The Golden Boot deadlock
As the 2026 World Cup nears its conclusion, two iconic forwards find themselves locked in a tight race for the Golden Boot. According to FourFourTwo, Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe are both on the same number of goals heading into the final stages of the tournament.
What happens if they finish level?
FIFA introduced a tiebreaker system for the World Cup Golden Boot award to avoid shared trophies. If two or more players end the tournament with the same goal tally, the following criteria are applied in order:
- Assists: The player with more assists wins. This rewards creativity and all-round attacking contribution.
- Minutes played: If still tied, the player who has played fewer minutes takes the prize. This favours efficiency—goals per minute.
In the extremely unlikely event that the deadlock persists, the award is shared. However, the assist and minutes rules have been sufficient to decide every recent World Cup Golden Boot race. The tiebreaker rules have already decided past Golden Boots. At the 2010 World Cup, Thomas Müller claimed the award ahead of David Villa, Wesley Sneijder and Diego Forlán thanks to his three assists, despite all four netting five times.
What it means for Messi and Mbappe
Both players are still active in the competition and will have chances to add to their totals in the remaining matches. Argentina and France are two of the four teams left, meaning every minute on the pitch could prove decisive—not just for team glory but for individual honours.
The 2026 edition has already delivered stunning moments, and the Golden Boot battle adds another layer of intrigue as the tournament reaches its climax.