Crystal Palace and Sunderland top Premier League World Cup goals chart — and the numbers say something about squad depth
Two mid-table sides outscored the league's heavyweight clubs at the group stage. The breakdown is less flattering for the chasing pack than the headline suggests.

Crystal Palace and Sunderland sit at the top of the Premier League's World Cup scoring chart after the group stage of the 2026 tournament, ahead of Arsenal, Liverpool and Manchester City, according to BBC Sport figures published on 28 June 2026.
The headline reads, at first glance, like a freak result — two mid-table English sides outscoring the clubs that have dominated the division for a decade. The reality is more interesting, and less flattering for the chasing pack than the table implies.
A depth chart disguised as a scoring chart
What BBC Sport's table actually measures is not which Premier League club has the best attack. It is which club has spread its goals across the most players selected for the tournament. A club that sends eleven players to the World Cup and watches eleven of them score finishes above one that sends nine players and watches its two stars score five each.
That distinction matters. Palace and Sunderland have built squads in which squad rotation, rather than individual brilliance, has driven national-team selection. For context on how unusual that is, consider that Arsenal, Liverpool and Manchester City have spent the past three transfer windows competing for the same handful of elite forwards; their World Cup squads are correspondingly narrower at the top end.
Where the table bites back
There is a counter-read. The chart understates the contribution of the bigger clubs because their players carry more of the creative burden for weaker national teams. A single Manchester City midfielder scoring twice for Brazil counts once in this table but represents a far higher expected-goals load than a Crystal Palace full-back tapping in a set-piece for a minnow.
It is also worth noting what the BBC Sport figures do not isolate: which players scored, against whom, and at what stage of the tournament. Two clubs sitting level on total goals from group-stage matches are not necessarily equal in attacking threat — one of them may have padded its tally against the weakest sides in its section.
The structural read
Premier League clubs are no longer competing only for trophies. They are competing, increasingly visibly, for national-team mindshare. A player who starts regularly for his country at a World Cup raises his resale value; a club that supplies a disproportionate number of internationals builds a recruitment brand. Palace and Sunderland have, in effect, been running an export business without quite meaning to.
The bigger clubs have run that business longer and with more polish. The fact that they are now being outscored on this metric — even provisionally, even at the group stage — says something about how the second tier of English football has closed the development gap.
Stakes
For Arsenal, Liverpool and Manchester City, the practical question is whether to keep concentrating goals in three or four elite forwards, or to follow Palace and Sunderland in widening the scoring base at the cost of individual supremacy. The transfer market will give them an answer before the next international window does.
This piece draws on a single BBC Sport article published 28 June 2026; the figures cited are group-stage totals only, and will shift through the knockout rounds.