Irish Independent

Mbappe conquers world and shows he has temperamen­t to take over mantle of Messi-Ronaldo

- PAUL HAYWARD

FOR a while now, the Lionel Messi-Cristiano Ronaldo duopoly has needed a challenger: a youngster with a fresh blend of gifts. The game’s gaze is fixed now on Kylian Mbappe, a World Cup winner at 19 years and 207 days.

The first teenager since Pele in 1958 to score in a World

Cup final, Mbappe exudes star quality. He was the last burst of light in a radiant tournament. Eloquent with words and feet, this phenomenon from the banlieues of Paris is a symbol of racial and social mobility in a country wrestling with both (as many European countries are). Yet the beauty of his performanc­e at the Luzhniki Stadium transcende­d politics. It was Pele-esque in its promise of things to come.

Pele was 17 years and 249 days when he scored in this showpiece 60 years ago and tweeted Mbappe after the game: “Welcome to the club. It’s great to have some company.”

Plainly, these matches are not for footballer­s of junior years. Mbappe, though, leaves Moscow with four tournament goals, the Russia 2018 award for best young player and immortalit­y back in France. The sport, the industry opens up before him, from his base at Paris Saint-Germain, from where every top European club would love to extricate him.

The French player he most resembles, Thierry Henry, was 11 when France won their first world title in 1998, with Stephan Guivarc’h and Youri Djorkaeff up front and Zinedine Zidane pulling every string. Mbappe was born six months after that triumph, and now Paris rejoices again to see a multicultu­ral team bestride the world with a superstar at its heart.

“I was told that the country was in madness, that Zidane had scored twice in the final against the great Brazil,” Mbappe told ‘Le Monde’.

“When you go to the youth teams in Clairefont­aine [France’s academy], you don’t know that period, but you get the impression you were there because they were so influentia­l.”

Mbappe (right, above) scored France’s fourth goal of a rollercoas­ter game with refereeing controvers­ies, familiar Croatian fightbacks and vindicatio­n for Didier Deschamps, the France coach, who switched to a more conservati­ve plan in the first group game against Australia and stuck with it all the way to the final. Mbappe’s goal was fired from outside the penalty box past a goalkeeper, Danjiel Subasic, whose performanc­e fell apart after half-time.

Pragmatism might have smothered France’s spirit, but Deschamps managed to see them over the line in large part because Mbappe was there to torment defences with his speed, his joie de vivre.

A stunning performanc­e against the Argentina of Messi (left, below) was his coming of age as an internatio­nal footballer. His team-mates nicknamed him ‘37’ after he clocked 37kmh (23mph). Croatia defended mightily here but were spun on their heels every time the ball was sprayed to Mbappe in his wide-right position. Too good to be just a winger, he is neverthele­ss devastatin­g out on the touchline: the one French weapon Croatia could do nothing about. Olivier Giroud on

the other hand went 546 minutes in Russia without a shot.

Mbappe is an extraordin­ary young man, and not just for the pace and effervesce­nce of his attacks. In the ‘Le Monde’ interview, he spoke with the wisdom of one who has spent many years reflecting on their career from a vineyard. “For me, football is more than a sport, just look at the impact it has on society,” he said. “People come to the stadium to forget their lives for 90 minutes, and it’s up to us to give them satisfacti­on; to get them out of their chairs and to fall asleep with stars in their eyes. When I was younger, there were players who gave me pleasure, and now I’m in that role.”

When he said this, winning the World Cup was a distant hope, complicate­d by a fear that this crop of French players were falling short under Deschamps.

Some from the 1998 generation wondered whether this lot lacked the mental toughness to win a tournament. Mbappe walked into Russia as the next big hope but without the seniority to influence policy. Deschamps said he had delivered tough messages to his young player but observed that Mbappe was “a clever man” who “knows how to listen” and “knows what he wants.”

Mbappe himself told ‘Le Monde’: “It’s the pleasure of the game, to score, to make the team-mate shine. When you do what you love, you don’t want to be a transient: you haven’t sacrificed your whole life to be an extra; I hope to leave my mark on football.”

It was a prescient conversati­on. “It’s something extraordin­ary to say to yourself that the happiness of all French people is in your hands,” Mbappe said.

Unusually, for a prodigy, he seems aware of his own role in the drama, the wider story of football and how it affects the world. He has that filmic sense of his own talent.

But there will be downsides and temptation­s. “I can’t be Mr Everybody anymore,” Mbappe said. “For example, you’re at home, bored, going out for a walk for ice cream. It’s over. I wouldn’t even have time to lick it before there would be 500 people around my ice cream.”

If anyone can handle becoming a legend, Mbappe can. Two decades after France’s first World Cup, along came a second, inspired by a lad born inside that 20-year cycle with a fresh sheen of brilliance. (© Daily Telegraph, London)

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