EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J: Kylian Mbappe struck twice to lead France to a dominant 3-1 ​victory over Senegal in World Cup Group I and become his country’s all-time record goalscorer.

Although the Africans had looked ‌the stronger team in the first half, the second period was a different matter as class ultimately proved the difference for the twice world champions.

Substitute Bradley Barcola added a second, and Mbappe broke Olivier Giroud’s record with his ​58th France goal thanks to a scorching strike from outside the box deep into added time, seconds after Ibrahim Mbaye’s consolation strike for ​Senegal.

The double moved Mbappe to 14 World Cup goals, taking him past Lionel Messi and Just Fontaine and level with ⁠Germany’s Gerd Muller, two behind record holder Miroslav Klose.

He said: “I play to leave a mark on my country’s history and to help my team win the ​World Cup. I don’t think we’re fully up and running yet. But it’s always good to start a tournament with a win. It gives ​you a bit more peace of mind, even though you’re never really relaxed at a World Cup.”

Senegal had started with far greater intensity and gave France early problems through Nicolas Jackson and Ismaila Sarr, while Deschamps’ side struggled to find rhythm despite dominating possession.

Jackson almost opened the scoring after a lightning counter-attack down the left, driving ​into the box and firing a low shot against the post before the ball ricocheted off goalkeeper Mike Maignan’s heel and went out for a ​corner.

Mbappe was largely subdued in the first half, misplacing simple passes and finding little space against Senegal’s disciplined defence.

With Aurelien Tchouameni dropping deep, almost as ‌a third ⁠centre back, France left Adrien Rabiot isolated in midfield and relied heavily on attacks from the wings through Desire Doue and Michael Olise or direct balls towards Mbappe.

Senegal should have gone ahead with the final move of the half when Sadio Mane surged down the left and clipped a fine cross to Sarr, who was unmarked inside the box but blasted his first-time effort over the bar from close range.

France were sharper after halftime and were left furious in the 58th minute when Mane slid in on Mbappe inside the ​box. The referee was sent to the pitchside monitor by VAR officials but stood by his decision not to ​award a penalty.

⁠The breakthrough came when Olise collected the ball on the right and slipped a precise low pass between the defenders for Mbappe, who ran on to a clever pass and finished coolly.

France extended their lead in the 82nd minute when Rabiot released Barcola through the middle and the substitute, two minutes after replacing Ousmane ⁠Dembele, chipped ​the ball over the onrushing Mendy.

Mbaye revived Senegal’s hopes in the 95th minute, leaving ​Theo Hernandez on the floor with a fine dribble before smashing a shot into the top corner.

But Mbappe had the final word, lashing a spectacular strike from distance into the top ​left corner to complete France’s win in style.

Senegal coach Pape Thiaw said: “We do have some regrets. When you ​look at the match overall, if ⁠we had more efficient by halftime we would have been able to lead one or two nil.”

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