
Mbappé places himself firmly behind Messi and Ronaldo in World Cup pecking order
French forward Kylian Mbappé swiftly declared Lionel Messi “the best in the world” alongside Cristiano Ronaldo, deflecting individual comparisons after his own opening-match double and Messi’s hat-trick.
From the dais of Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, on the eve of France’s second group match, Kylian Mbappé was asked to choose the finest among the tournament’s early marksmen: himself, Erling Haaland, Harry Kane and Lionel Messi. Without a breath of hesitation, the reply came: “Lionel Messi – está claro.” The French captain then added a familiar companion: “with Cristiano Ronaldo.” The statement was delivered not as concession but as a calm recognition of a hierarchy that, in his view, remains unchanged despite his own two-goal debut against Senegal and Messi’s three against Algeria.
The praise was rooted in a generation-spanning perspective that European football observers often attribute to Mbappé’s formative years watching the two greats. “He has shown for fifteen years that he has incredible quality,” Mbappé said of the Argentine, before widening the frame to include the Portuguese forward. The Frenchman now has fourteen World Cup goals, just two shy of Messi’s sixteen – a mark that tied Miroslav Klose – yet he waved away any suggestion that personal tallies drive him. “I try to show my quality on the big stages and help my team win another World Cup. The rest is debate for the people, for the journalists, for the fans.”
This public deference carries echoes of the two seasons they shared at Paris Saint‑Germain, though it never softened the edges of their historic World Cup encounters: France’s 2018 round‑of‑16 victory over Argentina and the epic 2022 final, which Messi’s side lifted. In Philadelphia, Mbappé cast those rivalries as fuel rather than fixation. He declined to speculate on whether Haaland and Norway were sizing up the Group I favourites, insisting his focus stayed on Iraq. The question of who reigns, he argued, is best left outside the dressing room.
Away from the marquee debate, Mbappé’s remarks ranged across the tournament’s emerging themes. On the new hydration breaks, he noted that opinion shifts with the scoreboard: useful when trailing, an interruption when dominating. He critiqued what he called “la cultura del momento” – the tactical copycat cycle that has football imitating Barcelona, then Real Madrid, now PSG – emphasising that winners set the trends. He also dismissed the idea of emulating Messi and Ronaldo by playing deep into his thirties, quipping that the media would drive him out sooner.
France’s path now runs through Iraq before a likely group‑deciding collision with Norway, where Mbappé and Haaland will share the same pitch. The goal‑scoring race will intensify, but the Frenchman’s Philadelphia performance made clear that, in his own reckoning, the throne is still occupied by those who defined the past fifteen years.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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Mbappé, during a World Cup press conference, stated that Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo are the best players in history, placing them above his own achievements and those of Haaland and Kane.
Mbappé surrendered to the evidence of Messi's greatness, declaring him the best in the world and highlighting his 15 years of incredible quality, with Ronaldo mentioned only as a secondary nod.
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