Relentless France break Croatian hearts
A TRANSIENT lull accompanied the end of the concert yet ‘One Life, One Dream’ still echoed for the 22 protagonists about to take the centre-stage. Here was one game. The pain of losing this one game is anything but transient. It lingers on; the regret lives on. Victory in this one game is everlasting. Only a handful of men have won this one game. It’s an enduring achievement.
It will be this current generation of French footballers who will now be forever remembered as World Cup winners. Tied on second with England for the team with the lowest average age at the tournament in Russia, you can only imagine what promise the future holds for them. With a breathtaking performance, France closed the World Cup in Russia on Sunday with their hands on the trophy for the first time since 1998.
France coach Didier Deschamps, the captain of that Les Bleus side 20 years ago, has throughout this tournament relied on his players’ ability to rip apart the opposition with their searing pace on the counterattack and they did exactly that to Croatia as well as they buried them 4-2 on the pitch of the Luzhniki Stadium here on Sunday.
It was a performance so emphatic, so convincing that it was all over for Croatia five minutes past the hour mark when Kylian Mbappe, the French sprint king, the teen sensation awarded the tournament’s Young Player Award, smashed in France’s fourth goal to put them 4-1 up.