Kylian Mbappe scored twice as France defeated Iraq 3-0 on Monday to move to four goals for the tournament, but his effort to draw level with the all-time World Cup scoring record was immediately surpassed by Lionel Messi, who scored both goals in Argentina’s 2-0 win over Austria earlier the same day to take the outright record to 18 goals and extend his lead at the top of the scoring charts.
Mbappe’s brace brought his career World Cup total to 16 goals, drawing him level with Germany’s Miroslav Klose in what would have been a record-equaling moment had Messi not scored first. The timing meant the record changed hands twice on Monday without Mbappe ever holding it, a striking illustration of the competitive dynamic between the two players that has defined this tournament.
A dismissal of the scoring race that few believed
Speaking after the Iraq match, Mbappe addressed the Golden Boot conversation directly and at length, insisting that he was not focused on individual statistics and that team performance was his only priority. He acknowledged Messi’s consistency without any visible frustration, describing the Argentine’s goal-scoring as something he had come to accept as a given rather than a source of pressure. His public framing placed team success above personal milestones at every opportunity.
The framing is plausible on its face. Mbappe has won a World Cup before and has experienced the particular sting of finishing second despite scoring a hat trick in the final. He understands better than almost anyone that goals without trophies feel incomplete.
But four goals in two group stage games is not the output of someone operating without ambition in that dimension. And his pointed remark that if he wanted to match Messi he would need to do even more suggested that the internal comparison was very much present even as the public language minimized it.
What the scoring race looks like heading into the knockouts
Mbappe sits at four goals alongside Erling Haaland in joint-second place, one behind Messi’s five. The gap is meaningful but not insurmountable, particularly given that Mbappe has consistently elevated his performance as tournaments deepen. In 2022 he scored eight goals in seven games, including a hat trick in the final, and won the Golden Boot. In 2018 he finished joint-second in scoring.
France have already confirmed their place in the knockout stages and play their final group match on Friday against Norway, the nation Haaland represents. That match determines who finishes top of Group I and shapes the bracket path both teams will follow into the elimination rounds. The encounter also presents a collision between two of the three players currently challenging Messi for the Golden Boot, making it among the most anticipated remaining group stage matches.
France’s broader performance and what lies ahead
The victory over Iraq was comfortable rather than demanding, allowing France to manage their squad across the 90 minutes while still producing a decisive margin. Mbappe’s involvement in the goals underscored his central importance to how the team functions in attack, and the ease of the result gave the coaching staff the opportunity to assess the group heading into what will be a significantly more challenging knockout phase.
Mbappe was direct about the difficulty ahead, acknowledging that advancing in a World Cup means beating every team placed in your path, which eventually includes the best in the tournament. His focus on collective strength rather than individual output is consistent with what a team needs from its captain in the weeks ahead, regardless of how the Golden Boot conversation develops in parallel.

