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2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

World Cup sets a goal-scoring record

2 min read
10:33UTC

The tournament has scored 139 goals in 45 group matches, past the 2014 record of 136, with games still to play.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

The 2026 World Cup breaks the group-stage goals record with 139 in 45 matches.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Before this World Cup, the most goals ever scored in the group stage was 136, at the 1994 tournament in the United States. The 2026 group stage has already beaten that with three matches still to play, and the 139 goals came in 45 matches rather than the 48 it took in 1994. In plain terms, games at this World Cup are scoring more goals than any previous tournament. The average is 3.1 goals per game. Part of the reason may be the match ball, the Adidas Trionda, which goalkeepers have said behaves unpredictably in the air. Part of it may be the expanded field of 48 teams, which includes more mismatches between strong and weaker sides.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    The record falling with three matches remaining means the final group-stage total may reach 145-150, amplifying the 48-team format's case against critics who predicted bloated, low-scoring group games.

  • Opportunity

    FIFA can use the 3.1 goals-per-game rate as the headline commercial statistic for future World Cup rights negotiations, targeting markets where scoring rates drive subscription conversions.

First Reported In

Update #29 · South Africa reach a first knockout

Tribune India· 25 Jun 2026
Read original
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