Lionel Messi is currently ahead in the World Cup Golden Boot race with five goals from two matches. Kylian Mbappe and Erling Haaland are close behind on four each, keeping the contest wide open rather than settled.
The early scoring surge has already produced rare historical context: according to the source, this is only the second World Cup in which three players have reached at least four goals after two matches, and the first since 1954. Messi’s total has also moved him to 18 career World Cup goals, beyond Miroslav Klose’s previous mark of 16.
Mbappe has matched Klose’s 16 World Cup goals after scoring twice in France’s weather-delayed win over Iraq, while Haaland’s double against Senegal helped Norway reach the last 32. Haaland’s broader Norway record, listed at 59 goals in 52 appearances, adds to the sense that this tournament could reshape the conversation around modern international scorers.
The chase still has more names around it. Harry Kane began with two goals for England against Ghana, and Folarin Balogun has also scored twice for the USA. The expanded 48-team format and extra knockout round may create more opportunities, but the central question remains whether Messi’s lead can withstand the pressure from Mbappe, Haaland and the other elite forwards.


Discussion
Sign in to join the discussion.
Sign in / Register