Lionel Messi opened Argentina’s 2026 World Cup campaign with a hat trick in a 3-0 victory over Algeria in Kansas City on Tuesday night, tying the all-time record for World Cup goals at 16 and becoming the first player in the history of the sport to appear in six World Cup tournaments.
The performance left Argentina manager Lionel Scaloni visibly moved in his post-match press conference, where he described watching Messi as something that defies easy explanation even for someone who sees him train and compete every day. Scaloni has been coaching Messi at international level long enough to have witnessed most of his greatest moments in an Argentina shirt, and yet Tuesday’s performance still produced a reaction of genuine wonder.
How the night unfolded
Messi opened the scoring in the first half with a left-footed strike from just outside the penalty area, the kind of technical precision that has defined his game for two decades. He then added two more goals after the break before being substituted off in the 80th minute to a standing ovation from the capacity crowd inside Kansas City Stadium. By the time he left the field, the record book had been rewritten.
The 16-goal mark puts Messi level with Germany’s Miroslav Klose, the previous sole holder of the record across four tournaments from 2002 to 2014. Messi reached the same figure across six appearances, the most any player has ever made in the competition. The achievement of appearing in a sixth World Cup alone was already historically unprecedented before the goals arrived.
A manager struggling to find the right words
Scaloni spoke at length after the final whistle about what watching Messi means for everyone connected to Argentine football and for the broader global audience that tunes in specifically to see him play. He described Messi’s consistency over two decades as something that cannot be overstated, noting that the performances Argentina’s manager witnesses in training every day make what happens on the pitch feel inevitable even when it is historically remarkable.
The manager’s tone throughout the press conference was that of someone who has accepted that no conventional vocabulary fully captures what Messi contributes to a football match, and that the best response available is simply to encourage people to watch and enjoy it while it is still happening.
No room for complacency despite the perfect start
Despite the commanding victory, Scaloni was careful to frame the result in the context of a tournament that will demand sustained excellence rather than a single outstanding performance. The expanded 48-team format has brought more competitive nations into the field, and Scaloni made clear that the level of discipline and collective effort his team produced against Algeria would need to be replicated or exceeded in the matches ahead.
Argentina next faces Austria on June 22 before concluding group stage play against Jordan. The objective in the coming weeks is to carry the momentum of Tuesday’s opening while maintaining the defensive and tactical organization that kept Algeria from threatening throughout.
A moment the sport will not forget quickly
Messi is 38 years old and has said publicly that this is his final World Cup. Every match, every goal, and every record carries the weight of a farewell that the football world is not yet ready to accept. Tuesday night in Kansas City added another layer to a legacy that already sits beyond any reasonable comparison, and the fans who gave him a standing ovation as he walked off the pitch seemed to understand exactly what they were watching.

