What happened when four players tied for 2010 World Cup Golden Boot? Could Messi and Mbappé do the same? | Football News

What happened when four players tied for 2010 World Cup Golden Boot? Could Messi and Mbappé do the same?
Messi and Mbappé’s Golden Boot battle could be decided by FIFA’s tiebreaker rules after dramatic finale.

The race for the Golden Boot at the 2026 FIFA World Cup is heading towards a finish remarkably similar to one of the closest battles in tournament history.Lionel Messi currently tops the standings with eight goals and four assists, narrowly ahead of France captain Kylian Mbappé, who has eight goals and three assists. Although both players are level on goals, Messi leads because FIFA’s first tiebreaker is assists.With France still scheduled to face England in the third-place playoff before Argentina meet Spain in the World Cup final, the race is not yet over. It is a situation that echoes the dramatic finish to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, when four players ended the tournament level on goals and FIFA had to separate them using its official tiebreakers.

The extraordinary four-way tie in 2010

The 2010 World Cup produced one of the closest Golden Boot races ever witnessed.Germany’s Thomas Müller, Spain’s David Villa, the Netherlands’ Wesley Sneijder, and Uruguay’s Diego Forlán all finished the tournament with five goals.Rather than declaring joint winners, FIFA applied its official ranking criteria.Müller had also contributed three assists, while Villa, Sneijder and Forlán each finished with one assist.That gave the Germany forward the Golden Boot despite all four players finishing level on goals.The remaining positions were then decided by the next tiebreaker: minutes played.Villa claimed the Silver Boot because he had played fewer minutes than the remaining two players.Sneijder received the Bronze Boot after recording fewer minutes than Forlán, leaving the Uruguay captain fourth despite matching the others for goals.The final standings were:

  • Golden Boot: Thomas Müller (Germany) – 5 goals, 3 assists
  • Silver Boot: David Villa (Spain) – 5 goals, 1 assist
  • Bronze Boot: Wesley Sneijder (Netherlands) – 5 goals, 1 assist
  • Fourth: Diego Forlán (Uruguay) – 5 goals, 1 assist

Interestingly, both Müller and Forlán scored one goal each in the third-place playoff. Germany defeated Uruguay 3-2 to secure the bronze medal, but Müller’s superior assist tally ensured he remained on top of the Golden Boot standings.

The importance of the third-place playoff

Although often described as a consolation match, the third-place playoff still counts as an official FIFA World Cup fixture.Every goal, assist and minute played contributes towards the Golden Boot race.History has produced several examples where the match directly influenced the outcome of the award.At the 1958 World Cup, France striker Just Fontaine scored an incredible four goals against West Germany in the third-place playoff to finish with 13 goals, a single-tournament World Cup record that still stands today.Four decades later, at the 1998 World Cup, Croatia striker Davor Šuker scored the winning goal in a 2-1 victory over the Netherlands in the third-place playoff. That strike lifted him onto six goals, securing the Golden Boot ahead of every other contender.

Why 2026 could produce another tiebreaker finish

The current standings show just how finely balanced the race remains.

  • Lionel Messi (Argentina): 8 goals, 4 assists
  • Kylian Mbappé (France): 8 goals, 3 assists
  • Jude Bellingham (England): 6 goals, 1 assist
  • Harry Kane (England): 6 goals, 1 assist
  • Ousmane Dembélé (France): 5 goals, 2 assists

Messi moved ahead after producing two assists in Argentina’s dramatic 2-1 semifinal comeback against England. Although he did not score, his passes for Enzo Fernández and Lautaro Martínez took his assist tally to four, one more than Mbappé.France’s elimination has not ended Mbappé’s chances because Les Bleus still face England in the third-place playoff. Any goals scored there count towards the Golden Boot, giving the French captain one final opportunity to move ahead before Messi plays Spain in the World Cup final.How FIFA decides the Golden BootFIFA applies three criteria to determine the winner:

  • Most goals scored.
  • Most assists, as determined by FIFA’s Technical Study Group, if players are level on goals.
  • Fewest minutes played, if players remain level on both goals and assists.

Those exact regulations decided the award in 2010 and could once again prove decisive if Messi and Mbappé finish the 2026 tournament level on goals.

Recent Golden Boot winners

The award has often been decided by fine margins in recent tournaments:

  • 2022: Kylian Mbappé (France) – 8 goals, 2 assists
  • 2018: Harry Kane (England) – 6 goals
  • 2014: James Rodríguez (Colombia) – 6 goals, 2 assists
  • 2010: Thomas Müller (Germany) – 5 goals, 3 assists
  • 2006: Miroslav Klose (Germany) – 5 goals, 3 assists
  • 2002: Ronaldo (Brazil) – 8 goals

With both Messi and Mbappé still level on eight goals, another Golden Boot race could ultimately be decided not by goals alone, but by the same tiebreaker rules that separated Müller, Villa, Sneijder and Forlán in South Africa 16 years ago.

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