• Lionel Messi (Argentina)
  • Harry Kane (England)
  • Kylian Mbappé (France)
  • Jonathan David (Canada)
  • Erling Haaland (Norway)
  • Vinícius Júnior (Brazil)

History suggests that Golden Boot winners usually come from teams that reach at least the semi-finals, giving established footballing nations a natural advantage.

Can the 2026 World Cup Rewrite History?

The expanded tournament format presents an intriguing possibility.

More teams mean more matches.

More matches create more opportunities for goals.

The long-standing record of 13 goals in a single World Cup, set by Just Fontaine in 1958, has survived for nearly seven decades. While it remains one of football’s toughest records to break, the 2026 format gives elite forwards more opportunities than ever before.

Whether it is Harry Kane’s clinical finishing, Messi’s enduring brilliance, Mbappé’s explosive pace, or the emergence of a new footballing hero, the race has only just begun.

If the opening week is any indication, the battle for the Golden Boot may become one of the defining stories of the FIFA World Cup 2026.

As the tournament progresses, every goal could rewrite football history.

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