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SportTuesday, June 23, 2026

Messi breaks Klose's World Cup goal record as Mbappé and Ronaldo also rewrite history

A double against Austria lifted Lionel Messi to 18 tournament goals, but a VAR dispute and Kylian Mbappé's rapid pursuit framed a night of shifting benchmarks.

Lionel Messi claimed sole possession of the World Cup's all-time scoring record with a brace in Argentina's 2-0 victory over Austria in Group J, moving to 18 goals and eclipsing the 16 Miroslav Klose had held since 2014. The historic moment arrived in the 38th minute, when Messi swept home a left-footed finish on the counter, minutes after sending a penalty wide. The sequence, however, drew immediate scrutiny from European broadcast analysts: former Manchester United goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel, working for FOX Sports, argued that Alexis Mac Allister had fouled Xaver Schlager in the build-up and that VAR should have intervened to disallow the goal. The incident injected a note of contention into an otherwise celebratory milestone.

The same matchday produced a cascade of statistical landmarks. Cristiano Ronaldo struck inside six minutes of Portugal's rout of Uzbekistan, becoming the first player to score in six consecutive World Cup editions and extending the span between his first and last tournament goal to 20 years and 11 days. His double also carried him past Eusebio as Portugal's all-time leading World Cup scorer. Hours later, Kylian Mbappé netted twice in France's win over Iraq, reaching 16 goals in only 16 World Cup appearances and drawing level with Klose. Erling Haaland, meanwhile, scored in Norway's 3-2 defeat of Senegal, joining a select group of six players to register more than one goal in their opening two World Cup matches; the team and supporters marked the win with a synchronised Viking rowing gesture.

Reaction from Germany underlined the generational shift. Klose told Süddeutsche Zeitung he had long expected the record to fall, calling Messi “the best footballer of all time” and offering unreserved congratulations. Brazilian great Ronaldo Nazário marvelled at Messi's longevity, noting he himself had retired four years earlier and weighed 120 kilos at the same age. Mbappé, speaking before his own double, acknowledged the chase with a blend of deference and ambition: “I run from behind. I will try to keep scoring to help my team, and if I do I will get closer to the record, but the most important thing for me is to win the World Cup.”

Argentina, already assured of top spot in the group, now face a tactical decision. Messi has asked head coach Lionel Scaloni to play at least some minutes against Jordan, according to reports in the Argentine media, with the captain keen to maintain rhythm and extend his lead over Mbappé. Scaloni is expected to grant him 45 minutes, possibly as a starter withdrawn at the interval. The next concrete consequence on the pitch lies in Group K, where Portugal, fresh from Ronaldo's record-setting display, will meet Colombia in Miami to decide the group's final standings.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

56%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressContinental European press
Latin American press
TriumphPaternalism

Messi's double against Austria not only secured Argentina's victory but also cemented his status as the all-time World Cup top scorer with 18 goals, surpassing Klose. The Argentine captain personally asked to play against Jordan to continue his historic run, while Klose himself graciously praised the new record holder. The narrative is one of triumph and generational legacy, with Messi's achievement celebrated as a golden page in football history.

Continental European press
PragmatismDetachment

Messi's record-breaking 18th World Cup goal places him at the top of the all-time scoring list, but the focus quickly shifts to the emerging generational duel with Mbappé, who is close behind. Alongside Haaland and Kane, the tournament is framed as a showcase of elite forwards competing for supremacy. The tone is balanced, treating the record as a milestone within a broader competitive landscape.

Related articles

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Upd. 02:50 AM2 languages · 3 outlets
3 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Messi breaks Klose's World Cup goal record as Mbappé and Ronaldo also rewrite history

A double against Austria lifted Lionel Messi to 18 tournament goals, but a VAR dispute and Kylian Mbappé's rapid pursuit framed a night of shifting benchmarks.

Lionel Messi claimed sole possession of the World Cup's all-time scoring record with a brace in Argentina's 2-0 victory over Austria in Group J, moving to 18 goals and eclipsing the 16 Miroslav Klose had held since 2014. The historic moment arrived in the 38th minute, when Messi swept home a left-footed finish on the counter, minutes after sending a penalty wide. The sequence, however, drew immediate scrutiny from European broadcast analysts: former Manchester United goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel, working for FOX Sports, argued that Alexis Mac Allister had fouled Xaver Schlager in the build-up and that VAR should have intervened to disallow the goal. The incident injected a note of contention into an otherwise celebratory milestone.

The same matchday produced a cascade of statistical landmarks. Cristiano Ronaldo struck inside six minutes of Portugal's rout of Uzbekistan, becoming the first player to score in six consecutive World Cup editions and extending the span between his first and last tournament goal to 20 years and 11 days. His double also carried him past Eusebio as Portugal's all-time leading World Cup scorer. Hours later, Kylian Mbappé netted twice in France's win over Iraq, reaching 16 goals in only 16 World Cup appearances and drawing level with Klose. Erling Haaland, meanwhile, scored in Norway's 3-2 defeat of Senegal, joining a select group of six players to register more than one goal in their opening two World Cup matches; the team and supporters marked the win with a synchronised Viking rowing gesture.

Reaction from Germany underlined the generational shift. Klose told Süddeutsche Zeitung he had long expected the record to fall, calling Messi “the best footballer of all time” and offering unreserved congratulations. Brazilian great Ronaldo Nazário marvelled at Messi's longevity, noting he himself had retired four years earlier and weighed 120 kilos at the same age. Mbappé, speaking before his own double, acknowledged the chase with a blend of deference and ambition: “I run from behind. I will try to keep scoring to help my team, and if I do I will get closer to the record, but the most important thing for me is to win the World Cup.”

Argentina, already assured of top spot in the group, now face a tactical decision. Messi has asked head coach Lionel Scaloni to play at least some minutes against Jordan, according to reports in the Argentine media, with the captain keen to maintain rhythm and extend his lead over Mbappé. Scaloni is expected to grant him 45 minutes, possibly as a starter withdrawn at the interval. The next concrete consequence on the pitch lies in Group K, where Portugal, fresh from Ronaldo's record-setting display, will meet Colombia in Miami to decide the group's final standings.

Source divergence

Sport · 3 outlets · 2 languages

56%High

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable60%
Neutral20%
Critical20%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressContinental European press
Latin American press
TriumphPaternalism

Messi's double against Austria not only secured Argentina's victory but also cemented his status as the all-time World Cup top scorer with 18 goals, surpassing Klose. The Argentine captain personally asked to play against Jordan to continue his historic run, while Klose himself graciously praised the new record holder. The narrative is one of triumph and generational legacy, with Messi's achievement celebrated as a golden page in football history.

Continental European press
PragmatismDetachment

Messi's record-breaking 18th World Cup goal places him at the top of the all-time scoring list, but the focus quickly shifts to the emerging generational duel with Mbappé, who is close behind. Alongside Haaland and Kane, the tournament is framed as a showcase of elite forwards competing for supremacy. The tone is balanced, treating the record as a milestone within a broader competitive landscape.

This story appeared in

3 outlets · 2 languages

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