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Kylian Mbappe will donate $500,000 in winnings to charity—here's how he went from a rough neighborhood to the World Cup

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France's forward Kylian Mbappe, center, celebrates during the trophy ceremony after winning the Russia 2018 World Cup final football match between France and Croatia at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow on July 15, 2018.
ALEXANDER NEMENOV | AFP | Getty Images

The 19-year-old French forward Kylian Mbappe made roughly $22,300 each game this World Cup, plus a reported $350,000 bonus for winning the final on Sunday, which adds up to over $500,000, and he'll be donating that sum to charity.

It might only be a fraction of his total salary — he gets paid $1.7 million a month by his club team, Paris-Saint Germain — but half a million dollars could mean a lot to the Premiers de Cordees, an association that organizes sporting events for children with disabilities.

“Kylian, he's a great person,” said Sebastien Ruffin, general manager of Premiers de Cordee. “When his schedule allows it, he intervenes for us with pleasure. He has a very good [relationship] with children, he always finds the right [words] to encourage them. I sometimes even feel that [he] takes more pleasure to play with the kids than the kids themselves.”

Not too long ago, Mbappe was a boy himself, living in the poor Parisian suburb of Bondy and returning home after soccer practice to a bedroom adorned with posters of his idol, Cristiano Ronaldo. Now he is a starting forward for the French national team and the youngest player since Pele to score a goal in the World Cup final.

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He officially joined PSG for a fee of $217 million, which is the second highest fee of all time; the record is held by his club-mate Neymar. He spent the last season there on loan from AS Monaco in an agreement that contained a clause allowing PSG to permanently sign him to their roster.

"For a player so untested that figure seemed extraordinary when it was agreed, but it is increasingly coming to look like a bargain,” reports the Guardian.

MBAPPE WITH RONALDO

Mbappe has proven himself this month at the World Cup. During his performance against Argentina, he earned France an early penalty kick after an impressive burst of speed — in order to stop his 60-yard sprint with the ball, the Argentinian defense resorted to dragging him down in the box. He later scored twice, becoming the first teenager to score multiple goals in the World Cup knockout stages since, once again, Pele in 1958.

France won the game 4 to 3, eliminating five-time Ballon D'Or winner Lionel Messi from the tournament.

Mbappe has also impressed at the club level. He contributed 13 goals and seven assists in just 28 League 1 appearances, helping PSG clinch the title.

MBAPPE SPRINT

His hometown of Bondy is one of the French banlieues, or "places with large, working-class, nonwhite communities, synonymous with riots and social strife, thought of as breeding grounds for crime and terrorism," as The New York Times puts it.

Emerging from the banlieues and finding success is considered no easy feat. But on the current French national team, there are eight players from the banlieues, including Paul Pogba and Blaise Matuidi. Young people in the region celebrate their stories and dream of following in their footsteps. In Bondy, a giant mural of Mbappe looks down from the wall of an old apartment block.

"He was the best kid I coached. He is probably the best I will ever coach," Antonio Riccardi, one of his first coaches on his first team, AS Bondy, tells the Times. From the time Mbappe was six years old, he stood out. And he listened, which is an important trait for any athlete who wants a chance of becoming a star. "He assimilates advice quickly. You ask him something once, and the second time he does it," Riccardi told ESPN.

Scouts from top clubs recognized his talent, too. He visited famous European teams such as Chelsea when he was 12 and Real Madrid a couple of years later before deciding to sign with Monaco when he was only 16. His first year, he became the youngest player to ever score for the club, breaking a record formerly held by the retired French star Thierry Henry.

Mbappe credits his astronomical success to practice and dedication. "In football, everything is possible through hard work and I think that has been important," he told beIN Sports last year. "I've always believed in myself and I knew I was capable of doing great things. It isn't just about desire and wanting to succeed, you must work hard."

Even though he found fame at a young age, Mbappe maintains a reputation for being both humble and generous. "I may be ahead of my age, but in real life I am still a kid," Mbappe told beIN Sports. "‘Footballer' does not rhyme with 'Ferrari.' I have no car, it's not a big deal."

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