Messi passes Klose to become the World Cup's all-time leading scorer
A brace against Austria in Dallas takes the Argentina captain past Miroslav Klose to 17 World Cup goals, securing holders top spot in Group J and a place in the knockout stage.
Lionel Messi wrote another line into the tournament's longest-running personal narrative on the evening of 22 June 2026, striking twice in Argentina's 2-0 win over Austria at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas to surpass Germany's Miroslav Klose and become the all-time leading scorer in men's World Cup history. The goals, scored in the 38th minute and again after the break, took the Argentina captain to 17 World Cup goals — one clear of Klose's mark of 16 — and in the same match sealed Argentina's place at the top of Group J and a path into the round of 32 as defending champions.
It is the kind of record that looks inevitable only in retrospect. Ten years on from the night he announced his retirement from international football, Messi has not merely returned to the stage; he has reset the scale of what a single player can accumulate across the tournament's most unforgiving format. The brace did more than chase Klose — it confirmed that the holders' group campaign will be the warm-up they wanted, not the survival act some pre-tournament forecasts had predicted.
A record built across five tournaments
The goal that took Messi level with, and then past, Klose arrived in the 38th minute, finished with the kind of composure that has become his signature in this competition. A second-half goal completed the night and moved him to a tally no outfield player in the men's tournament has previously reached. Coverage from BBC Sport and Sky Sports noted the opening strike's placement and the second's predatory instinct inside the box; ESPN's match report framed the evening as a confirmation rather than a coronation, observing that Messi had entered the tournament already level with Klose on 16 and needed only a single goal to move ahead on his own.
The detail that gives the record its weight is the spread. Messi's 17 World Cup goals have been scored across five different tournaments — Germany 2006, South Africa 2010, Brazil 2014, Russia 2018, Qatar 2022 and now the United States, Canada and Mexico in 2026. Klose's 16, by contrast, came across four World Cups. The longevity is the story as much as the finishing. A player who walked away from international football in 2016, reversed the decision within weeks under a new coach, won the tournament in 2022 and has now carried the holders through a 48-team edition, is still adding to a ledger that began when he was a teenager.
The frame around the goal
There is a counter-narrative worth naming. The first goal moved Messi level rather than past, and the second arrived with the game already in Argentina's keeping. A reader could fairly ask whether a record set against an Austria side ranked outside the world's top 20 carries the same gravity as goals struck in the knockouts. The 2006 and 2010 strikes came in group-stage routs; the 2014 goals came in the run that delivered Argentina to the final in Brazil; the 2022 goals came on the path to the trophy itself. Tonight's work was group-stage business, and Austria's resistance was real if eventually insufficient.
A second, more prosaic objection: the expanded 48-team format of this World Cup simply offers more games, and a player with Argentina's service may find more opportunities in 2026 than Klose ever did across his 24 matches in the tournament. The structural caveat is real, but it does not diminish the difficulty of finishing across five tournaments at this level. The record sits, and the qualifying language will adjust around it.
The holder's path opens up
The footballing consequence is cleaner than the statistical one. Argentina's 2-0 win, combined with results elsewhere in Group J, sent the reigning champions through to the round of 32 as group winners. That matters tactically. Group-toppers in a 48-team field tend to avoid the bigger names in the first knockout round and benefit from an extra day's rest. Argentina's progression in first place also means the holders' group-stage form — a stuttering opener, a steadying second match and now a Messi-led third — has been enough without a peak performance, an admission the squad itself has been candid about in Dallas.
The wider story is the squad's shape around the captain. Lautaro Martínez and Julián Álvarez have shared the scoring burden across the group, and the defensive record has held. Messi's two goals tonight bought Argentina margin rather than rescue, and that is the position a holder wants to be in heading into the knockouts. It is also the position a 38-year-old wants to be in: still moving the record, no longer dragging the team with him.
What remains uncertain
There are limits to the record that the Dallas performance did not resolve. The 17-goal tally is the men's mark; the overall tournament record across men's and women's World Cups, tracked separately by FIFA, was the framing ESPN used to describe the achievement on the night. Whether the new mark stands for the rest of the tournament depends on how far Argentina go, and on whether the next opponent can keep the ball from a player who has now scored in six consecutive World Cups. The round-of-32 draw will set the next test, and the gap between group football and knockout football remains the tournament's sharpest filter.
The other open question is history's read. Klose's 16 came in a different era of the competition, with fewer matches per tournament and a different shape of opposition. Comparing them is unavoidable but imperfect. What is not in dispute is the duration: a player who first appeared at this level in 2006 is now the all-time leading scorer in 2026, and the holders are still in it.
This piece sticks to the record as the wires reported it on the night. The grouping — Messi versus the field, and the holder's path through the knockouts — will sharpen once the round-of-32 draw is made.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/transfermarkt/
- https://t.me/FIFAcom/
