England beat France 6-4 for World Cup 2026 bronze and Mbappé still broke records
England beat France 6-4 in the World Cup 2026 third-place match in Miami after leading 4-0. Mbappé scored twice, reached 22 career World Cup goals and now leads the Golden Boot with 10.
England beat France 6-4 in the World Cup 2026 third-place match in Miami on Saturday night — ten goals, half a historic comeback, and two records falling along the way. It’s England’s best World Cup finish since the 1966 title, and the first time the bronze game has ended in an English party: the only previous attempt, in 1990, ended in defeat.
How did the England-France third-place match unfold?
A game in two acts that nobody scripted. With Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham starting on the bench and a heavily rotated XI, England reached half-time 4-0 up — Declan Rice among the scorers — and looked set for a stroll. Then Didier Deschamps’ farewell France decided to make the night memorable: from the 48th minute, with Olise pulling the strings, Les Bleus clawed goals back and began sniffing at something nobody has ever done at a World Cup — overturning 4-0 down. It wasn’t to be: England struck again late on and closed it out at 6-4, delivering on the preview’s promise that neither side does dull games. Deschamps departs after fourteen years, with Zidane tipped to succeed him; the full match sheet is at FIFA’s official match centre.
What records did Mbappé break in Miami?
Two in one evening. Mbappé scored twice — both times served by Michael Olise — and the second was his 22nd career World Cup goal, passing the all-time record Messi had set earlier this very tournament. Olise, for his part, reached seven assists at this World Cup and wiped from the books a mark Pelé had owned since 1970. Defeats come in many flavours; with two records inside, this one stings less.
Where does the Golden Boot race stand for the final?
Turned upside down. On the eve it was level at eight; now Mbappé leads with 10 goals and Messi has the ninety minutes (or more) of Sunday’s final against Spain to answer — he needs two just to reopen the conversation. The Frenchman has done his part. Now we find out whether the Argentine has one more chapter in him.
By Vasco Almada
Image: Bryan Berlin / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)