World Cup 2026: Does the Third-Place Play-Off Decide the Golden Boot?
World Cup Third-Place Match Goals Still Count for the Golden Boot!
What Is the Big News?
Goals scored by players in the World Cup’s third place play-off will count towards a player’s goal tally and the race for the Golden Boot.
Think of the Golden Boot like a prize for the player who scores the most goals in the whole tournament (like a cookie jar for the kid who collects the most cookies). The third-place play-off is a match between the two teams that lost in the semi-finals. Even though it’s not the big final, any goals scored there still count!
Important Point: Every goal in the third-place play-off matters for the Golden Boot race — it is not a "meaningless" match for top scorers.
Who Can Still Win the Golden Boot?
Because goals in the third-place match count, some star players can still win the Golden Boot even though their teams are not in the final.
- Kylian Mbappe (France)
- Ousmane Dembele (France)
- Harry Kane (England)
- Jude Bellingham (England)
France and England lost in the semi-finals, but they play each other in the third-place play-off. So these four still have a chance to win the Golden Boot at the 2026 tournament in the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
The Current Goal Scoreboard
With only two matches left (the third-place match and the final), here are the top scorers:
- Mbappe – 8 goals (tied for most)
- Lionel Messi – 8 goals (leads the race because he has 1 more assist than Mbappe)
- Assist = passing the ball so a teammate can score
- Erling Haaland (Norway) – 7 goals (but out of the tournament, so can’t score more)
- Bellingham – 6 goals
- Kane – 6 goals
- Dembele – 5 goals
- Mikel Oyarzabal (Spain) – 5 goals
So far, seven players have scored five or more goals.
Upcoming Matches
- Saturday: England vs France (third-place play-off)
- Sunday: Spain vs Argentina (the final)
Why the Third-Place Match Is a Big Deal
The Golden Boot race might be decided by who plays in that England vs France match.
- If coaches pick their best players, stars like Mbappe, Kane, Bellingham, and Dembele can add more goals.
- In 2018, England’s boss Gareth Southgate changed 5 players for the third-place match. Kane started but didn’t score, and still won the Golden Boot that year.
History Says the Match Matters
A total of seven past Golden Boot winners scored in the third-place play-off:
- Needed those goals to win:
- Thomas Muller (Germany, 2010)
- Davor Suker (Croatia, 1998)
- Salvatore Schillaci (Italy, 1990)
- Leonidas (Brazil, 1938)
- Scored but would have won anyway:
- Grzegorz Lato (Poland, 1974)
- Eusebio (Portugal, 1966)
- Just Fontaine (France, 1958)
Important Point: In 4 of those 7 cases, the third-place goals were the reason they won the Golden Boot!
Summary
Goals in the World Cup third-place play-off count for the Golden Boot. Mbappe, Dembele, Kane, and Bellingham can still win it in 2026 even after semi-final exits. Mbappe and Messi lead with 8 goals, but Messi is ahead on assists. The England vs France match could decide the winner, and history shows third-place goals have often been decisive.
FAQ
Q: What is the Golden Boot?
A: It is the award given to the player who scores the most goals in the World Cup tournament.
Q: Does the third-place match really count for the Golden Boot?
A: Yes! Goals scored in that match are added to a player’s total, just like any other match.
Q: Why is Messi ahead of Mbappe if both have 8 goals?
A: Because Messi has one more assist (a pass that leads to a goal), which breaks the tie.
Q: Can Haaland still win the Golden Boot?
A: No, because Norway left the tournament in the quarter-finals, so he cannot score any more goals.
Q: Have third-place goals decided the Golden Boot before?
A: Yes, in 4 of 7 past cases where winners scored in that match, those goals were what won them the award.
