The 2026 World Cup has continued to witness intense competition not only among the nations fighting for the championship, but also among some of the greatest strikers of this generation. Argentina captain Lionel Messi, France star Kylian Mbappé, and Norway forward Erling Haaland have emerged as the center of major discussion during the group stage after displaying outstanding goal-scoring form. Their performances in the opening matches have made the race for the Golden Boot one of the most captivating storylines of the tournament.
Messi has continued to make history at the age of 38 by breaking the record for the most goals scored in World Cup history. The Argentine star now has 18 World Cup goals, surpassing former Germany striker Miroslav Klose, who held the record with 16 goals for more than a decade. Messi began his 2026 campaign in spectacular fashion, scoring a hat-trick against Algeria before adding two more goals against Austria, demonstrating that he remains at the highest level despite being in the final stages of his football career.
Meanwhile, MbappĂ© continues to prove that he is the leading figure of footballâs new generation. He has already reached 16 World Cup goals in just 16 matches, an impressive ratio that highlights his remarkable scoring ability. In this yearâs tournament, MbappĂ© has started with four goals in two group-stage matches, putting him close behind Messi in the race for the Golden Boot and intensifying the competition as the tournament progresses.
Haaland has also made an impressive start to his first-ever World Cup campaign. The Norwegian striker has already scored four goals and continues to display the same lethal finishing ability that earned him widespread acclaim in European club football. Although he remains far behind the all-time World Cup scoring records, his consistent goal-scoring form has made Norway one of the teams being closely watched in this tournament.
As the group stage approaches its conclusion, football fans around the world remain focused on these three stars. Messi currently leads the way, but MbappĂ© and Haaland still have opportunities to increase their goal tallies in the remaining matches. With the record of 13 goals in a single World Cup, set by former France striker Just Fontaine in 1958, still standing, the big question is whether any of these forwards can come close toâor even challengeâthat historic mark before the tournament reaches its final.



