France Enters FIFA World Cup 2026 Round Of 16: Kylian Mbappe Shines As France Beats Sweden
France moved into the FIFA World Cup 2026 last 16 with a commanding 3-0 win over Sweden in New York, powered by another decisive Kylian Mbappe performance. The France captain scored either side of Bradly Barcola’s second-half goal as Didier Deschamps’ side turned early pressure into a knockout statement.
Sweden survived for almost the entire first half despite repeated French chances, but Mbappe broke the resistance just before the interval. Barcola then gave France breathing space after the restart before Mbappe added his second, ending Sweden’s campaign and setting up a Round of 16 meeting with Paraguay.
AI-generated summary, reviewed by editors

Mbappe leads France past Sweden
France began with pace, width and clear intent. Mbappe and Michael Olise both struck the woodwork before the breakthrough arrived at the end of the first half. Sweden had defended deep and relied on last-ditch blocks, but the pressure eventually became too much to contain.
The opener came from a quick corner routine that caught Sweden unsettled. Mbappe worked space inside the box, shifted the ball away from Viktor Gyokeres and curled a precise finish beyond the goalkeeper. He ran straight towards Deschamps, with France’s players joining the celebration near the touchline.
That goal changed the mood of the match. Sweden had reached half-time only one goal down, but they had offered little going forward. France, by contrast, had already shown too many ways to hurt them, with Mbappe drifting left, Olise finding pockets and Barcola stretching the defensive line.
France’s second goal arrived early in the second half and effectively ended Swedish hopes. Aurelien Tchouameni intercepted a loose pass in midfield and quickly moved the ball to Olise. The Bayern Munich playmaker slipped a clever pass through the Swedish defence, allowing Barcola to steady himself and finish past Zetterstrom.
Olise influence gives France another attacking layer
Olise did not score, but he was central to France’s best football. His weight of pass for Barcola’s goal opened Sweden completely, and he later created the chance for Mbappe’s second. His ability to receive between midfield and defence gave France control without slowing their attacks.
The third goal showed the same pattern. Olise threaded another pass beyond Sweden’s back line, and Mbappe timed his run to stay onside. Once through, he bent a trademark finish into the far corner, sealing the result with the calmness that has defined his World Cup knockout record.
Mbappe’s second goal also strengthened his place among the tournament’s great scorers. He moved further up the all-time World Cup scoring charts and extended his remarkable knockout-stage record. By the time he was withdrawn late in the game, the New York crowd stood to applaud another major-tournament performance.
Deschamps responded with a bow from the technical area as Mbappe and Olise were substituted in the closing stages. Jean-Philippe Mateta and Rayan Cherki came on, with France already in complete control. Desire Doue also tested Sweden’s goalkeeper with a low drive from outside the area.
Sweden exit after failing to trouble France
Sweden’s best spell was brief and arrived only after they were chasing the game. Taha Abdi Ali came on and showed quick feet on the flank, bringing some urgency to Graham Potter’s side. Gyokeres also forced Mike Maignan into action, but the France goalkeeper was largely a spectator.
For Sweden, the defeat added to a difficult knockout record in recent World Cup appearances. They had previously lost their opening knockout match against Senegal in 2002 and Germany in 2006. Against France, they rarely looked capable of changing that pattern once the first goal went in.
France’s defensive comfort was as important as their attacking fluency. Tchouameni screened the back line well, while the centre-backs dealt calmly with Sweden’s direct balls. With Maignan barely stretched for long periods, Deschamps’ team conserved energy while still creating enough chances to win by more.
The result also underlined France’s growing authority against European opposition at World Cups. This was another controlled knockout performance from a side that has blended experience with younger attacking options. Tougher tests are likely, but France looked balanced, sharp and physically strong in New York.
France will now prepare for Paraguay in the Round of 16 with momentum and a fully functioning attack. Sweden leave the tournament after being outplayed in every key phase. For Deschamps, the win offered more than progression: it showed that France’s main players are finding form at the right time.












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