Lionel Messi scored his first World Cup hat-trick on Tuesday 16 June to reach 16 World Cup goals, equalling Miroslav Klose's all-time record, in Argentina's 3-0 win over Algeria at Kansas City Stadium 1. It was his 200th appearance for Argentina and came 20 years to the day after his World Cup debut. Hours later at MetLife Stadium, Kylian Mbappe scored twice in France's 3-1 win over Senegal to reach 58 international goals, breaking his country's all-time scoring record 2. In Boston, Erling Haaland scored his first World Cup goals in a brace as Norway beat Iraq 4-1 3.
The three milestones describe a generational ladder rather than a single peak. Messi at 38 closed a 20-year arc; Mbappe reached the French record in his prime; Haaland opened his account at his first tournament. Klose built his 16-goal mark across four tournaments between 2002 and 2014, and it had stood for twelve years. Messi reached the same total inside a sixth World Cup, having become the first man alongside Cristiano Ronaldo to appear at six editions of the tournament at the same edition .
The convergence owes as much to the calendar as to form. Three group openers landed on the same date because the 48-team schedule front-loads matches; in a 32-team edition these fixtures would have been spread across more days. For a month this topic had been carried by visa rows, labour disputes and ticketing subpoenas. On 16 June the football took the front page back.
