World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
In six World Cups, a total of 28 matches, 18 goals, with a shot conversion rate of only 15%.
Six World Cups, 28 appearances, 18 goals, and a shot conversion rate of only 15%.
38-year-old Messi has just been crowned the all-time top scorer in North America, trampling Klose's record of 16 goals underfoot. Press releases are full of effusive praise. Stripping away the filter, this is a case of data inflation.
A 15% conversion rate means he needs nearly seven shots to score a single goal. The average time of 138 minutes per goal is hardly impressive in the context of elite strikers. Efficiency takes a backseat; it's all about sheer volume of shots.
On that matchday in mid-June, Mbappé and Haaland had just laid out the red carpet with braces. Mbappé brought his personal World Cup goal tally to 15, while Haaland casually scored a brace on his debut. The youngsters are meticulous, grinding out every goal with high conversion rates inside the box. Then they look up, and the 38-year-old veteran is "violently cashing in" with inefficient long-range shots from the edge of the arc and outside the box, single-handedly overturning the red carpet with sheer volume. Foreign media dissected his shot map—it's a screen full of forced attempts from outside the box. The price of absolute ball control is a plummeting conversion rate.
To figure out the purchasing power of these 18 goals, you first have to check FIFA's books.
The 2026 World Cup has expanded to 48 teams, with total matches skyrocketing from 64 to 104. This is the football world's quantitative easing. The printing press is turned on, minnows become ATMs, and the average goals per game in the group stage is approaching a recent three-tournament high (to be verified). Big-score blowouts are the norm; you can pad your stats in easy games without even breaking a sweat.
In his debut against Algeria, Messi had 6 shots with 4 on target and scored 3, a single-game conversion rate of 50%. Then he scored another two against Austria. With a maximum of 8 games per team under this format, the system is designed to protect aging players' stats.
In the "gold standard" era of 32 teams, Klose accumulated 16 goals with a 24% conversion rate and an average time of 112 minutes per goal. The current 18 goals are a product of the 48-team "fiat currency" era. Fontaine's record of 13 goals in a single tournament, which stood for 68 years, is barely holding on in this inflationary age.
Having the entire team funnel all the ball possession to a 38-year-old with a 15% conversion rate has long since left the realm of tactical core and is a pure act of system farming. France's L'Équipe laid bare Scaloni's calculations after the match: playing time and shooting rights are unconditional; the whole team's operation depends on Messi's feel for the day.
No matter how fancy the tactics on the board, once you reach the final third, it's one move: give the ball to Messi, then the whole team clasps their hands in prayer.
The 104-match schedule continues, and the inflation printing press hasn't stopped. Messi's running distance still ranks lowest on the team, but the ball will keep flowing to his feet.