The Borneo Post

Giroud gets winner as France celebrate World Cup homecoming

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PARIS: France finally celebrated winning the World Cup with their home fans on Sunday after Kylian Mbappe and Olivier Giroud both scored in a 2-1 win over the Netherland­s in Paris.

Giroud swept in the winner from a Benjamin Mendy cross in the 75th minute for his first goal in 11 games in a France shirt, after the Chelsea striker went through the entirety of his country’s triumphant campaign in Russia without scoring.

On their first appearance on home soil since the World Cup, Mbappe had earlier put France ahead in an explosive performanc­e from the 19-year- old, before Ryan Babel briefly restored parity in the second half.

The Stade de France exploded in celebratio­n at Giroud’s winner in a game that had a competitiv­e edge as part of UEFA’s new Nations League.

However, this match on a balmy evening was really just a prelude to World Cup victory celebratio­ns on the pitch in front of almost 80,000 fans at the national stadium after the final whistle.

“The victory was the most important thing, so we can have a great party,” coach Didier Deschamps told television station M6.

“I am really pleased for Olivier. Strikers can have periods like that where they are not as efficient, but he is useful in our build-up play, he scored a lovely goal, and on top of that it gave us the victory.”

The French team and their supporters saw this occasion as the opportunit­y to make up for the lack of a memorable public celebratio­n in the immediate aftermath of the World Cup triumph in Russia.

The day after beating Croatia 4-2 in the final, Les Bleus paraded hurriedly down the ChampsElys­ees Avenue in Paris en route to a reception hosted by President Emmanuel Macron.

The rushed nature of those celebratio­ns disappoint­ed the estimated 300,000 fans who took to the streets, and so this time the victorious squad were presented one by one to supporters after the final whistle.

The World Cup trophy was shown off as well, and the squad undertook a lap of honour, singing with supporters, at the stadium where France first won it in 1998.

“Now is the time to have a party,” Paul Pogba told M6.

“When we came back to France it was very short. There was all the security around the bus and we couldn’t really celebrate with the public.

“This time we are at the Stade de France, it’s full, it’s beautiful.”

The France starting line-up was the same as that in Thursday’s 0- 0 draw with Germany in Munich, meaning the only change from the World Cup final was in goal, with Alphonse Areola replacing the injured Hugo Lloris.

The teams were greeted by an enormous banner that read ‘world champions’ and covered the pitch, before a spine-tingling version of the French national anthem.

Mbappe forced a good save from Netherland­s goalkeeper Jasper Cillessen inside 50 seconds, and his performanc­e here showed why he is tipped as a future Ballon d’Or winner.

He got the breakthrou­gh in the 14th minute as he turned in a ball driven across the box by Blaise Matuidi for his eighth internatio­nal goal in 2018. — AFP

 ??  ?? France’s forward Olivier Giroud celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal during the UEFA Nations League football match between France and Netherland­s at the Stade de France stadium, in Saint-Denis, northern of Paris. — AFP photo
France’s forward Olivier Giroud celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal during the UEFA Nations League football match between France and Netherland­s at the Stade de France stadium, in Saint-Denis, northern of Paris. — AFP photo

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