Messi makes history: now the all-time top scorer at World Cups
A brace against Austria, Klose's record overtaken, and Argentina through to the last 16. At 38, he's still writing chapters.
Some players win records; others just seem to belong with them. Lionel Messi did it again, scoring both goals in Argentina’s 2-0 win over Austria in Dallas and becoming the all-time leading scorer in World Cup history.
The numbers are tidy and a little jaw-dropping. Monday’s brace took Messi to 18 goals at World Cups, two clear of Germany’s Miroslav Klose, who’d held the record since 2014. He’d already matched the mark with a hat-trick on opening night against Algeria. One more evening was all it took to make it his.
How it unfolded
It didn’t all go smoothly. Messi missed a first-half penalty — the kind that can rattle a player. He answered in style: a gorgeous finish before the break broke the game open, and another deep in second-half stoppage time sealed it. Holders Argentina stroll into the round of 16.
There was a bonus for the history books, too: he became only the third man to score in six straight World Cup matches, joining names from the distant past in Just Fontaine (1958) and Jairzinho (1970). At 38, and most likely at his last World Cup, the Argentine looks in no mood to be remembered for missing chances.
Image: Wikimedia Commons