Wizardry: Haaland finds the space that opponents didn’t know they had left.
| Photo Credit: AP
Forget the scoreline for a second. If you actually looked at how Erling Haaland has scored his seven goals this World Cup, “one behind” starts to sound like the wrong way to describe him.
The Norwegian might be a goal behind Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe in the Golden Boot race but the numbers don’t tell the whole story.
Back with a bang
He was rested for Norway’s final group game, so he’s played at least one less than his rivals.
Against Brazil, the striker touched the ball a fraction of the times Messi or Mbappe typically do in a game.
Just too good
He was closely marked by Marquinhos and Gabriel throughout, and still walked away with a brace that eliminated the five-time champion.
Haaland’s seven goals have come from 18 shots — a 39% conversion rate, the best by any player with 15-plus shots in a World Cup since Gary Lineker (1986).
He’s averaging a goal every 14 touches this tournament, the fewest touches-per-goal of any player to score three-plus goals in a World Cup in the last six decades.
Haaland’s games tend to follow the same arc. Long periods where he’s barely involved, tracked closely and starved of service, followed by a short burst where none of that seems to matter.
He finds the space they didn’t know they’d left, and doing it so consistently that “one gap” starts to feel like all he ever needs.
Seven goals is already the most by a World Cup debutant since Grzegorz Lato in 1974, his tally is more than Messi, Mbappe and Ronaldo’s own debut tournaments combined (six total between them).
Stepping up
Golden Boots may get forgotten. What will not be forgotten is a 25-year-old carrying a nation of five million past Brazil, against defenders focusing solely on him.
This was never a fair race. Haaland just made it look like one.
Published – July 11, 2026 06:46 pm IST


