The 2026 World Cup has produced upsets, comebacks and a co-host’s tears, but as the tournament reaches its final weekend, one storyline has pulled clear of the rest. The Golden Boot race is the tightest in living memory, and for a while football’s oldest individual record looked like it might come under genuine threat.

Kylian Mbappe and Lionel Messi are locked together on eight goals apiece, with the Argentine now ahead on the assist tiebreaker after his two assists in Argentina’s 2-1 semi-final win over England. The crucial difference is where each man goes next: Messi carries his eight into Sunday’s final against Spain, while Mbappe, whose France side were beaten 2-0 by the same opponents, has only Saturday’s third-place play-off left to add to his tally. Erling Haaland’s tournament is over, his total frozen on seven after Norway’s extra-time defeat to England, while Harry Kane sits on six alongside his England team-mate Jude Bellingham, both with the third-place match still to come. It is the first World Cup in which three players have reached seven or more goals.
The tiebreaker swings to Messi
Thursday’s quarter-final against Morocco summed up the fine margins at the top. Mbappe saw a penalty saved by Yassine Bounou, then whipped a shot past the same goalkeeper on the hour before teeing up Dembele to seal France’s place in the last four. That goal drew him level with Messi on eight, and at that point his three assists to the Argentine’s two edged him back to the summit.
Messi’s route to eight was no less dramatic. The 39-year-old missed a penalty against Egypt in the round of 16, then scored during a frantic late comeback as the holders survived a genuine scare to reach the last eight. Against Switzerland in the quarter-final he added an assist rather than a goal, his corner headed home by Alexis Mac Allister in a 3-1 extra-time win. The decisive swing came in the semi-final: two assists in the space of seven minutes against England lifted him to four for the tournament, one clear of Mbappe on the measure that now separates them. He remains the all-time World Cup scorer on 21 goals, one ahead of Mbappe on 20, meaning the pair are chasing two records at once: the tournament Golden Boot and the outright historical mark.
Haaland frozen out as Norway go home
Saturday’s quarter-final in Miami was billed as a Golden Boot eliminator, and it delivered a brutal verdict. Haaland had been the tournament’s most ruthless finisher, scoring in each of his first five appearances and dumping five-time champions Brazil out with a brace in the round of 16, but England’s 2-1 extra-time win ended Norway’s first World Cup this century and locked his total at seven. His rate of more than a goal a game was elite; the runway, as ever, was the problem. With Messi and Mbappe both a goal clear on eight, the Norwegian can no longer catch them, and his remarkable summer will end without the individual prize it long threatened to claim.
Kane, by contrast, plays on, if only for one more match. The England captain drew a blank in the semi-final, and against Norway in the quarter-final a neat first-half dink had been chalked off for offside, but he had already overtaken Gary Lineker as England’s record World Cup scorer and held his nerve from the spot in the chaotic 3-2 win over Mexico at the Azteca. Six goals with only the third-place play-off left keeps him mathematically alive, though he would now need the kind of finish that defined his Golden Boot triumph in Russia in 2018 to matter. Bellingham, level with him on six after braces against Mexico and Norway, is in the same boat.
Argentina strike late, and the run-in is set
Wednesday’s semi-final in Atlanta carried the weight of 1986, 1998 and 2002, and for an hour it looked like being England’s night. Anthony Gordon turned in a Morgan Rogers cross on 55 minutes to put the Three Lions ahead, and Argentina, ragged and running low, seemed to be drifting out of the tournament. Then Messi took over. He picked out Enzo Fernandez for a thunderous equaliser from outside the box on 85 minutes, then floated the cross that Lautaro Martinez headed home in stoppage time to win it 2-1. Kane could not find the goal that would have kept his own race alive, and England were left with the third-place match as consolation.
That result set the run-in. Messi, on eight and one assist to the good, goes into Sunday’s final against Spain in East Rutherford knowing that a single goal, or even another assist, would tighten his hold on the one major honour he has never won. Mbappe and Kane, the two most recent Golden Boot winners, line up on opposite sides of Saturday’s third-place play-off in Miami, France against England, the last chance either has to add to his total. The two men who traded the award in 2018 and 2022 will settle nothing between them that Messi cannot undo 24 hours later.
The betting picture
Unsurprisingly, the Golden Boot market has become one of the most heavily traded of the tournament, and the semi-finals have reshaped it again. Haaland’s price has settled now that his total cannot grow, and Mbappe, the pre-semi favourite, has drifted after his blank against Spain left him reliant on the third-place match. Messi is now the one the market fears: level on goals, one assist ahead, and with the final still to play, he would take the award on the tiebreaker even without scoring, provided Mbappe fails to overtake him. Kane is the outsider of the live names, needing a hatful in Miami to matter. Prices vary considerably from firm to firm, and with the odds shifting after every match, punters comparing the market across an exhaustive list of UK bookies will find meaningful differences on all the leading names.
There is history at stake in the market too. No player has ever won the Golden Boot twice, so both Mbappe, the 2022 winner in Qatar, and Kane, the 2018 winner in Russia, would set a precedent of their own, and the pair will chase it in the same match on Saturday. Messi, remarkably, has never won it at all, and stands one game from finally doing so.
The ghost of Just Fontaine
Hovering above all of this is a record that has stood since 1958. Just Fontaine scored 13 goals for France at that summer’s finals in Sweden, a mark no player has come close to matching since Gerd Muller managed 10 in 1970. The expanded 48-team format means a finalist now plays eight matches rather than six, and for a while, with Mbappe and Messi both climbing and games still in hand, the arithmetic looked closer than it had been in decades. For the full story of how Fontaine set the mark, and why it has proved so durable, here is a breakdown of the Just Fontaine record and whether anyone can beat it in 2026.
In the end the record survives comfortably. With one match left apiece, neither Mbappe nor Messi can bridge a five-goal gap to reach 13, let alone the 14 it would take to stand alone. Fontaine’s mark, as it has for 68 years, lives to see another World Cup. The closest anyone came was the thought of it, flickering into view before the knockout rounds quietly closed the door.
A tournament that keeps on giving
Whatever happens across the final weekend, this World Cup has already delivered on its promise as the biggest in history, from packed stadiums across three host nations to the game’s growing footprint far beyond them, a reach reflected in stories such as Brazilian World Cup winner Edmilson lending his name to a global youth football project this month.
But the abiding image of the summer may still be an individual one. Messi and Mbappe, the two men who defined the 2022 final, have traded goals and assists across another tournament, only for the knockouts to send them in different directions: one to the final in East Rutherford on 19 July, the other to a third-place consolation in Miami. Football rarely writes scripts this good. The last two days of the tournament will decide whether the Golden Boot follows the trophy, or slips away from the man chasing both.
David Prior
David Prior is the editor of Today News, responsible for the overall editorial strategy. He is an NCTJ-qualified journalist with over 20 years’ experience, and is also editor of the award-winning hyperlocal news title Altrincham Today. His LinkedIn profile is here.











































































