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2026 FIFA World Cup
11JUL

Three records in one World Cup day

3 min read
10:15UTC

Lionel Messi equalled Miroslav Klose's all-time World Cup record on his 200th Argentina cap; within hours Kylian Mbappe broke France's scoring record and Erling Haaland opened his account.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Three of the most decorated forwards alive set all-time records on the same World Cup afternoon.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Three of the world's best players each broke a major record on the same afternoon, which has never happened before at a World Cup. Lionel Messi scored three goals to match the all-time World Cup scoring record of 16 goals, set by Germany's Miroslav Klose across four tournaments. Meanwhile Kylian Mbappe scored twice to break France's national record for goals scored in international football, and Erling Haaland scored twice in his very first World Cup match. The reason all three happened on the same day was partly down to scheduling: the expanded 48-team format meant FIFA crammed 16 matches into two days, and put the biggest teams on the same afternoon. FIFA assigned Argentina, France, and Norway to the same broadcast window as a commercial decision.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three structural conditions aligned on 16 June. First, the 48-team format required three simultaneous afternoon slots on matchday five and six, which FIFA filled with Argentina, France, and Norway. Second, Messi and Klose had been converging on the same 16-goal mark since Messi scored his 15th at Qatar 2022: four years of anticipation compressed into a single group opener.

Third, Haaland's World Cup debut had been delayed by Norway's qualification failure in 2018 and 2022, meaning a striker who had scored 97 goals in 102 Sporting CP appearances arrived at age 25 for his first tournament, almost certain to score in the first match.

The calendar front-loading also reflects FIFA's commercial model: group-stage matches involving record-holders in prime broadcast windows generate the highest per-match global audiences, and the body's scheduling matrix systematically places highest-notoriety fixtures in the first week.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    The 48-team format's ability to front-load marquee fixtures concentrates viewership records into day-one windows, likely a template FIFA will expand to broadcast deals for 2030 and 2034.

  • Consequence

    Messi's 16th goal means he needs only one more to hold the record outright; every subsequent Argentina match carries a global milestone narrative, sustaining commercial value for the remainder of the group stage.

First Reported In

Update #21 · Three records fall in one afternoon

ESPN· 17 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Spain
Spain
Spain face France on Tuesday for the second semi-final place, the last unresolved tie in the bracket.
France
France
France already through to the other semi-final, await Tuesday's result against Spain to know who plays the England-Argentina winner in the final.
Switzerland
Switzerland
Switzerland reached their first World Cup quarter-final since 1954 and led Argentina before Breel Embolo's second yellow card left them a man down for the last half-hour. They expect the run to raise expectations for the next cycle rather than close a chapter.
Norway
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Norway leaned on Erling Haaland to reach a first modern-era quarter-final, and he nearly took them further before a disallowed goal and England's late double ended the run. Their tournament closes as the best World Cup performance in the country's history.
Argentina national team
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England
England
England needed a 93rd-minute Bellingham winner to see off Norway, the third straight knockout tie settled in its closing stages rather than controlled. They travel to Atlanta as favourites but with Declan Rice a fitness doubt and Jarell Quansah suspended.