An artistic, premium illustration for the FIFA World Cup 2026 featuring a golden championship trophy silhouette, abstract football shapes, and dynamic crimson and gold energy waves on a deep charcoal background
A canvas of global passion: the coveted FIFA World Cup trophy stands as the ultimate prize in sports, leading us toward a historic, three-nation tournament in 2026.

FIFA World Cup 2026: Messi Makes History, Mbappé Hunts Records & 5 Nations Set to Conquer the Globe — Complete Live Update

An artistic, premium illustration for the FIFA World Cup 2026 featuring a golden championship trophy silhouette, abstract football shapes, and dynamic crimson and gold energy waves on a deep charcoal background
A canvas of global passion: the coveted FIFA World Cup trophy stands as the ultimate prize in sports, leading us toward a historic, three-nation tournament in 2026.
FIFA World Cup 2026 — Live Tournament Report | EduNXT Tech Learning Sports
Live Tournament · 24 June 2026 · Matchday 14 of 18 — Group Stage

Timestamp Report · 24 June 2026 · EduNXT Tech Learning Global Sports Desk

FIFA World Cup 2026
Mid-Tournament State of Play

Fourteen matchdays in. 100+ goals scored. Records shattered. Upsets delivered. Stars ignited. As the group stage reaches its climax across 16 cities in the United States, Mexico and Canada, this is the complete editorial picture of the biggest World Cup in history — as it stands on 24 June 2026.

Teams: 48
Matches Played: ~54
Goals Scored: 100+
Already Through: 6 nations
Final: 19 Jul · MetLife
Chapter One

FIFA World Cup 2026
The Story So Far

When Mexico’s Julián Quiñones swept the ball into the net against South Africa at the Estadio Azteca on 11 June 2026 — scoring the tournament’s opening goal and the first ever by a CONCACAF player at a World Cup opening match — it felt like a statement: this World Cup intended to write new history, in new ways, from the very first kick.

For the first time in FIFA World Cup history, 48 nations are competing in a tournament co-hosted by three countries: the United States, Mexico, and Canada. The expanded format has delivered exactly what its architects promised — more drama, more nations, more goals, more story lines. With matches spanning from the Estadio Azteca in Mexico City to MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, from Hard Rock Stadium in Miami to Levi’s Stadium in San Francisco, the sheer geographical scale of this tournament is unprecedented.

48 teams were divided into 12 groups of four. The top two nations from each group advance automatically to the Round of 32, joined by the eight best third-placed finishers — a new rule that ensures even spirited group-stage performances are rewarded. From the Round of 32 onwards, it is a straight single-elimination knockout. The two finalists will have played eight matches by the time they meet at MetLife Stadium on 19 July 2026 — the longest World Cup campaign in history.

48
Nations Competing
First-ever 48-team World Cup. An expansion from 32 in all previous editions since 1998.
12
Groups (A–L)
Each group contains four teams playing a round-robin. Top 2 plus 8 best third-placed advance.
104
Total Matches
The longest World Cup in history: 39 days of football across 16 cities in 3 countries.
6
Nations Through
Argentina, France, Germany, Norway, Mexico and the USA have officially clinched Round of 32 places.
3
Eliminated
Haiti, Turkey and Tunisia — mathematically eliminated. The first exits of the 2026 edition.
18
Messi’s WC Goals
Lionel Messi set the all-time World Cup goals record vs Austria on 22 June, surpassing Miroslav Klose’s previous record of 16.

“There were moments when I was really angry about missing the penalty, but I was able to make up for it. Beyond anything, I’m so happy for the win. I’m enjoying this moment and craving to enjoy it with my teammates.”

— Lionel Messi, after Argentina 2–0 Austria, 22 June 2026

Among the key narratives to have emerged in the tournament’s first fourteen matchdays: Lionel Messi has become the all-time leading scorer in World Cup history, surpassing Miroslav Klose’s record of 16. Kylian Mbappé became France’s all-time World Cup scorer, surpassing Just Fontaine’s 68-year record. Erling Haaland announced himself on the World Cup stage with a sensational debut of four goals in his first two matches. Germany showed ruthless efficiency, dismantling Curaçao 7–1 in the tournament’s biggest win so far. And perhaps the most remarkable story of the opening phase: Canada’s Jonathan David struck a hat-trick in a stunning 6–0 win over hosts Qatar, making Canada legitimate contenders to advance deep into their home tournament.

