Citizen Mbappé taking on far right lends pride to France’s Euros exit | Philippe Auclair
He skied the chance to equalise against Spain but Kylian Mbappé’s eloquence has elevated his team
It is not because Kylian Mbappé spoke out, twice, about the necessity to take a stand against “the extremes” and, more to the point, the National Rally, that he skied a shot that would have brought France level with Spain in their semi-final. But it is because he and others, such as Marcus Thuram and Jules Koundé, did speak out that it will be possible to look back to France’s frustrating Euro 2024 with something like pride. “Never at such a moment, never such a player, never in such a trenchant, brilliant, mastered fashion, never in the history of the French national team, had we witnessed the conjunction of a major moment in French political life, the words of a captain and a great sporting event,” enthused L’Équipe.
The French sports daily had a point, even if other French footballers had taken political stances in the past. The St-Étienne forward Dominique Rocheteau had not hidden his unease about taking part in the World Cup held in General Videla’s Argentina in 1978, though he didn’t go as far as the Swedish players who lent their their support to the mothers demonstrating on the Plaza de Mayo during the same tournament. More recently, Zinédine Zidane had called on the French electorate to vote against Marine Le Pen’s father, Jean-Marie, in the 2002 presidential election, calling what was still the Front and not yet the Rassemblement National “a party which does not correspond at all to the values of France”. Kylian, Marcus, Jules et les autres are the heirs of Zizou in more ways than one.