Published on 08:13 AM, November 04, 2022

France need best version of Mbappe as tough World Cup looms

Photo: Reuters

Kylian Mbappe loves nothing more than carrying the weight of a team on his shoulders and there is evidence he will need to do just that when France start the defence of their World Cup title.

The Paris St Germain forward, who became the second youngest player after Pele to score twice in a World Cup final in France's 4-2 win against Croatia, will have to deal with huge expectations.

His self-proclaimed drive to become the greatest will be put to the test after an under-par European Championship campaign in 2021 and in a team that is not as strong as four years ago.

France's forward Kylian Mbappe kisses the World Cup trophy after the Russia 2018 World Cup final football match between France and Croatia at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow. Regarding Europe's already supremacy over South America, the upcoming Qatar 2022 World Cup could either consolidate the trend or be a turning point. The outlook for South America for does not look much encouraging as the gap has widened in almost all areas: economic potential, more competitive tournaments and the exodus of youngsters from the region at an increasingly younger age. Photo: AFP

With a defence that needs constant readjustments and has shown signs of nerves lately, and in the absence of pivotal midfielder N'Golo Kante, who is out injured, Les Bleus will need Mbappe at his very best and his partnership with Ballon d'Or winner Karim Benzema to finally produce more than a few sparks.

In the absence of the injured Benzema in the last couple of games, Mbappe has enjoyed being fielded alongside 36-year-old Olivier Giroud, whose willingness to play as a lone striker helps Mbappe find the space he craves.

"I have much more freedom here (than at PSG). The coach knows that there is a number nine like Olivier who occupies the defences. I can wander around, go into space, ask for balls," said Mbappe, who has denied asking to leave PSG amid talk that he is unhappy being played as a centre-forward in Ligue 1.

The speculation, however, has made the headlines and the 23-year-old has been the centre of attention on and off the field.

Mbappe's capacity to solely focus on his performances on the pitch might determine France's fate in Qatar, where they face Australia, Denmark and Tunisia in Group D.

Mbappe has shown no sign of slowing down in his progression, scoring 19 goals in 20 games this season.

France's goalkeeper Hugo Lloris holding the trophy as he celebrates with teammates during the trophy ceremony at the end of the Russia 2018 World Cup final football match between France and Croatia at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow. Four years after France's victory, football is waiting for its new master at the 2022 World Cup. But the contenders, Brazil, Argentina and France, are afraid of getting bogged down in the atypical World Cup in Qatar, which promises to be full of surprises. Photo: AFP

Having missed the decisive penalty in a shootout against Switzerland that sent France packing in the last 16 at Euro 2020, Mbappe has unfinished business with the national team.

If the 23-year-old is to succeed Benzema as Ballon d'Or winner, nothing short of a sterling World Cup campaign will be acceptable for the hungry forward.

France great Thierry Henry recently urged Mbappe to put the team above his own interests and France fans will be hoping that piece of advice has been heard.

 

France at the World Cup

Following is a statbox for France

FIFA Ranking: 4 (Oct 6)

Odds: 6-1

Previous tournaments:

France have appeared in 15 World Cups, including the last six. They won their first title in 1998, beating Brazil 3-0 in the final on home soil, and repeated the feat in the last edition in Russia with a 4-2 final victory against Croatia.

How they qualified:

France qualified top of Group D with five wins and three draws, two of them against second-placed Ukraine.

They finished their qualifying campaign with three consecutive victories, including an 8-0 demolition of Kazakhstan. They scored 18 goals and conceded three.

Form guide:

Since securing qualification for the finals in Qatar, France won two friendly games against Ivory Coast and South Africa but then struggled in the Nations League.

They salvaged their place in the top tier but ended a dismal campaign with a 2-0 defeat away to Denmark - their third in six matches, having won only one.