The 1,000th match in World Cup history was played on 20 June 2026 — the Group F match between Japan and Tunisia — a milestone that highlights just how far this 96-year-old tournament has grown. The first time a halftime show will feature at a World Cup final has been confirmed for 19 July, produced by Global Citizen and curated by Chris Martin of Coldplay.

🏆
A Message to Young Footballers Watching
Every one of these 48 nations started their journey four years ago in qualifying rounds watched by hundreds. Today, billions watch them. The World Cup reminds us that the game belongs to everyone — from the children playing barefoot in Senegal to teenagers dribbling past shadows in Norwegian winter. Keep playing. Your World Cup story starts now. Follow the full tournament at FIFA.com.
Chapter Two

48 Nations, 12 Groups
Group-by-Group Performance

With matchday 3 of the group stage underway on 24 June 2026, here is a complete picture of how every group has unfolded — results, leading performances, and the nations on the cusp of advancement.

The groups span every continent. Europe contributes the largest bloc with 16 nations (UEFA), followed by Africa (CAF) with 10, South America (CONMEBOL) with 6, Asia (AFC) with 9, CONCACAF with 6, and one nation from Oceania (New Zealand). The three hosts — USA, Mexico, and Canada — compete in their respective home venues throughout the group stage.

Key Results Through 24 June 2026

GroupMatchScoreSignificance
AMexico vs South Africa2–0Opening match of the tournament; first WC goal by a CONCACAF player in an opener
ASouth Korea vs Czechia2–1Asian nation secures opening win in Group A
AMexico vs South Korea1–0Hosts Mexico top Group A after 2 matches with 6 points — already through
BCanada vs Bosnia-Herz.1–1Canada’s first WC group-stage draw; Jonathan David’s form emerging
BSwitzerland vs Qatar1–1Surprise draw — Qatar hold Switzerland in WC opener
BCanada vs Qatar6–0★ Biggest win of the tournament so far. Jonathan David hat-trick. Two Qatar red cards.
BSwitzerland vs Bosnia-Herz.4–1Switzerland assert dominance; on course to advance
CBrazil vs Morocco1–1Morocco again show they are no respecters of reputation
CScotland vs Haiti1–0Scotland open campaign with narrow but crucial win
CMorocco vs Scotland1–0Morocco make a statement — Africa’s most dangerous outfit
CBrazil vs Haiti3–0Brazil bounce back; Vinicius Jr. with a stunning strike. Scotland vs Brazil on 24 June — live
DUSA vs Paraguay4–1★ USA announce themselves with a rampant opener on home soil
DAustralia vs Türkiye2–0Socceroos start strongly; Turkey eliminated after matchday 2
DUSA vs Australia2–0USA win Group D; first nation in North America’s WC to qualify — hosts in dreamland
EGermany vs Curaçao7–1★ Biggest win of the tournament. Kai Havertz hat-trick. Germany terrifying in attack.
EIvory Coast vs Ecuador1–0Africa’s dark horse open with a shock win
EGermany vs Ivory Coast2–1Germany survive a scare; through to Round of 32 after 2 games
FNetherlands vs Japan2–2Thriller — Japan match Netherlands, an early sign of their quality
FSweden vs Tunisia5–1Gyokeres and Isak tear Tunisia apart in the Group F opener
FNetherlands vs Sweden5–1★ Netherlands show devastating form; Gakpo and Brobbey starring
FJapan vs Tunisia4–0The 1,000th match in World Cup history. Japan cruise into contention.
GBelgium vs Egypt1–1Egypt’s surprise result; Belgium far from convincing
GEgypt vs New Zealand3–1Mohamed Salah leads Egypt to a statement win
HSpain vs Cape Verde0–0★ Major shock — Cape Verde hold the world No.2 to a goalless draw
HSaudi Arabia vs Uruguay1–1Another draw in a competitive group
HSpain vs Saudi Arabia4–0Lamine Yamal and Pedri back in the XI — Spain look like title contenders again
IFrance vs Senegal3–1★ Mbappé brace; breaks France’s all-time WC scoring record
INorway vs Iraq4–1★ Haaland brace on World Cup debut; Norway’s biggest-ever WC win
IFrance vs Iraq3–0France ruthless; Mbappé with another double (4 goals in 2 games)
INorway vs Senegal3–2Haaland scores twice more — 4 goals in 2 games; Norway through
JArgentina vs Algeria3–0★ Messi hat-trick. First of his WC career. New all-time WC goals record beckons.
JAustria vs Jordan3–1Austria emerge as dark horses in a competitive group
JArgentina vs Austria2–0★★ Messi scores both. Breaks Klose’s record with 18 career WC goals. Argentina dominant.
KPortugal vs DR Congo1–1Ronaldo blanked; DR Congo hold Portugal to a shock draw
KColombia vs Uzbekistan3–1Colombia look good; Luis Díaz impressive
KPortugal vs Uzbekistan5–0Ronaldo brace; Portugal respond emphatically. Market moves to +1000.
LEngland vs Croatia4–2★ England attacking football — Bellingham, Kane, Saka all featuring
LGhana vs Panama1–0Ghana begin with a narrow win

