal is to guarantee that these events go off smoothly... that the party not be spoiled by such tragedies," Paris police chief Michel Delpuech said Thursday.
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He said police forces had not faced such a confluence of "exceptional events" in the capital since July 12, 1998, when up to 1.5 million euphoric fans converged on the Champs Elysees after France won its first World Cup title.
The following day saw an ecstatic parade for the victorious French team, fuelling a burst of national pride that carried over into the traditional July 14 military parade along "the most beautiful avenue in the world".
- Memories of 1998 -
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"We will stop letting people in when this limit is reached," Delpuech said, urging fans "to arrive as early as possible, starting at 1:00 pm (1100 GMT)."
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