It's fast becoming a World Cup Golden Boot for the ages. But who will win it?

Kylian Mbappe (7), Lionel Messi (8) and Erling Haaland (7) have scored 22 goals between them at the 2026 World Cup Some Golden Boot races build slowly. Others are shaped by one runaway scorer. This one is different. This is a Golden Boot race for the ages, a four-way sprint featuring Kylian Mbappe, Erling Haaland, Lionel Messi and Harry Kane, all hitting numbers that would comfortably win most modern tournaments. Double-figure scoring at a World Cup is one of football's rarest feats. Only a handful of players in nearly a century of competition have ever reached 10 or more goals at a single tournament. Yet here we are in 2026 with four forwards pushing towards that territory at the same time. The pace of scoring alone marks this out as something special. Messi leads the way with eight. Mbappe and Haaland sit on seven goals, with Kane just behind on six. In most recent tournaments, that would already be enough to secure the Golden Boot. Miroslav Klose won it with five in 2006, as did Thomas Muller in 2010, edging out Diego Forlan, Wesley Sneijder and David Villa on assists. Even Harry Kane's six in 2018 and Mbappe's eight in 2022 felt like outliers. This year, those tallies are merely the starting point. The historical comparison sharpens the picture. Only eight players had scored eight or more goals at a single World Cup previously – Just Fontaine, Sandor Kocsis, Gerd Muller, Ademir, Eusebio, Guillermo Stabile, Ronaldo and Mbappe. Messi has now joined them. That list spans almost 100 years of football. Now, in 2026, three more players are simultaneously threatening to join Messi on it. The scoring rate, the consistency and the spread across different teams and styles all add up to a Golden Boot battle that feels genuinely generational.