Note: Matches still to play on 24 June 2026 include Scotland vs Brazil, Morocco vs Haiti, Switzerland vs Canada, and Czechia vs Mexico. Results from those matches will appear in the next live update. All data as of 08:00 IST, 24 June 2026.

Chapter Three

The Three Star Performers
of World Cup 2026

In the most talent-laden World Cup in history, three players have risen above all others in the tournament’s opening phase — breaking records, rewriting history, and igniting billions of viewers with performances that belong to football’s immortal gallery.

01
Lionel Messi
🇦🇷 Argentina · Group J
At 38 years old — an age when most footballers have long retired — Lionel Messi is producing the most prolific early-tournament performance in World Cup history. He opened Argentina’s campaign with his first-ever World Cup hat-trick against Algeria (3–0). He then doubled and sealed a 2–0 win over Austria on 22 June with both goals — in the process scoring his 18th World Cup goal, surpassing Miroslav Klose’s previous all-time record of 16. He has now scored in five consecutive World Cup matches and boasts 24 career WC goal contributions (16 goals, 8 assists), passing Pelé’s total of 21. He became the first player to appear at six different World Cups (2006, 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022, 2026). Messi heads the Golden Boot race with 5 goals in 2 matches. He looks 28, not 38. If Argentina reach the final, football will witness something it has never seen before.
5
Goals
2
Games
18
WC Career
★1st
Golden Boot
02
Kylian Mbappé
🇫🇷 France · Group I
The heir apparent. Mbappé has been Messi’s closest rival in the Golden Boot race, matching him stride for stride with four goals in two matches. Against Senegal in France’s opener (3–1), Mbappé scored a brace — becoming the third player to score for France in three different World Cup editions (2018, 2022, 2026), and breaking Just Fontaine’s 68-year record as France’s all-time World Cup top scorer. He followed it up with two more goals as France dismantled Iraq 3–0. He is now tied with Gerd Müller on 14 career World Cup goals, behind only Messi, Klose, and Ronaldo. After his Senegal brace, Mbappé said: “If I want to keep up with what Leo is doing, I’ll have to do even more.” France’s crown jewel looks unstoppable on the biggest stage. At 27, this could well be his tournament.
4
Goals
2
Games
14
WC Career
★2nd
Golden Boot
03
Erling Haaland
🇳🇴 Norway · Group I
The giant from Bryne, finally on the World Cup stage. Norway’s qualifying campaign ensured their return after a 28-year absence from the World Cup (last appearance: 1998). Haaland has made every second count. In the tournament opener against Iraq, he scored twice in a 4–1 win — the first brace ever by a Norwegian player in a World Cup match — in just 20 touches of the ball. He then scored twice more against Senegal in a 3–2 thriller, bringing his tally to four goals in two matches, equal to Mbappé, and enough to make Norway genuine Round of 32 contenders. Remarkably, five of Norway’s starting XI weren’t even born when Norway last played a World Cup. Haaland already tops Norway’s all-time World Cup scoring charts. His finishing instinct — clinical, physical, effortless — has confirmed him as the most lethal striker on the planet. Norway are a 15-game winning run when Haaland scores.
4
Goals
2
Games
4
WC Career
★2nd
Joint Boot

