<p>Hat-trick star Kylian Mbappe matched one Ligue 1 record by scoring after just eight seconds in Lille to set Paris Saint-Germain on their way to a 7-1 victory on Sunday, while the division hit a modern high with 11 red cards in one weekend.</p>.<p>Mbappe equalled a 30-year-old record when he burst into space, collected a pass from Lionel Messi and surprised Lille goalkeeper Leo Jardim with a lob to score his second league goal of the season.</p>.<p>The goal matched Michel Rio's strike for Caen against Cannes on February 15, 1992, although statisticians MisterChip calculated that Rio was slightly faster, scoring after 7.9sec to Mbappe's 8.3.</p>.<p>Mbappe then hit a post when facing an open goal, but Messi, Achraf Hakimi and Neymar all scored before half-time as PSG tore apart the only other club to win the French title in the last five seasons.</p>.<p>Stories of tensions between two of PSG's superstars, Mbappe and Neymar, had swirled around the club this week but the Brazilian scored twice and Mbappe three times.</p>.<p>"It's a real satisfaction to see them happy on the field, playing for each other," PSG coach Christophe Galtier said.</p>.<p>"Obviously there is talent, and when this talent comes together, it makes for a very enjoyable match."</p>.<p>Neymar added a fifth early in the second half. After Jonathan Bamba replied for Lille, Mbappe struck twice, set up both times by Neymar.</p>.<p>The match ended a weekend when French football saw red, as referees applied a new "firmness order".</p>.<p>After Vanderson of Monaco and Samuel Gigot of Marseille were sent off on Saturday, there were nine more reds on Sunday, setting a single-round high in Ligue 1 for the last 30 years, according to statistics company Opta.</p>.<p>There were also seven reds in Ligue 2, three of them for Saint-Etienne as they lost 6-0 at home to Le Havre.</p>.<p>The last two reds on Sunday came in Rennes, where, despite a warning from their coach, Ajaccio finished with 10 men as Lesley Ugochukwu, who had only come on for Ajaccio five minutes earlier, was shown red in added time.</p>.<p>"Seeing the matches earlier in the day, I had the feeling that the referees had received firm instructions. I warned my players," said Ajaccio coach Olivier Pantaloni.</p>.<p>Hosts Rennes, who won 2-1, lost back-up goalkeeper Romain Salin to two yellow cards in quick succession for arguing from the touchline.</p>.<p>"The spectacle was perhaps more the red cards than the play this afternoon," complained Rennes coach Bruno Genesio.</p>.<p>"It's a bit weird. It is regrettable. Because it distorts the matches."</p>.<p>In Clermont, Saif-Eddine Khaoui scored the only goal against struggling Nice in the fifth minute.</p>.<p>The visitors, who have not won this season, lost Mario Lemina in the 80th minute and Jean-Clair Todibo two minutes later.</p>.<p>There were four red cards in Montpellier as Auxerre gained their first victory in Ligue 1 since May 2012.</p>.<p>Montpellier midfielder Khalil Fayad was sent off in the 46th minute and Auxerre striker M'Baye Niang in the 51st.</p>.<p>After Mathias Autret scored a penalty winner, Nuno Da Costa and then Montpellier midfielder Teji Savanier were sent off.</p>.<p>"There were four expulsions. That's heavy in a game without extreme violence," said Auxerre coach Jean-Marc Furlan.</p>.<p>"In our time, when we played, we killed each other. There was never a yellow or a red. UEFA changed all that because there were serious injuries like (Diego) Maradona or (Marco) Van Basten," said the former defender, who played for a series of French clubs from the mid-1970s to the early 1990s.</p>.<p>Montpellier coach Olivier Dall'Oglio agreed.</p>.<p>"There are red cards being shown very quickly, there are penalties being whistled very quickly," said Dall'Oglio.</p>.<p>"There are always new instructions. There is always a new strictness, but it will fade as the days go by."</p>.<p>Angers lost 3-1 at home to Brest after losing Halid Sabanovic to a straight red in the 35th minute.</p>
