Kylian Mbappe is two goals away from equaling the all-time men’s World Cup scoring record, and both he and the player he would need to catch are still very much in the tournament.
Mbappe scored twice for France in a 3-1 victory over Senegal, pushing his World Cup career total to 14 goals. Lionel Messi sits at 16 after his hat trick against Algeria in Argentina’s opening match, a performance that drew Messi level with the previous all-time record holder. With both players healthy, in form, and with multiple matches remaining, the scoring race between two of the game’s most prolific forwards has become one of the defining subplots of the 2026 tournament.
A chase framed with admiration rather than rivalry
Mbappe, 27, has been consistently complimentary about Messi throughout his career, and his remarks after the Senegal match maintained that tone. He described the Argentina captain as the best in the world and said he was not surprised by the hat trick performance, framing it as entirely consistent with what Messi has produced for nearly two decades at the highest level of the game. Mbappe positioned himself as someone focused on helping France win rather than personally chasing a statistical milestone, while acknowledging that scoring goals and achieving those collective aims are inseparable at a World Cup.
The two men were teammates at Paris Saint-Germain and the dynamic of their relationship, one defined by mutual respect despite the competitive pressures of sharing a team, carries over into the international stage where they now face each other only in knockout rounds.
A century of appearances for France
Alongside the scoring record pursuit, Mbappe is celebrating a personal milestone ahead of France’s second group stage match against Iraq in Philadelphia. The fixture will be his 100th appearance for the French national team, a landmark that relatively few players in the history of the game have reached, and one that arrives on the World Cup stage.
Mbappe described the occasion as historic and acknowledged its special nature while making clear that the result against Iraq was more important than the personal significance of the match number. France need a positive result to confirm their place in the knockout rounds, and Mbappe’s framing suggested a player who understands that individual milestones derive their greatest meaning from the team context in which they occur.
The backdrop of 2022 and the ambition of 2026
The current tournament carries additional weight for Mbappe because of how the previous one ended. France reached the final in 2022 where they faced Argentina in one of the most dramatic championship matches in World Cup history, eventually losing on penalties after Mbappe scored a hat trick in the final. Messi lifted the trophy that Mbappe had come within minutes of claiming for himself.
The appetite to correct that outcome is a significant part of what drives Mbappe’s approach to this tournament. He won the World Cup in 2018 as a teenager and experienced the particular pain of a final loss in 2022. A third tournament at 27 represents what is likely his peak moment of readiness, playing for a Real Madrid side that has confirmed his status as one of the best players on the planet at club level.
Whether the scoring race with Messi defines the tournament’s individual narrative will depend on how far both teams advance. If Argentina and France both reach the later rounds, the question of who finishes with more World Cup goals could remain unresolved until the final stages of the competition.