“It is the first World Cup since 1954 — and only the second tournament in history — where three players have scored four or more times after just two matches.”

— Sky Sports, 23 June 2026
🌟
Others Worth Watching — The Supporting Cast
Beyond the top three, Harry Kane (England) with 2 goals including a brace vs Croatia is chasing Gary Lineker’s record as England’s World Cup top scorer. Jonathan David (Canada) announced himself with a hat-trick in the 6–0 win over Qatar and is one of the breakout stars of the tournament. Kai Havertz (Germany) has contributed a hat-trick in the 7–1 demolition of Curaçao. And 17-year-old Lamine Yamal (Spain) has returned to the starting XI and already scored his first World Cup goal, making him one of the most exciting young players in tournament history. Full stats at Olympics.com Golden Boot Tracker.
Chapter Four

Total Dominance —
The 5 Teams Outclassing Their Rivals

Some teams arrive at a World Cup to participate. These five nations have arrived to dominate. Through the first two matchdays, they have not merely won — they have outclassed, outscored, and outmanoeuvred every opponent placed in front of them, leaving judges in no doubt that they represent football’s elite tier in 2026.

★ No.1 · Dominant Force
🇦🇷 Argentina
Group J · W2 D0 L0 · GF:5 GA:0 · 6 pts
The reigning world champions have not merely defended their title — they have sent a message to every other nation. Argentina have won both matches without conceding a single goal. Messi’s hat-trick against Algeria and his brace against Austria make Argentina’s opening phase the most individually dominant by any team at any World Cup since the modern era. Their structure — organised, energetic, technically superb in midfield with Enzo Fernández — and the transcendent brilliance of Messi at the peak of his powers makes them terrifying opposition. Argentina did not concede a goal in their 2022 group stage either. The blueprint is the same; the execution is even crisper.
5 goals · 0 conceded Messi hat-trick Perfect record
★ No.2 · Attacking Machine
🇫🇷 France
Group I · W2 D0 L0 · GF:6 GA:1 · 6 pts
France have been simply relentless. Six goals in two matches with only one conceded — a near-perfect attacking record. Mbappé’s four goals have provided the headline, but France’s performance against both Senegal and Iraq showed that this is a collective unit of extraordinary depth. Bradley Barcola scored on debut, Ousmane Dembélé has been the tournament’s most dangerous wide player, and Aurélien Tchouaméni has controlled midfield entirely. Les Bleus have moved into outright tournament favourites with every bookmaker globally at odds of approximately +400 — making them the most-backed team in North America. Their only vulnerability remains a potentially difficult Round of 16 clash.
6 goals scored Mbappé ×4 WC top favourites
★ No.3 · Clinical & Efficient
🇩🇪 Germany
Group E · W2 D0 L0 · GF:9 GA:2 · 6 pts
Germany’s 7–1 demolition of Curaçao was the single most emphatic result of the tournament. Kai Havertz delivered a hat-trick. Deniz Undav, deployed as a super-sub, added two more goals and finished the group phase with three to his name, describing himself as “lost for words.” Even in the more competitive 2–1 win over Ivory Coast — where the Elephants briefly threatened — Germany displayed the resolve of champions. After successive group-stage exits at the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, Julian Nagelsmann’s side look entirely renewed: faster, more direct, and with devastating firepower. Germany have been officially confirmed as the third nation through to the Round of 32. The draw gods may yet pit them against France in the Round of 16 — which would be an appointment with destiny.
9 goals in 2 matches 7–1 vs Curaçao Havertz hat-trick
★ No.4 · The Dark Force
🇳🇱 Netherlands
Group F · W1 D1 L0 · GF:7 GA:3 · 4 pts
The Netherlands drew their opening match 2–2 with Japan in a contest that felt like a glimpse of two future contenders. But in their second match — a 5–1 thrashing of Sweden — they showed precisely why they are considered one of the most dangerous teams in the field. Cody Gakpo and Brian Brobbey answered Ronald Koeman’s demand for World Cup excellence. The Oranje have now scored seven goals across two matches. Their relentless pressing, rapid transitions, and individual quality throughout the pitch make them a nightmare matchup. ESPN’s panel of reporters called them capable of reaching the quarterfinals or beyond. Should they avoid injury concerns to goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen, the Netherlands could be the surprise of the knockout rounds.
7 goals in 2 games 5–1 vs Sweden Gakpo & Brobbey starring
★ No.5 · The Home Sensation
🇺🇸 United States
Group D · W2 D0 L0 · GF:6 GA:1 · 6 pts — Group Winners
The story of the tournament’s opening fortnight in North America could well be the United States. A 4–1 opening win over Paraguay — featuring Folarin Balogun’s finest international performance and Christian Pulisic at his inspirational best — had the football world reassessing what the USMNT are capable of. They followed it with a controlled, professional 2–0 win over Australia to top Group D and become the first host nation confirmed through to the knockout rounds. The USA’s title odds have since more than tripled, with one model noting that “their implied title probability has more than tripled since before the tournament.” Coach Mauricio Pochettino has moulded a cohesive, ambitious, technically mature squad. If the USA continue on this trajectory on home soil, North America will lose its collective mind.
6 goals in 2 games Group D winners 4–1 vs Paraguay
Chapter Five

