Lionel Messi scored his 17th and 18th World Cup goals against Austria in Arlington on Monday 22 June, passing Miroslav Klose's men's record of 16 and Marta's all-time mark of 17 to stand alone at the top of the scoring chart across both the men's and women's tournaments. He is 38. Argentina won Group J 2-0 and reached the round of 32. Messi opened the scoring on 38 minutes with a left-footed first-time finish from a Facundo Medina pass, then added the second deep in stoppage time. 1
Six days earlier he had only drawn level with Klose, a hat-trick against Algeria taking him to 16 on his 200th cap ; this was the afternoon he moved past him, and past Marta with him. The record that mattered statistically was Marta's 17, not Klose's 16: the Brazilian's all-time mark had stood above the men's record since 2019, so Messi is the first man to clear the women's benchmark as well as his own.
The goals came in his sixth consecutive World Cup match on the scoresheet, a run only Just Fontaine in 1958 and Jairzinho in 1970 had managed before him. 2 He had missed a ninth-minute penalty before either goal landed. The record rewards two decades of availability more than any single tournament's scoring burst: Klose needed four tournaments to reach 16, while Messi has reached 18 across six, a function of longevity rather than per-tournament dominance.
