
Kylian Mbappé is sore. It’s November, and last night Mbappé’s Paris Saint-Germain fought out a bitter draw with Newcastle in the Champions League group stage at the Parc des Princes. Mbappé scored a penalty in stoppage time, rescuing a point after a frustrating team performance. But if he’s sour about it, Mbappé doesn’t show it, today dressed casually in a plain black T-shirt and a loose-fitting pastel-coloured Jordan tracksuit, Hublot Big Bang One Click peeking out from the sleeve. “Football is a complex thing and you quickly forget the positive experiences as well as the negative ones,” he tells me. “You always have to adapt and reinvent yourself.”
A few post-game aches are standard for Mbappé, a player who, at 25, has already played more than 400 games at the summit of men’s soccer. After breaking through as a teenage sensation at AS Monaco, Mbappé won the World Cup with France at just 19. In 2017, he moved to PSG for €180 million ($215 million), becoming the most expensive teenage player ever and one of the most expensive jewels in an all-star team that for two seasons included Neymar and Lionel Messi. He is already Paris Saint-Germain’s all-time top scorer; it seems likely that sooner or later, he’ll achieve the same status with the French national team. (Along the way he became the youngest player ever to reach the shortlist for the Ballon d’Or.)
In that time, Mbappé says, he has learned what it takes to keep his body in peak condition: more stretching before matches, more time in the hands of physiotherapists afterwards. “It’s all that largely invisible work that makes it possible to string together matches and come back more easily from any injury,” he says, while also emphasizing that unlike some players he prefers to draw a clear line between his professional and private life. “I have a well-equipped home gym, but I prefer to spend as much time as possible at the training center and do whatever I have to do there, even if it means staying late. Recovery is also mental. The club is work, and home is a chill space where I’m more relaxed and where I get to spend time with my family, who I don’t get to see often enough.”
This season marks a new pivot point for Mbappé. In July, Messi left PSG for Inter Miami and the MLS. A month later, Neymar moved to Saudi Arabia’s Al-Hilal. The twin departures marked the dismantling of one of the most electric forward lines in football, but Mbappé says he’s unfazed, by both the burden he now shoulders and the tumult within the global game. “Many great players who have shaped the history of football have left Europe this summer and we are entering a new era,” Mbappé says. “It’s become part of the cycle of this sport and at some point it will be my turn to leave. I’m not worried about these changes. I’m simply thinking about continuing my career and following my own path.”
Mbappé likes to control every aspect of his image, savvy about how he presents himself to the world. But, throughout our conversation, I can’t help but note that there’s a childlike enthusiasm about him, and his obsession with winning. “The desire to win, to go beyond the limits of what is possible, and to do great things is deeply ingrained in me. I think I owe it to the education and guidance I received both on and off the pitch, which helped me to build myself as a player and as a man,” he says. “We tend to forget it, but we’re eternally children when we play football. The level at which we play the game changes, but the mentality doesn’t. The passion is constant through the years.”
Despite leading the Ligue 1 top scorer charts for five seasons in a row—he scored 29 last year, as PSG held off surprise challenger Lens for the title—Mbappé has recently reiterated his intention to become a more well-rounded player. His national team coach explains that that’s simply what Mbappé does. “That doesn’t surprise me because he’s a perfectionist and a competitor. He always wants to do more and be better in every area,” says France coach Didier Deschamps. Heading, for example, was not initially one of Mbappé’s many strengths, but Deschamps notes that he’s made noticeable progress in this area, as demonstrated by the goal he scored for France against Australia at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. “Even if the number of goals he’s already scored is impressive, he can probably still be a little more precise,” Deschamps says.
Mbappé has a more holistic approach to his training. “I think that beyond the technical aspects of becoming better with, say, your left foot or your head, what is most important is broadening your vision of the sport,” he says. “By playing for six or seven different coaches, I’ve learned six or seven different ways of doing my job. I developed different facets of my game and constantly grew. The right frame of mind requires being able to listen and adapt.” Mbappé explains that he’s shaped approach to the game through listening to the many great athletes he’s encountered on his travels, like Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, and Novak Djokovic. (And French handball star Nikola Karabatic, too.) He’s starting to embrace opportunities to take on greater responsibilities—like being recently named captain of the French national team.
“The big difference compared to before is that then my attention was really focused on my performance and what I personally could bring to the team,” Mbappé says. “Being captain provides me with a new, broader vision.”
Mbappé cites the example of basketball star LeBron James, whom he met in the US during a Nike campaign a few years ago. “He is much farther along in his career than I am and projects outside of sport have cemented his place as a sporting legend. Being able to ask for advice from inspiring figures like him provides an opportunity to adjust my plan and create my own approach that is as effective as possible in terms of helping young people today,” he explains.
His own path could fork soon, as Mbappé’s contract with PSG ends in June. After seven seasons of titles and records, as well as tensions and frustrations, the striker will have a choice to make: whether to stick around, in hopes of leading PSG to its first Champions League win, or to chart his own course elsewhere. (He has, for several years, been linked with Real Madrid; last summer, Saudi Arabia’s Al-Hilal reportedly offered him one of the most lucrative athletic contracts in history. Mbappé declined.)
If all that—along with carrying the hopes and dreams of French soccer—sounds like a burden, that’s exactly the point. “I’ve shown that pressure doesn’t affect me negatively, and I’d even say that I need it to perform at my best,” he says. “Pressure allows me to maintain the degree of excellence required to play at the highest level.”
From “Face of Braunschweig” to “Face of Germany,” Ewa Haas-Stark Inspires with Passion and Purpose In a world where influence is often fleeting, Ewa Haas-Stark stands as a beacon of lasting impact. As the CEO, Editor-in-Chief, and Publisher of EWA’S
Trtrizzy, the dynamic hip-hop artist based in London, is poised to drop his highly anticipated album, “Welcome to Choplife.” Born and bred in the vibrant cultural landscape of London, Trtrizzy’s musical journey is a testament to his passion for hip-hop
Celebrate International Women’s Day by reading about these 8 powerhouses of ladies who are changing and impacting the world around them, whilst helping to lift and inspire others around them to do the same. Elena Cardone Elena Cardone, an accomplished
From Gangster Films to Comedy, Vermeeren’s Versatile Acting Makes Waves in the UK In the bustling and ever-evolving world of cinema, it’s a rarity to witness a foreign actor make significant inroads into the local film industry of a country.