Published: 10:15, December 5, 2022 | Updated: 11:03, December 5, 2022
Soccer-Age gap no problem for France's deadly striking duo
By Reuters

France's Kylian Mbappe waves during warm up ahed of the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between France and Poland, at the Al Thumama Stadium in Doha, Qatar, Dec 4, 2022. (MOISES CASTILLO / AP)

DOHA - Thirteen years separate France strikers Kylian Mbappe and Olivier Giroud but their devastating double act in the 3-1 last-16 defeat of Poland at the World Cup on Sunday showed the age gap is no barrier to a flourishing relationship.

Giroud, at 36, brings experience and guile to France's attack, while Mbappe, 23, is blessed with pace so explosive that the screens at the Al Thumama Stadium showed him hitting a top of speed of 35 kph (22 mph) as he tormented Poland's defence.

Olivier Giroud launched a 74th-minute counter-attack that ended with the France number 10 using all his power to hammer a shot past Wojciech Szczesny in Poland's goal

It was not supposed to be this way in Qatar. Giroud looked set for a secondary role for the World Cup holders until the team's number one center forward Karim Benzema pulled out with an injury on the eve of the tournament.

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Mbappe and Benzema have forged a promising partnership for France in the past but the young Paris St Germain striker has said previously that Giroud's approach to attack probably suited him better.

That understanding was clear for all to see as Poland were cut apart by France's strikers.

A defence-splitting pass by Mbappe set up Giroud to break the deadlock - and become France's all-time top goalscorer - in the 44th minute of the mismatch, with Poland chasing shadows for most of it.

The goal also made Giroud - at 36 years and 65 days old - the oldest scorer in a World Cup knockout match since Cameroon's Roger Milla against Colombia in 1990 in a last-16 game.

"Giroud is an incredible player, there are many who say it now," French coach Didier Deschamps told reporters.

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"He was much criticised but Olivier has the mindset to fight. When he is not decisive, he is so useful to the team but like any centre forward, he prefers the collective victory, but winning with this goal-scoring record, it's not nothing."

Favor returned

Giroud, who plays for AC Milan after making his name in England with Arsenal and Chelsea, returned the favor when it was Mbappe's turn to get on the scoresheet.

He launched a 74th-minute counter-attack that ended with the France number 10 using all his power to hammer a shot past Wojciech Szczesny in Poland's goal.

With Giroud substituted to give his ageing legs a rest, Mbappe went on to claim his second goal, curling a shot into the top corner in added time before Robert Lewandowski claimed a penalty consolation goal for Poland.

The brace meant Mbappe became the youngest player to reach five knockout-stage goals at a World Cup since Brazil great Pele in 1958, when he was 17, according to data firm Opta.

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While France's defence showed it was far from impregnable at times in the Poland match, their quarter-final opponents - England or Senegal who play later on Sunday - will not have missed how Ousmane Dembele, Antoine Griezmann and substitute Marcus Thuram also dazzled for Les Bleus.

The way France piled forward in numbers from the start of Sunday's match drew a sharp contrast with Poland's approach as Lewandowski, one of the world's most prolific strikers, was left to play a lone striker role for much of the evening.

He had publicly called on Poland coach Czeslaw Michniewicz last year to give him a strike partner and a better chance of finding the net, which he did so often in the Bundesliga for Borussia Dortmund and Bayern Munich before moving to Barcelona.

His frustration was palpable once again after France's scintillating attacking display when the 34-year-old was asked by Polish media if he planned to play in the next World Cup.

"It's still a long way to go and, obviously, you need to enjoy the game," he said. "If we attack, try to attack, it's a bit different. But if we play defensively, there's no joy."