Following a stunning brace against Iraq in the 2026 FIFA World Cup group stage, Mbappé scales new historic heights, breathing down the neck of Argentina’s newly-crowned record holder Lionel Messi.
DUBAI: French talisman Kylian Mbappé has solidified his status as an all-time footballing great, netting a sensational brace against Iraq to lift his total FIFA World Cup goal tally to 16. Coming just hours after his long-time rival Lionel Messi claimed the crown of the tournament’s absolute top scorer with 18 goals, Mbappé’s latest clinic keeps France flawlessly on course in the 2026 edition and sets up an electrifying multi-generational battle for the ultimate goal-scoring record in North America.
Les Bleus cruised to a definitive 3-0 victory over Iraq in their Group I encounter, a match dominated from the offset by the tactical maturity of Didier Deschamps’ men. Mbappé opened the scoring in the 14th minute with an emphatic finish, before compounding Iraq’s defensive woes in the 54th minute with a clinical second. Real Madrid teammate Ousmane Dembélé added a third in the 66th minute, putting the game completely out of reach.
Mbappé’s dynamic brace follows another two-goal haul in France’s tournament opener against Senegal. With four goals in his first two games of this tournament, the 27-year-old forward has surged tied with legendary German striker Miroslav Klose’s lifetime total of 16 World Cup goals to take undisputed second place in the historic standings, just two goals behind Messi.
The race for the Golden Boot has transformed into an era-defining narrative. Only a day prior, Lionel Messi sent shockwaves through the sporting landscape in Arlington, Texas, scoring twice against Austria to cross Klose’s previous milestone and plant his flag at the apex of World Cup history with 18 goals. Mbappé’s lethal response guarantees that Messi’s reign at the top will face an immediate and relentless challenge.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup across the United States, Mexico, and Canada has already rewritten the record books within its opening week. Miroslav Klose’s long-standing record of 16 goals, set across four tournaments between 2002 and 2014, was broken twice in less than 48 hours. Lionel Messi achieved the summit in his historic sixth World Cup campaign, whereas Kylian Mbappé has miraculously amassed 16 goals in just his third tournament appearance (2018, 2022, 2026), giving him a mathematically superior scoring rate that positions him to eventually own the global record.











































