The fervent embrace of the star by a community in dire need of a hero is noteworthy as racism rises across the world. The star's cold-shouldering of Macron after France's defeat in the final too is being seen as an image of Black defiance...
DOHA: When Adrien Rabiot, who was not at full fitness after his bout of flu yet plugged the holes in the French midfield all evening in the final, was taken off four minutes from time and replaced by Youssouf Fofana, it marked a strange moment in the French line-up, and football's history.
Because, with the exception of their captain Hugo Lloris in goal, all other French players on the field were black.
It was probably the first such occurrence in a World Cup, and a final at that. No African team has played at this top-most level of the game, yet France were carrying a unique marker for race and equality, even if it was purely on footballing terms.
Apart from Argentina's passion spilling over and Messi's epic footballing journey finding completion in a World Cup win, another thing which stood out in the roller-coaster epic of Sunday's final was France football's tremendous depth.
Asked about the future, their coach Didier Deschamps was unperturbed. "We have great strength in depth. Not worried about the future," he would say. It would not be the hyperbole of a beaten coach trying to distract us, but a statement of fact.
Even before the first-half was over, Deschamps substituted two senior players in Olivier Giroud and Ousmane Dembele. It looked like the hand of a defeated coach, throwing in the towel as Argentina appeared to be cruising with a two-goal lead.
Then the second set of substitutions, in the 70th minute – Camavinga and Kingsley Coman for a subdued and largely ineffective Theo Hernandez and Antoine Griezmann, and thereshuffling of the formation – was genius. France roared back into the game almost immediately, setting up a finale for the ages.
The fear remains how the shrill right-wing in France will react to the close defeat that the Les Bleus eventually suffered.
Indeed, in the build-up to the final, there were those would point out the origins of each player in starting line-up – even the white Griezmann, who is of Portuguese descent - claiming that they were not French enough. This was another blow to the French idea of 'Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite' as is enshrined in their founding principles.
And this despite the national team being one of the most complete in the modern game, brimming with talented third-generation immigrants from France's African colonies, players who were all born in France and learnt their football in the arrondissements of Paris.
Leading them is the frighteningly talented Kylian Mbappe. His fantastic hat-trick in the final notwithstanding – the second goal was an unbelievable piece of balance and execution that defied all basic tenets of shot-making – Mbappe has also emerged as the global face of his race. It is a fervent embrace of the star by a community in dire need of a hero as racism rises across the world, fuelled by the rise of rightwing majoritarianism.
1/10:TOI's FIFA World Cup 2022 XI
<p>Here is TOI's FIFA World Cup 2022 XI which ended in Lionel Messi leading Argentina to glory, scoring twice against France in one of the all-time great finals.</p>Getty Images2/10:FORWARD: Kylian Mbappe (France)
<p>Nicknamed Donatello, the Parisian already has a World Cup and a Golden Ball at 23. He will be around for a while to rewrite the record books.</p>Getty Images3/10:FORWARD: Richarlison (Brazil)
<p>The only Brazilian to make the cut ahead of Olivier Giroud or Julian Alvarez by virtue of his dazzling displays earlier in the tournament. The Tottenham player scored arguably the goal of the competition – a stunning overhead kick in his team's opening win over Serbia.</p>Getty Images4/10:FORWARD: Lionel Messi (Argentina)
<p>Mr. Magnificent in his fifth World Cup at the age of 35. His drive and passion, skill and leadership helped Argentina win their third World Cup.</p>Getty Images5/10:MIDFIELDER: Luka Modric (Croatia)
<p>One can't look beyond the 37-year-old engine with endless fuel supply. The Croatian captain pushed his team for 120 minutes against Brazil and kept his calm in the shootout.</p>Getty Images6/10:MIDFIELDER: Jude Bellingham (England)
<p>An exceptional talent who dictated the England midfield with panache and confidence belying age.</p>Getty Images7/10:MIDFIELDER: Enzo Fernandez (Argentina)
<p>Handled the pressure of playing alongside Lionel Messi and never looked out of depth. Justifiably won the young player of the tournament award.</p>Getty Images8/10:DEFENDER: RB | Achraf Hakimi (Morocco)
<p>The PSG star delivered intensity on both ends of the pitch and impressed in all seven of his appearances in the tournament.</p>Getty Images9/10:DEFENDER: CB | Josko Gvardiol (Croatia)
<p>The 20-year-old masked stopper emerged as one of the young stars of the tournament as he helped Croatia reach the semifinals.</p>Getty Images10/10:DEFENDER: CB | Raphael Varane (France)
<p>Pillar in the France team that won the trophy four years ago; his reassuring presence proved crucial again.<br /></p>Getty ImagesBarely 24 – he celebrates his birthday on Tuesday – Mbappe's rather indifferent treatment of French president Emmanuel Macron as the premier offered his commiserations on the Lusail turf afterwards was a cold-shoulder in full glare of the world.
It made the front pages of the world's newspapers the next morning, an unmissable inset finding elbow-room in the splash of Argentina's blue and yellow. Whether it was deep personal disappointment and fatigue at having come so close, or simply a rejection of things Macron stands for, like using Les Bleus as a vehicle for his propaganda, many social theorists and political analysts immediately saw it as an image of defiance.
Here was the foremost star of the world game almost seeing through his country's president. "Macron, miles offside," a section of the French media headlined their opinion on his visit to the French dressing room to offer a pep-talk, and before that, to be seen on the podium as Qatar and FIFA gave out the final prizes.
Things were not always this frosty between Mbappe and Macron. The most marketable footballer on the planet at the moment, Mbappe had a protracted, well-documented saga involving his transfer to Real Madrid, which eventually fell through. Many believed the last-minute back-track was due to a gentle tug back by Macron himself and pressure from Nasser Al-Khelaifi, who is chairman of Qatar Sports Investments, the owners of Paris Saint Germain, his club that subsequently bent all the rules to give him unheard of influence and control.
Macron even had to issue a statement saying that he had only advised Mbappe informally to stay back in France. "I merely advised him, in a totally informal way, to remain in France. I believe it is my responsibility, as president, to defend the country when asked in an informal and friendly manner," he would state. Mbappe would also agree that he received "good advice".
Whatever the current status of the two French personalities, what has clearly emerged is the unique standing of the star of Cameroonian-Algerian parentage.
Mbappe and his brand of football – explosive, error-free and supremely athletic – has the capacity to change the way the game will be played forever. The market realizes this, and this is always going to be a tricky marriage given the pressures and demands of wealth and the innate need to be socially and politically conscious.
It is this prodigious talent and unimaginable potential that he carries that makes Mbappe the face of his race. In Doha on Sunday, alongwith Messi, he was being touted as the principal employee of the state. Also, on Sunday, alongside Messi, he effortlessly soared over all those trappings, and into a realm that can be only his, and that of his race.