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France forward Kylian Mbappe and Uruguay forward Luis Suarez are shown in this combo photo.FRANCK FIFE/Getty Images

France picked up two trophies in 1998: One, of course, was the country’s only World Cup title, won on home soil. It was also the birth year of Kylian Mbappé, the 19-year-old who’s emerging as one of the biggest stars of the World Cup.

“Well, that was a good year for him to be born, even if he didn’t see much of the 1998 World Cup,” joked French coach Didier Deschamps, who was the captain of that championship squad. “I’m very happy that Mbappé is a French citizen.”

It will be France’s searing speed led by Mbapé and Antoine Griezmann against Uruguay’s defence anchored by Diego Godin on Friday in Nizhny Novgorod in the World Cup quarter-finals. The winner will face Brazil or Belgium.

Uruguay has given up only one goal in four World Cup matches, and France has scored seven – the most coming in a 4-3 victory over Argentina in the round of 16.

In scoring twice against Argentina , Mbappé became the first teenager with multiple goals in a World Cup knockout game since a 17-year-old Pele did it twice (including a hat trick against France) in 1958.

It’s a big stage with inevitable comparisons that Mbappé smiled about and then batted away.

“It’s flattering to be the second one since Pele,” said Mbappé, born in France to a father from Cameroon and a mother from Algeria. “But let’s put things in perspective. Pele’s another category.”

This is France’s seventh quarter-final and its fourth in the past six World Cups dating back to 1998 and the famous side led by Deschamps, Patrick Vieira, Zinedine Zidane and Thierry Henry – the so-called Rainbow Team from a multicultural France.

“In a World Cup you have the top-level players,” said Mbappé, whose club team is Paris Saint-Germain. “So it’s an opportunity to show what you can do and what your abilities are. There is no better place than a World Cup.”

After three lacklustre games in group play, France was electric in its most recent match, particularly in the second half when it cut up Argentina’s plodding defence. Five of France’s starters in the first group match had never played in the World Cup, including Mbappé.

“You need some patience,” Deschamps said.

Deschamps has compared playing Uruguay to facing Peru, which narrowly lost to France 1-0 in group play on a goal by Mbappé. He termed Uruguay “solid and aggressive” in a French television interview, adding: “These are not qualities displayed by Argentina.”

The match will showcase several cross-border friendships.

Griezmann plays at Atletico Madrid where his teammates are Uruguayan defenders Godin and Jose Maria Gimenez. Godin is the godfather of Griezmann’s daughter.

While Godin and Gimenez will try to stop Griezmann, Uruguay striker Luis Suarez will be opposing Barcelona teammate Samuel Umtiti.

“I’ve always joked … that I wanted to face Umtiti at a World Cup,” Suarez said. “And it came true.”

Suarez’s running mate, Edinson Cavani, scored both goals in the knockout win over Cristiano Ronaldo and Portugal, but is nursing a hamstring injury.

It’s unclear if he will play and his absence would be a blow to the South Americans, but defence is the real key to Uruguay’s hopes, with coach Oscar Tabarez expecting to see less of the ball.

“I think very often there’s the mistaken belief that ball possession leads to scoring opportunities,” said Tabarez, who took over in 2006.

“If you don’t have ball possession, you can still inflict pain.”

The Associated Press

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