France coach Marc Lievremont said Sunday his side's demoralising World Cup loss to Tonga had left him with a sense of "deep personal failure." The Tongans triumphed 19-14 here Saturday in what was one of the biggest upsets in World Cup history, but it was still the French that made it through to the quarter-finals from Pool A where they will play England. Lievremont, who has endured a torrid campaign to date in New Zealand, said that "every missed pass, every missed tackle I felt like a deep personal failure." "We always hope for better. Even if so far our campaign has been anything but straightforward, I had the feeling that the players were making progress and that what was at stake in this match - qualification and a place in the quarter-finals to come - would have put us out of danger of this kind of mishap." "The French rugby world and my players mocked the footballers last year, but in some ways yesterday we never got off the bus," he added, referring to the players' revolt against coach Raymond Domenech at the 2010 World Cup when they stayed on their team-bus when they were supposed to be training. Lievremont, who has already been told his contract will not be renewed at the end of the World Cup, said that he also regretted that his players had gone their separate ways after the defeat. "I would have preferred it if we had shared a glass, spoken about it and just agreed that it is still a fine adventure," he said. Turning to his own position, Lievremont, who took over as France coach after the last World Cup four years ago, said that he was fully aware of his own failings. "As many people believe, I am certainly no more that a division two coach, who is incapable of coaching a team as fine as France, but I do know how to fight and I have no intention of giving up now. "If we fail again next weekend (against England), you have your scapegoat, but what people think about me is not important. "I am still convinced that we have the potential" to beat England, he added.