It was a decision that stunned the world's best referees. France forward Kylian Mbappe was on the attack against Senegal when he went down inside the box after a 58th-minute challenge by Sadio Mane. With the game goalless at the New York New Jersey Stadium, referee Alireza Faghani was sent to the pitchside monitor to look at the challenge again after a VAR review. He returned to the pitch and appeared to point to the penalty spot, much to the delight of the thousands of France fans inside the ground. However, their joy was short lived as Faghani had actually signalled for a goal-kick, before he explained that Mbappe had initiated the contact.
Speaking on BBC One, Darren Cann – the 2010 World Cup final assistant referee – said: "My phone has blown up with messages from several of the world's best referees who also can't understand why a penalty wasn't given." Former Scotland winger Pat Nevin, at the game for BBC Radio 5 Live, labelled it a "rubbish decision". "No chance at all. How can he [Mbappe] have initiated the contact? The most nonsensical line I have ever heard." Former England captain Alan Shearer, at the game for BBC One, said it was a "bizarre" decision. "I don't get it. You can see the lunge from Mane and his left leg catches Mbappe. How can Mbappe initiate contact if he is in front of him? It's bizarre, it really is."
“World's best referees baffled as Mbappe denied penalty in France's 3-1 win over Senegal.”
France boss Didier Deschamps, speaking after the game, said his side should have been awarded a penalty. "For the referee to come back and say Kylian put his leg forward, I am not sure I saw this. A penalty should have been awarded but this is my interpretation. The referee is always correct."
The decision did not hurt France in the end, who ran out 3-1 winners. Senegal had earlier missed golden chances, with Nicolas Jackson hitting the post and Ismaila Sarr firing over from six yards. France woke up in the second half, and Mbappe – the Golden Boot winner from 2022 – made a sensational run across the box to finish first time for his first goal. PSG's Bradley Barcola then produced a composed finish to double the lead, before Senegal's Ibrahim Mbaye scored a stunning solo goal. But within seconds of the restart, Mbappe scored his second from range to restore France's two-goal lead. In doing so, the Real Madrid forward replaced Olivier Giroud as France's all-time leading scorer, with 58 goals in 99 appearances, and also became France's all-time top scorer at World Cups with 14 goals in 15 tournament matches.
Yet the penalty controversy lingered. Cann added: "I can't support the referee's decision to be honest. For me it is a clear penalty. For me it is very, very clear and I am extremely surprised he did not point to the spot after a correct VAR review."