<p>Hat-trick star Kylian Mbappe matched one Ligue 1 record by scoring after just eight seconds in Lille to set Paris Saint-Germain on their way to a 7-1 victory on Sunday, while the division hit a modern high with 11 red cards in one weekend.</p>.<p>Mbappe equalled a 30-year-old record when he burst into space, collected a pass from Lionel Messi and surprised Lille goalkeeper Leo Jardim with a lob to score his second league goal of the season.</p>.<p>The goal matched Michel Rio's strike for Caen against Cannes on February 15, 1992, although statisticians MisterChip calculated that Rio was slightly faster, scoring after 7.9sec to Mbappe's 8.3.</p>.<p>Mbappe then hit a post when facing an open goal, but Messi, Achraf Hakimi and Neymar all scored before half-time as PSG tore apart the only other club to win the French title in the last five seasons.</p>.<p>Stories of tensions between two of PSG's superstars, Mbappe and Neymar, had swirled around the club this week but the Brazilian scored twice and Mbappe three times.</p>.<p>"It's a real satisfaction to see them happy on the field, playing for each other," PSG coach Christophe Galtier said.</p>.<p>"Obviously there is talent, and when this talent comes together, it makes for a very enjoyable match."</p>.<p>Neymar added a fifth early in the second half. After Jonathan Bamba replied for Lille, Mbappe struck twice, set up both times by Neymar.</p>.<p>The match ended a weekend when French football saw red, as referees applied a new "firmness order".</p>.<p>After Vanderson of Monaco and Samuel Gigot of Marseille were sent off on Saturday, there were nine more reds on Sunday, setting a single-round high in Ligue 1 for the last 30 years, according to statistics company Opta.</p>.<p>There were also seven reds in Ligue 2, three of them for Saint-Etienne as they lost 6-0 at home to Le Havre.</p>.<p>The last two reds on Sunday came in Rennes, where, despite a warning from their coach, Ajaccio finished with 10 men as Lesley Ugochukwu, who had only come on for Ajaccio five minutes earlier, was shown red in added time.</p>.<p>"Seeing the matches earlier in the day, I had the feeling that the referees had received firm instructions. I warned my players," said Ajaccio coach Olivier Pantaloni.</p>.<p>Hosts Rennes, who won 2-1, lost back-up goalkeeper Romain Salin to two yellow cards in quick succession for arguing from the touchline.</p>.<p>"The spectacle was perhaps more the red cards than the play this afternoon," complained Rennes coach Bruno Genesio.</p>.<p>"It's a bit weird. It is regrettable. Because it distorts the matches."</p>.<p>In Clermont, Saif-Eddine Khaoui scored the only goal against struggling Nice in the fifth minute.</p>.<p>The visitors, who have not won this season, lost Mario Lemina in the 80th minute and Jean-Clair Todibo two minutes later.</p>.<p>There were four red cards in Montpellier as Auxerre gained their first victory in Ligue 1 since May 2012.</p>.<p>Montpellier midfielder Khalil Fayad was sent off in the 46th minute and Auxerre striker M'Baye Niang in the 51st.</p>.<p>After Mathias Autret scored a penalty winner, Nuno Da Costa and then Montpellier midfielder Teji Savanier were sent off.</p>.<p>"There were four expulsions. That's heavy in a game without extreme violence," said Auxerre coach Jean-Marc Furlan.</p>.<p>"In our time, when we played, we killed each other. There was never a yellow or a red. UEFA changed all that because there were serious injuries like (Diego) Maradona or (Marco) Van Basten," said the former defender, who played for a series of French clubs from the mid-1970s to the early 1990s.</p>.<p>Montpellier coach Olivier Dall'Oglio agreed.</p>.<p>"There are red cards being shown very quickly, there are penalties being whistled very quickly," said Dall'Oglio.</p>.<p>"There are always new instructions. There is always a new strictness, but it will fade as the days go by."</p>.<p>Angers lost 3-1 at home to Brest after losing Halid Sabanovic to a straight red in the 35th minute.</p>