Varane: France team-mates happy whoever wins Ballon d'Or
Antoine Griezmann and Kylian Mbappe are tipped as Ballon d'Or contenders, but Raphael Varane is unconcerned about conflict over the award.

Raphael Varane says his France team-mates will be happy whichever of them wins this year's hotly contested Ballon d'Or award.
Real Madrid defender Varane has been backed by France icon Michel Platini for the prize after winning both the Champions League and the World Cup in 2018, the only player to do so.
But contenders include France colleagues Kylian Mbappe and Antoine Greizmann, the latter forward having fired Atletico Madrid to Europa League glory against Marseille last term.
Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi have won the award five times each in the last decade, while Luka Modric is also in the running after claiming the Golden Ball for his performances in Croatia's run to Russia 2018's final.
Varane, though, said he and his France team-mates have not talked about who could win this year's Ballon d'Or.
"I think there won't be a problem between us," the centre-back said to France Football, the publication behind the Ballon d'Or. "If a Frenchman wins it we'll be happy, whoever it is.
"It's in the news, but we don't talk about it. We speak about what was done well, but not [that] this one deserves it more than another. We all contributed. You can't say: 'He doesn't deserve it, he didn't work.'"
Get FourFourTwo Newsletter
The best features, fun and footballing quizzes, straight to your inbox every week.
Back to training November 5, 2018
Despite France also boasting stars including Manchester United midfielder Paul Pogba, Varane feels their triumph under Didier Deschamps was a team effort.
"We do a team sport. Individually, you're worthless! You can be a huge player, if you play alone, the team loses," he added. "All the teams that win a big trophy, it is thanks to the collective, when each one takes pleasure to share with the others. This is how it works.
"Basically, I played football to share with others, to excel together, to achieve a goal. After, we all have our ego, our pride and our personality. But all alone, in football, it does not work.
"I am a young old man. I really feel in the middle. I have a good feeling with everyone. I have responsibilities within the group, I am one of the most experienced, of those who must reassure others. I always had a bit of a big brother role. I have a rather fraternal side.
"I'm not the uncle, nor the youngest, I'm the brother. Ben Mendy called me Raphton. I thought I knew all my nicknames but he invented another one. He is inspired."

‘Newcastle’s board said I was over the hill, so I left and played 108 consecutive games and won the European Cup – not a bad way to answer that accusation!’: Ex-Magpies defender reflects on career highlight after proving former side wrong

‘Parma viewed him as the perfect replacement for Adrian Mutu, who’d left to sign for Chelsea. But Manchester United’s interest was much more concrete’: Cristiano Ronaldo's 2003 transfer details revealed by former Sporting director of football