EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ, July 01 (Reuters): France uncorked a Champagne performance on Tuesday to sweep Sweden aside 3-0 with a display of attacking verve and precision and book their place in the World Cup last 16.
At the heart of it all was French captain and talisman Kylian Mbappe. From the start it had been clear he was a man on a mission.
Mbappe's two goals lifted his World Cup finals tally to 18, one behind Lionel Messi on the all-time list. Remarkably, those goals have come in just 18 matches, with his double here taking him to six for the tournament.
By the final whistle Sweden looked less like beaten men, more like beaten-up men, after 90 minutes hauling themselves round the New York-New Jersey pitch trying to keep up with the precise French passing.
The temperature on the pitch felt even hotter than the 32 degrees Celsius (90 degrees Fahrenheit) officially recorded in East Rutherford, but for Sweden it might as well have been the surface of the sun as they visibly wilted under a relentless French onslaught.
Mbappe was at the centre of everything. He had a long range shot saved in the 16th minute and had the ball in the net four minutes later. The effort was ruled out for offside, but Sweden had been warned.
The match was scoreless by the time the packed stadium roundly booed the hydration break, as has become customary among soccer fans angered by the effective introduction of four quarters to a game traditionally separated by two halves. For once, though, nobody could doubt the justification as the haggard Swedes looked out on their feet.
The jeering fans were swiftly distracted by a deafening rendition of Jon Bon Jovi's "Livin' on a Prayer" before the match resumed but there was to be no divine intervention for the Scandinavians.
Mbappe rattled the post just after the half-hour as he inched ever closer and finally broke the deadlock on 45 minutes when, from a pass by Ousmane Dembele, he jinked and skipped and slammed a right-foot shot past Jacob Widell Zetterstrom.
The pair have now combined for six goals at World Cup finals, more than any duo in tournament history, moving clear of Germany's Michael Ballack and Miroslav Klose, and Poland's Grzegorz Lato and Andrzej Szarmach.
The French among the more than 86,000 in the stadium erupted and Mbappe, followed by the entire French team, ran to Didier Deschamps on the touchline to embrace the coach just back in the US after attending his mother's funeral.
France came out for the second half in the same fashion. Sharp, precise and dangerous.
France's flamboyant attack sweeps Sweden aside
FE Team | Published: July 01, 2026 23:25:21
France's forward Kylian Mbappe celebrates after scoring his team's first goal during the 2026 World Cup round of 32 football match against Sweden at the New York/New Jersey Stadium in East Rutherford on Wednesday (as per BST) —AP
Share if you like