Who Will Lift the Trophy?
The Top 5 Favourites — 24 June 2026

Based on their performances so far, the oddsboards, the power rankings of 20 global ESPN reporters, and the modelling of prediction systems — these are the five nations most likely to be standing at MetLife Stadium on 19 July 2026, reaching for the golden trophy.

1
🇫🇷
France — Les Bleus
Outright Favourite · +400 (FanDuel, 23 June 2026)
Why France are the No.1 favourite: They have dominated Group I with six goals in two matches. Mbappé is arguably playing the best football of his life. But the case for France extends far beyond one individual. Coach Didier Deschamps has assembled a squad of extraordinary depth — Dembélé, Barcola, Griezmann, Tchouaméni, Camavinga — that gives him solutions for every tactical problem. France are looking to become the first nation since Brazil (1958–1962) to win back-to-back World Cups (they won in 2018, reached the final in 2022). The squad is mature, motivated, and hungry for redemption after that Qatar final heartbreak. Every major prediction market — FanDuel, Kalshi, Polymarket — has France as the clear tournament leader. Les Bleus are France’s most formidable World Cup squad in a generation. Threat to their run: A potential Round of 16 meeting with Germany would be the clash of the century.
2
🇪🇸
Spain — La Roja
Second Favourite · +500 (FanDuel, 23 June 2026)
The most technically gifted squad in the tournament — potentially. Spain’s opening draw with Cape Verde (0–0) was a shock that cooled the market and led to genuine questioning of their credentials. But the response was emphatic: a 4–0 destruction of Saudi Arabia with Lamine Yamal and Pedri back in the XI announced that La Roja were back. Spain possess the broadest midfield base of any nation — Pedri, Rodri, Gavi, Fabián Ruiz, Zubimendi — and the most exciting teenager in world football in 17-year-old Lamine Yamal, who already scored his first World Cup goal against Saudi Arabia. Spain’s tiki-taka evolution remains the most possession-dominant and tactically sophisticated football played by any team in North America. Their ceiling — if Yamal, Morata, and Pedri all fire together — is as high as anyone’s. Multiple pre-tournament prediction models named Spain as joint or outright favourites. They remain the most likely to peak at the right moment.
3
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England — The Three Lions
Third Favourite · +600 (FanDuel, 23 June 2026)
England’s blistering 4–2 win over Croatia in their opener — featuring goals from Jude Bellingham, Harry Kane, and Bukayo Saka — sent a powerful message that Thomas Tuchel’s side have arrived with genuine intent. This is not the cautious, anxious England of previous tournaments. Tuchel has instilled an attacking philosophy, and the squad has the firepower to execute it. Kane’s two goals moved him within touching distance of Gary Lineker’s record as England’s World Cup top scorer. Bellingham has arguably been the most complete midfielder in the tournament’s opening phase. Saka’s energy and directness on the right flank gives England a dimension that previous squads lacked. Is football finally coming home? England’s form, squad quality, and Tuchel’s tactical clarity give them a genuine route to the final — something that felt impossible to say even twelve months ago. ESPN’s panel of reporters listed them third behind France and Spain among likely champions.
4
🇦🇷
Argentina — La Albiceleste
