The phrase "Most goals in a single World Cup" refers to the record for the highest number of goals scored by an individual player during one edition of the FIFA World Cup tournament. This achievement highlights outstanding offensive performance and goal-scoring ability on football’s biggest stage. The current record is held by Just Fontaine of France, who scored 13 goals in the 1958 World Cup, a feat that remains unmatched in the tournament’s history.
The phrase "Most goals in a single World Cup" refers to the record for the highest number of goals scored by an individual player during one edition of the FIFA World Cup tournament. This achievement highlights outstanding offensive performance and goal-scoring ability on football’s biggest stage. The current record is held by Just Fontaine of France, who scored 13 goals in the 1958 World Cup, a feat that remains unmatched in the tournament’s history.
What does “Most goals in a single World Cup” mean?
It’s the record for the highest number of goals scored by one player in a single FIFA World Cup edition, counting goals in all official matches of that tournament (group stage and knockout rounds).
Who holds the record and how many goals did they score?
Just Fontaine (France) scored 13 goals in the 1958 World Cup in Sweden; the record still stands.
Has anyone come close to breaking Fontaine’s 13 goals?
The closest is Eusébio with 9 goals in the 1966 World Cup; no player has surpassed Fontaine’s 13.
Are there related World Cup scoring records I might encounter in quizzes?
Yes. For example, the most goals in a single World Cup match is 5 (Oleg Salenko, 1994). Another related record is the all-time World Cup career goals, held by Miroslav Klose with 16.