Les Bleus Turn On the Style in New Jersey
France announced themselves as serious contenders for a third World Cup crown with a commanding 3-0 victory over Sweden at MetLife Stadium, and the night belonged to Kylian Mbappe. The captain struck twice to drag France into the last 16 of an expanded tournament that has already produced its share of shocks, and to remind everyone why he remains the most feared forward on the planet.
From the opening whistle France pressed with intent. Sweden, resolute through the group stage, held firm for long stretches but could not contain the speed and movement of a French attack that flowed through Mbappe at every turn. When the breakthrough came it carried an air of inevitability, the striker peeling off his marker and finishing with the calm of a man who has done it on the biggest stages before.
A Statement of Intent
The second goal killed the contest. Mbappe doubled his tally with a strike that showcased both his instinct and his ruthlessness, and from there France managed the game with the maturity of a side that believes its best is still to come. A third goal late on put a gloss on the scoreline and sent the travelling supporters into raptures, but the story of the evening was the sense that Didier Deschamps’ team is peaking at exactly the right moment.
For Sweden there was disappointment but little disgrace. They had ridden their luck to reach the knockout rounds and ran into a France side operating at a level few in the tournament can match. Their exit closes a campaign that promised much yet ultimately underlined the gulf between the established giants and the chasing pack.
The Golden Boot Race Heats Up
Mbappe’s double carried significance beyond the result. It lifted him level near the summit of the Golden Boot standings, where Lionel Messi still leads the way on six goals as the all-time men’s World Cup top scorer. Mbappe now sits alongside Erling Haaland on five, with Vinicius Junior and Ousmane Dembele lurking just behind in what is shaping up as one of the great individual scoring duels the tournament has seen.
That subplot adds another layer of intrigue to France’s run. Every knockout tie now doubles as a stage for Mbappe to chase down Messi, and on this evidence he will take some stopping. France move into the last 16 as one of the form teams of the competition, their attack humming and their captain in the mood to write more history.
The message from New Jersey was unmistakable. France have found their rhythm, Mbappe has found his shooting boots, and the rest of the field has been put on notice that Les Bleus intend to be there when the trophy is lifted.

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