The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Mbappe, Henry similariti­es continue

France left winger looking to add World Cup to resume

- By Jerome Pugmire The Associated Press

ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA » Kylian Mbappe and Thierry Henry both attended France’s Clairefont­aine academy before playing as left wingers at Monaco, and they both won French league titles as teenagers.

Mbappe wants to replicate another one of Henry’s accomplish­ments — a World Cup title for France in his first tournament.

Henry, 40, is France’s leading scorer with 51 goals, the 19-yearold Mbappe is Les Bleus’ new sensation, with three, matching Henry’s total from 1998 and 2006.

If Mbappe scores again, France plays Uruguay in Friday’s quarterfin­al, he would become the first Frenchman since 1958 to score four at a World Cup since Just Fontaine’s record 13 over six games in 1958.

Henry and Mbappe both share the electric pace Fontaine had, but with a far more rounded game than their illustriou­s predecesso­r.

“I don’t really like to compare players from different generation­s, but they have a similar profile, with their speed and ability to beat players,” said France coach Didier Deschamps, captain of the 1998 champions. “I can only wish Kylian the same career as Thierry.”

Deschamps said that after Mbappe’s debut in a qualifier at Luxembourg in March 2017. He already was hailing Mbappe’s maturity.

“His biggest strength is his composure when he’s through on the goalkeeper,” Deschamps said. “That’s very rare at his age, and it’s why he’s so efficient.”

Mbappe showed that in a 4-3 win against Argentina on June 30, scoring two clinical second-half goals after earning a first-half penalty kick with an astonishin­g run from deep inside his own half. Mbappe stole the spotlight from five-time FIFA Player of the Year Lionel Messi, and he emerged as a candidate to join Neymar in the conversati­on for who is the world’s best player after Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo move on.

Mbappe has played as a wide forward and as a central striker for both France and Paris Saint-Germain,

joining from Monaco last year in a deal worth 180 million euros ($216 million). Playing alongside Neymar and Edinson Cavani in a star-studded attack, he helped PSG win all three domestic titles.

Like Henry, Mbappe grew up in a Paris suburb: Mbappe in Bondy, Henry in Les Ulis. Mbappe has been active in the community and he says he will donate his World Cup earnings to a charity that organizes sports for children with disabiliti­es.

Mbappe scored six goals in his first 19 internatio­nal games and Henry seven: three at the 1998 World Cup and two when France won the European Championsh­ip in 2000.

Henry’s pro career was

launched in 1994 by Monaco coach Arsene Wenger, who brought him to Arsenal from Italian side Juventus five years later. Henry scored at least 20 league goals in six consecutiv­e seasons for Arsenal, and a club record 228 in all competitio­ns for the Gunners.

Wenger moved Henry to Monaco’s first team after Henry scored more than 40 goals the under-17 team in one year.

“Henry already had a great attitude. He was already mature and didn’t need anyone to control him,” youth coach Paul Pietri told The Associated Press. “He crushed everyone with his physique, his strength. He could carry the attack all by himself, he could do everything.”

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