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Who is the youngest player to reach two World Cup finals? Mbappé, Pelé, Maradona...

  /  autty

Kylian Mbappé will play in another World Cup final on Sunday when France face Argentina.

France will play in a third World Cup final on Sunday when they take on Argentina.

Finals have been good for the French. In their first ever World Cup final in 1998, one they hosted, they beat Brazil 3-0 at the Stade de France in Paris.

They had to wait 20 years for their next final but they made no mistake when they faced Croatia in Russia 2018. A 4-2 win saw Didier Deschamps’ side claim victory with the help of a teenage Kylian Mbappé.

Pelé at World Cups

Pelé burst onto the scene in the 1958 World Cup with Brazil at the age of 17. He collected the Best Young Player Award after helping his country lift the Jules Rimet trophy with a 5-2 win over Sweden. The teenage wonderkid scored a brace as Brazil beat their Scandinavian counterparts.

The Seleção won the World Cup again in 1962, getting the better of Czechoslovakia. Pelé was only 21, but missed what would have been his second World Cup final after picking up an injury in the second match of the tournament. The silky South American team went on to beat Czechoslovakia 3-1.

Argentina and Maradona

Argentina played in two World Cup finals in the space of eight years. In 1978, on home soil, they were victorious over the Netherlands, winning 3-2 in the final in Buenos Aires.

Fours later and with Diego Maradona in their squad when they set off for the 1982 World Cup in Spain. Maradona was making a first World Cup appearance at the age of 21 but it wasn’t to be and Argentina were unable to defend their title on European soil as Italy ran out eventual winners.

In 1986 in Mexico, however, they tasted more success. Maradona, 25 at the time, was the man of the moment; and not only for his hand of God goal against England. El Pelusa guided his country to victory in the 1986 World Cup, beating West Germany in the final.

Maradona played every minute for Argentina, scoring five goals and providing five assists. His second goal against England in the 1986 World Cup quarter-finals was one the greatest individual goals ever seen. Lionel Messi provided Argentina fans with a similar run on Tuesday when he set up fellow forward Julián Álvarez to score his team’s third goal in the semi-final win over Croatia.

More Messi magic on Sunday will bring back the memories of 1986 to those old enough to remember the last time La Albiceleste tasted World Cup glory.