Metropole · Sport
—The record. Lionel Messi has sixteen World Cup goals, level with Germany’s Miroslav Klose for the most in the tournament’s history.
—The margin. One more goal would make him the outright record holder, alone at the summit.
—The night. He drew level with a hat-trick against Algeria, on his two hundredth game for Argentina.
—The age. Messi is thirty-eight, turning thirty-nine this month, in what is almost certainly his last World Cup.
—The irony. The record has belonged to a German since 2014, the year Germany beat Argentina in the final.
—The stake. South America has waited for one of its own to own this record alone. He is one goal away.
The Messi World Cup goals record is no longer a question of if, but when, and the answer will likely arrive before this tournament is over.
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One goal from history
Lionel Messi now stands one goal away from a record that has eluded South America for more than a decade. With sixteen career World Cup goals, he is level with the German striker Miroslav Klose at the very top of the all-time list.
A single strike would lift him clear, making him the outright leading scorer in the history of football’s greatest tournament. At thirty-eight, in what he has signalled will be his final World Cup, the moment feels both imminent and overdue.
For readers who do not follow the sport closely, the simplest framing is this: the most decorated footballer South America has ever produced is about to claim the one tournament record that has stubbornly stayed in European hands.
The Messi World Cup goals record, by the numbers
Messi reached sixteen with the first World Cup hat-trick of his long career, scoring all three goals in Argentina’s opening win over Algeria in Kansas City. It came on his two hundredth appearance for his country.
The timing was almost scripted. The hat-trick fell exactly twenty years to the day after his World Cup debut as a teenager in 2006, a match in which he also scored.
There is more. Counting goals and assists together, Messi now has twenty-four World Cup contributions, passing the Brazilian legend Pelé’s long-standing mark of twenty-one for the most ever.
He is also the first player to appear at six World Cups, has played more tournament matches and minutes than anyone in history, and at thirty-eight became the oldest player ever to score three goals in a single World Cup game.
Why a German has held the record
The man Messi is chasing is an unlikely rival. Miroslav Klose was never regarded as the best striker of his era, but he was a tournament specialist who simply kept scoring across four World Cups between 2002 and 2014.
He set the record on one of the most infamous nights in the sport’s history, scoring his sixteenth goal as Germany humiliated host Brazil seven goals to one in the 2014 semi-final in Belo Horizonte.
That goal broke the previous mark held by another South American great, Brazil’s Ronaldo, who had finished his career on fifteen. The record has stayed with Klose, and with Europe, ever since.
The cruellest detail belongs to Argentina. Days after dismantling Brazil, Klose and Germany beat Argentina one to nil in the 2014 final, denying Messi the trophy he wanted most at that stage of his career.
A South American wait
That history is why this moment carries weight beyond one player. The record was forged in the defeat of one South American giant and sealed against another, both at the 2014 tournament held on Brazilian soil.
For a continent that treats football as a defining part of its identity, having the sport’s premier scoring record sit in Europe has long felt like an anomaly waiting to be corrected.
Now the correction is one goal away, and it would be delivered by the player many consider the greatest the region has ever produced, in the twilight of his international career.
There is a challenger lurking. France’s Kylian Mbappé, a generation younger, sits on fourteen goals and is chasing the same milestone, which adds a thread of jeopardy to Messi’s pursuit.
The human arc behind the milestone
The record chase has not been a smooth procession. In the build-up to the tournament, a minor hamstring scare worried Argentine fans and raised familiar questions about whether age had finally caught up with him.
Those questions were answered emphatically. Against Algeria, Messi looked untroubled, scoring a long-range opener, pouncing on a rebound, and curling home a third before leaving the field to a standing ovation.
He was visibly moved afterwards, wiping away tears, and spoke of difficult recent days off the pitch and of the gratitude he felt for his teammates’ support. The numbers, he insisted, were just statistics.
That mix of vulnerability and brilliance is the real story. A player approaching thirty-nine, openly emotional, still bending the biggest matches to his will, is what makes the milestone resonate beyond the record books.
When, not if
The mathematics strongly favour Messi. Argentina, the defending champions, have at least two more group games to come, against Austria and Jordan, before the knockout rounds even begin.
He has now scored in five consecutive World Cup matches stretching back to the last tournament, a run that speaks to how reliably he finds the net on this stage even late in his career.
Barring injury or an early exit, the record will almost certainly fall, and most likely within days. When it does, a South American will finally stand alone at the top of the World Cup’s scoring chart.
It would be a fitting close to a tournament career that began with a teenage substitute’s goal in 2006 and may end with the most coveted individual record in the global game.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Messi World Cup goals record situation?
Messi has scored sixteen World Cup goals, level with Germany’s Miroslav Klose for the most in the tournament’s history. One more goal would make him the outright record holder, and with Argentina facing more matches, that milestone is widely expected to fall during the 2026 tournament.
How did Messi draw level with Klose?
He scored the first World Cup hat-trick of his career in Argentina’s opening win over Algeria, on his two hundredth appearance for his country and exactly twenty years after his World Cup debut. At thirty-eight he became the oldest player to score three goals in a single World Cup match.
Who else could break the record?
France’s Kylian Mbappé is the closest active challenger, sitting on fourteen World Cup goals and chasing the same record a generation younger than Messi. That keeps the race alive, though Messi is two goals ahead and continues to score reliably.
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