Two weeks into the 2026 World Cup, and football’s greatest individual prize — the adidas Golden Boot — has never felt more fiercely contested. We are watching legends cement their legacies, young kings announce their reigns, and wildcard super-subs come out of nowhere to gatecrash the party. Buckle up. This is the most stacked scoring race in World Cup history.
🥇 Lionel Messi — 5 Goals (Argentina) | THE GOAT, UNCHAINED

Nobody — and we mean nobody — is touching Leo Messi right now. The 38-year-old Inter Miami captain leads the Golden Boot standings with five goals in just two matches, and in doing so became the all-time leading scorer in men’s World Cup history with 18 career goals, surpassing Germany’s Miroslav Klose. He hit a hat-trick against Algeria in game one — his first-ever World Cup treble — before adding a composed brace against Austria.

The man has a World Cup winner’s medal, two Copa Américas, every individual honour football has to offer. The only thing missing from his impossible CV? A Golden Boot. At 38 years old, playing what is surely his final World Cup, he may just take it.
🥈 Kylian Mbappé — 4 Goals (France) | THE HEIR IS COMING

One goal separates Mbappe from Messi, and if that doesn’t make you nervous, nothing will. The French superstar has four goals in two games, including a brace against Iraq that pushed him to 16 career World Cup goals — level with Miroslav Klose for second on the all-time list. He already owns one Golden Boot from 2022. No player in history has won two. Mbappe is openly hunting history.
🥈 Erling Haaland — 4 Goals (Norway) | THE MACHINE ARRIVES

This is Haaland’s debut World Cup. He has looked absolutely terrifying. Two goals against Iraq in Norway’s opener. Two more — including a sensational side-foot volley that cannoned off the bar and in — against Senegal to send Norway into the knockouts. Four goals, zero hesitation. When reporters asked Haaland after the Iraq game if he was the best goalscorer in world football, he grinned and said: “I would say I’m up there.”
He wasn’t wrong.
🎖️ Deniz Undav — 3 Goals (Germany) | THE SUPER-SUB NOBODY SAW COMING

Germany have a secret weapon, and his name is Deniz Undav. The Stuttgart forward has started neither of Germany’s first two matches, yet somehow has three goals and two assists from just 56 minutes of World Cup action. A goal in the 7-1 demolition of Curaçao. A match-winning brace against Ivory Coast. Coach Julian Nagelsmann says he’s “fulfilling his role exceptionally well” — which is a polite way of saying: this man is chaos personified off the bench.
🎖️ Jonathan David — 3 Goals (Canada) | CANADA’S WORLD CUP HAT-TRICK HERO

Speaking of nobody seeing it coming — Jonathan David endured a difficult club season with just eight goals for Juventus in Italy. Then the World Cup arrived. The Canadian forward exploded with a hat-trick against Qatar in Canada’s historic 6-0 win, lifting his national team tally to 42 goals in 79 appearances. Playing on home soil in front of a passionate crowd, David looks reborn.
The Packed Two-Goal Club: Kane, Ronaldo, Vinicius & More

Behind the top five, it is gloriously chaotic. Harry Kane (England) has two goals but blanked against Ghana, missing a horror chance late on.

Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal) finally joined the party with a brace against Uzbekistan.

Vinícius Júnior (Brazil) and Matheus Cunha are both on two. Morocco’s Ismael Saibari has two including the fastest goal of the tournament. Folarin Balogun (USA), Cody Gakpo (Netherlands), and Ayase Ueda (Japan) are all in the conversation.
More than 70 players have scored at least one goal. The 2026 World Cup is on pace to breach 200 total goals by the final. This tournament is not just a feast — it’s a banquet.
The Bottom Line

Messi leads. Mbappe and Haaland are right behind him. A generational shootout between football’s present, future, and stubborn, magnificent past is unfolding in real time. With six more rounds of fixtures still to play, and 60 more matches remaining, the Golden Boot is anyone’s to claim.
Don’t look away.












