Updated On: 08 October, 2021 10:30 AM IST | Turin | AP
"I don't think there were many people who thought we could at halftime. All credit to the players. The pride and character that they showed, added to the quality, ensured we did it."

France`s forward Kylian Mbappe celebrates after scoring a goal prior to the UEFA Nations League semi-final football match between Belgium and France at the Juventus stadium in Turin. Pic/AFP
Kylian Mbappe redeemed himself with a goal and an assist as France came from two goals down to beat Belgium 3-2 and reach the Nations League final. Theo Hernández scored the last-minute winner to complete the comeback and send world champion France through to Sunday's final against Spain. It was only his second appearance for his country and came the day after his 24th birthday. Two quickfire goals at the end of the first half had given Belgium a seemingly comfortable lead but Mbappe, who became the youngest player to reach 50 caps for Les Bleus, set up Karim Benzema's goal in the 62nd minute and converted a penalty seven minutes later. "To be capable of doing what we did, and you shouldn't forget the team we did it to, the top-ranked team in the world at the moment, it's fantastic what the team of France managed to do," coach Didier Deschamps said. "I don't think there were many people who thought we could at halftime. All credit to the players. The pride and character that they showed, added to the quality, ensured we did it."
The 22-year-old Mbappe was made somewhat of a scapegoat for France's failure at the European Championship after missing the decisive penalty in the shootout in France's loss to Switzerland in the round of 16. "I never doubted Kylian. I always showed him that I was with him, behind him," Deschamps said. "I know very well that the France team is stronger with him." For Belgium it was another disappointing failure for a team that has entered the past few major tournaments as one of the big favorites but hasn't reached a big final since Euro 1980. Even the official twitter account of the Belgian national team seemed confident of victory at halftime, tweeting "Well, that's a comfortable lead!" before gently mocking itself after the final whistle. "You need to look at the first half we did, it was full of cool heads, real understanding of what was needed, creating chances, our performance was at the level we expect," Belgium coach Roberto Martínez said. "Second half we became emotional, we were thinking of getting to the final as quickly as we could rather than playing our game."