The 2026 World Cup set an all-time group-stage scoring record on 24 June, reaching 139 goals in 45 matches with three group games still to play. That passed the 136 goals the 2014 tournament needed 48 matches to reach, the previous high.
The rate tells the story more clearly than the total. At 3.1 goals a game, up from 2022's 2.69, the tournament is running close to half a goal per match higher, and it broke the record on a lower match count than the mark it beat. The 100th goal had landed only on 20 June, in the Netherlands' 5-1 win over Sweden ; the count has run well past it since.
Goalkeepers and analysts have pointed at the Adidas Trionda, the official match ball, and its flight as one driver. Whatever the cause, the record is the cleanest answer yet to the worry that adding 16 teams would dilute the football: the matches are scoring more freely, not less.