Reigning Champions · +650 (FanDuel, 23 June 2026)
The reigning world champions and their 38-year-old king. Argentina’s odds of +650 significantly undervalue what they have shown on the pitch. Five goals, zero conceded, and Messi playing at a level that defies age, defies physics, defies everything rational about elite sport. On pure performance metrics, Argentina are arguably the most impressive side in North America right now. Their midfield — Enzo Fernández, Alexis Mac Allister, Rodrigo De Paul — is the most complete unit in any squad. Their back four has been unbreached. The market’s hesitation comes from the inevitable question: can Messi sustain this for seven more matches? If Argentina do lift the trophy again, Messi’s status as the greatest player in football history — already beyond argument to most — will ascend to a level that no future generation could challenge. The odds look generous. Argentina must be treated as genuine favourites.
5
🇩🇪
Germany — Die Mannschaft
Fifth Favourite · +1300 (FanDuel, 23 June 2026)
Germany’s odds of +1300 represent perhaps the biggest value in the tournament market. After successive group-stage exits in 2018 and 2022 — unthinkable humiliations for a nation with four World Cup titles — Germany have arrived in North America transformed. The 7–1 against Curaçao may have been against relatively weaker opposition, but the manner of it — the pace, the pressing, the clinical edge, the goals coming from multiple sources including Havertz, Undav and Gnabry — spoke of a team liberated from the psychological weight of their recent failures. Julian Nagelsmann has rebuilt this squad around young energy and tactical flexibility. Their path through the knockout rounds could bring them face-to-face with France — the match every European football fan wants. Germany’s historical tournament record (4 titles, 8 finals) always makes them dangerous. Write them off at your peril.

“The top tier hasn’t changed — but it’s tightening fast. France and Spain dominate as favourites, Argentina and England surging. This is one of the most open World Cups in years.”

— Yahoo Sports, 18 June 2026
🌍
Dark Horses to Watch — Beyond the Big Five
Norway (+3300): Haaland’s form alone makes them dangerous. If Norway get a favourable Round of 32 draw, their firepower could propel them into the quarterfinals for the first time in history. · Morocco (+3500): The 2022 semi-finalists are at it again — holding Brazil to a draw and beating Scotland. Achraf Hakimi’s quality from right-back is world-class. · Portugal (+1000): After a shaky draw vs DR Congo, Ronaldo’s brace against Uzbekistan in a 5–0 win revived hope. Bruno Fernandes and Bernardo Silva provide craft; the question is always how long Ronaldo can carry Portugal alone. · Japan (+4000): Japan are tactically evolved and dangerous. Their draw with Netherlands and 4–0 win over Tunisia showed two sides of a team that could shock anyone in the knockout rounds. Follow the tournament in India at JioCinema.

EduNXT Tech Learning · Global Sports Special Edition · FIFA World Cup 2026 Timestamp Report

Published: 24 June 2026 · All data reflects results as of 08:00 IST, 24 June 2026. Live matches on 24 June not yet included.

Sources: FIFA.com · ESPN FC · Sky Sports · CBS Sports · Yahoo Sports · Goal.com · GiveMeSport

For educational and editorial purposes. All statistics sourced from publicly available official records and reputable sports media.