Doha: England's players have been asked one question over and over again as they prepare to face France in the World Cup quarterfinals on Saturday. How do you stop Kylian Mbappe? Hardly surprising, given Mbappe is the tournament's leading scorer with five goals and is widely considered the man to succeed Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo as soccer's biggest star.
"I'm sure England will have prepared to face Kylian," France coach Didier Deschamps said at a news conference Friday. "But Kylian is in the position to make a difference. Kylian is Kylian and he always will be." There is no sense of France trying to manage the expectations of its star player, even as the hype surrounding him grows with each stellar performance in Qatar.
He has already scored one more goal than the four he managed as his country won the 2018 World Cup in Russia. In the round of 16 in Qatar, he struck twice as the defending champions beat Poland 3-1, with two thunderous shots past goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny.
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"He cannot be compared to other players," France defender Dayot Upamecano said. Mbappe is being depicted as an unstoppable force in Qatar something England defender Kyle Walker pushed back against this week. "I don't know how to say it even more: I feel he is a top player. I'm not underestimating that one bit, but we are not playing tennis, it's not a solo sport," he said after being faced with a series of questions about the Paris Saint-Germain striker.
England captain Harry Kane on Friday praised Walker, who also was his teammate at Tottenham for several years, as "a fantastic defender". "He's been probably the most consistent right back there has been for the last 10 years." But France's players seem happy to feed the narrative that Mbappe is simply unstoppable. "If he (Walker) can stop Kylian Mbappe, good for him," said midfielder Youssouf Fofana.
"But 19 other teams in Ligue 1 have been waiting for the solution. The truth will come from the pitch." Walker will have the job of trying to limit the damage Mbappe can inflict on England's defense at Al Bayt Stadium. But rather than merely trying to contain France's biggest threat, discussion this week has been about how bold Three Lions coach Gareth Southgate is prepared to be in response.
England reached the semifinals in 2018, losing 2-1 in extra time to Croatia when trying to protect an early lead. "Whether we had the full belief to go and win the tournament, I'm not quite sure," Kane acknowledged. England also led early in the European Championship final last year, finishing 1-1 with Italy and losing the penalty shootout at home at Wembley Stadium. Again, Southgate was criticized for a too-cautious approach.
"I very much like Gareth. If I understand correctly, not everyone appreciates him so much in his own country," noted Deschamps. Southgate's team has played with more freedom at this World Cup, with a more attacking style leading to 12 goals in four games to tie Portugal as leading scorers.
Southgate has opted to play with a back four so far, but could switch to a five-man defense to try to cope with Mbappe. "Nobody was complaining about us playing a five before we reached the Euros final," said Walker. "I think it's a bit harsh to judge him on what we've done previously. I think at this tournament we have been playing good attacking football and scoring a lot of goals."
After coming close to a title twice with Southgate, Walker believes England is ready to win this time. "Beating France," he says, "would be evidence of that."
"It's a great opportunity to put a stamp down and to say that we are a good team and we can achieve great things, and give us the belief that we can win this," he said. "I'm not saying we don't believe, but to beat a big team like that in a quarterfinal, they're the reigning world champions, that will give us great confidence not arrogance but confidence." (AP)