Lionel Messi made history on Monday night by becoming the all-time leading scorer in World Cup history. After a brilliant hat trick against Algeria, the Argentina star also scored against Austria to reach 17 goals in the tournament, moving one ahead of Germany's Miroslav Klose, who had held the record.
The article says Messi also became the tournament's all-time penalty king, though he now holds the unwanted record for the most missed penalties in World Cup history. He already owned the record for most World Cup appearances, with 28 matches, and for most minutes played, with 2,394 before the match against Austria.
With his next assist, Messi is set to overtake his Argentina idol Diego Maradona and become the World Cup's all-time assist leader as well. At present, Messi and Maradona are tied with eight assists each.
The report also listed the top World Cup scorers of all time, placing Ronaldo third with 15 goals, followed by Gerd Muller and Kylian Mbappe with 14 each, and Just Fontaine with 13. Among the other names in the ranking are Pele, Sandor Kocsis, Jürgen Klinsmann, Helmut Rahn, Gary Lineker, Gabriel Batistuta, Teofilo Cubillas, Thomas Muller, and Grzegorz Lato.