Monday, June 22nd 2026 - 18:11 UTC

The goal came in the 38th minute at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, on the outskirts of Dallas, and put Argentina ahead 1-0 with the match under way

Lionel Messi on Monday became the outright all-time top scorer in World Cup history, netting his seventeenth goal in the competition during Argentina's match against Austria, on the second matchday of their group at the 2026 World Cup. With that goal, the Argentine captain surpassed the 16 scored by Germany's Miroslav Klose, until now the tournament's leading marksman.

The goal came in the 38th minute at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, on the outskirts of Dallas, and put Argentina ahead 1-0 with the match under way. Minutes earlier, in the 8th minute, Messi had passed up a chance to set the record when he missed a penalty that was stopped by the Austrian goalkeeper, Alexander Schlager.

The milestone caps a two-decade run at football's biggest event. Messi scored his first World Cup goal exactly twenty years ago, in 2006, when he came on as a substitute in Argentina's 6-0 rout of Serbia and Montenegro. He went on to add goals across six editions: one at Germany 2006, none at South Africa 2010, four at Brazil 2014, one at Russia 2018 and seven at Qatar 2022, where he lifted the title. At the 2026 World Cup he has four: a hat-trick on his opening match against Algeria, which let him equal Klose, and the one against Austria, which left him alone at the top.