Mbappe seeks to re-order football's hierarchy in World Cup final

Kylian
Mbappe can on Sunday become the youngest player to win two World Cups since
Pele achieved the feat at the age of 21.
Mbappe, who
turns 24 two days after the final, is the joint leading scorer with five goals
at this World Cup and the face of football's new generation.
The last
World Cup for Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, the tournament in Qatar
surely marks the passing of the baton from the two players who have dominated
the sport for nearly two decades.
While Messi
has one final chance to claim an elusive World Cup title, Mbappe and France
hope to usher in an era of dominance for a nation appearing in a fourth final
in seven attempts.
With a squad
decimated by injuries and struggling for form in the run-up, there were genuine
concerns France would suffer the same fate they did as holders in 2002 and
crash out in the group stage.
France may
not have set the world alight en route to the final, but they have been masters
of the key moments - demonstrating a ruthlessness and killer instinct when it
matters most.
Much of that
stems from Mbappe, the most feared player on the planet, whose goals have
helped carry France to within one win of becoming the first team to retain the
World Cup since Brazil in 1962.
"There
is a great connection between the team. We work together but, when you start to
come close to the title in this competition you need your main players at their
best," said goalkeeper and captain Hugo Lloris.
Mbappe
announced himself on the global stage in 2018 with a brace against Argentina in
last 16 in Russia, where he won the best young player award.
Aged 19, he
became the youngest player to score in a World Cup final since a 17-year-old
Pele in 1958, and Mbappe already has more World Cup goals than Portugal's
Ronaldo or Diego Maradona.
He bagged
four goals in total in the 2018 edition -- his first major tournament --
drilling home France's fourth in the 4-2 win over Croatia in the final.
Only Just
Fontaine, who scored an incredible 13 times at the 1958 tournament in Sweden,
has more World Cup goals for France.
'Difficult
to see the limit'
Mbappe has
scored 250 times in 362 games for club and country, a tally that far exceeds
those of Messi and Ronaldo at the same age.
"It's
difficult to see the limit for Kylian. He's capable of breaking all records.
It's amazing to have a team-mate like him," said Lloris.
But personal
accolades are not the motivation for Mbappe with Les Bleus.
"The
only objective for me is to win the World Cup," he said.
"That
is what I am dreaming of. I didn't come here to win the Golden Ball. That is
not why I am here. I am here to win and help the French national team.
"This
World Cup is an obsession for me, it's the competition of my dreams."
France are
not short on talent, but Mbappe is simply on another level.
So much so
that France coach Didier Deschamps has given Mbappe a licence to roam and he
often takes full advantage of that liberty, rarely getting back to help in
defence at this World Cup.
It is also
why Paris Saint-Germain moved heaven and earth to keep Mbappe at the club when
Real Madrid looked poised to prise the forward away from the Parc des Princes.
Mbappe
signed a new three-year contract to stay in his home country, a decision which
President Emmanuel Macron - who flew out for the semi-final against Morocco -
admitted he advised the striker to take.
Macron plans
to again attend Sunday's final at Lusail Stadium, where Mbappe has the chance
to occupy the stage vacated by Messi and Ronaldo - and make his case for a
first Ballon d'Or.
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