Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo are set to extend their era-defining rivalry into a record sixth FIFA World Cup when the 2026 tournament kicks off across the United States, Mexico and Canada. If both make their nations’ final squads as expected, they will become the first players in history to appear at six men’s World Cups, eclipsing a record that currently stands at five. Ronaldo will be 41 and Messi 39 when the competition begins next June, adding a historic layer of longevity to a duel that has dominated world football for nearly two decades.
Historic sixth World Cup
Before 2026, only a small group of male players – including Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Lothar Matthäus and Mexico’s Antonio Carbajal, Rafael Márquez and Andrés Guardado – had appeared at five World Cups, with no one reaching six. Crossing that threshold would put Messi and Ronaldo alone at the top of the appearance charts, underlining how long both have operated at the elite level required for repeated World Cup selection.
Across their careers for club and country, each has scored well over 800 goals, while together they have amassed nine UEFA Champions League titles and 13 Ballon d’Or awards. Those numbers, combined with two decades spent at the centre of the sport’s biggest stages, explain why their shared World Cup milestone is being framed as a defining moment in football history rather than just another statistical record.
Ronaldo confirms last shot at glory
Ronaldo has already made clear that the 2026 World Cup will be his final major international tournament, describing the event as the last chapter of his career at the highest level. Portugal secured qualification with a dominant win in European qualifying, confirming that their captain is on course for a sixth consecutive World Cup after earlier appearances in 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018 and 2022.
The Portugal forward has passed 950 career goals, including around 143 strikes for his country, and remains the most-capped male international in history with more than 220 appearances. He already holds the distinction of being the first man to score in five different World Cup tournaments, a benchmark set between 2006 and 2022 that he could extend further in North America.
Messi balances fitness and ambition
Messi has spoken openly about his desire to defend Argentina’s title in 2026 while stressing that his final decision will depend on fitness and form in the lead-up to the tournament. The Inter Miami forward, who has 195 caps and 114 goals for Argentina, has said he will gauge whether he can still contribute at the highest level before committing fully to another World Cup campaign.
If he steps onto the pitch in 2026, it will mark his sixth tournament after debuts in 2006 and subsequent appearances in 2010, 2014, 2018 and 2022, where he finally lifted the trophy in Qatar. Messi already holds the record for the most games played at the men’s World Cup, and further minutes in North America would extend that lead over legends such as Lothar Matthäus.
World Cup records and the GOAT debate
Their World Cup résumés remain central to the enduring debate over which of the two is the greatest of all time. Messi has 13 World Cup goals and eight assists in 26 appearances, including a golden run in Qatar in 2022, while Ronaldo has eight goals and two assists from 22 World Cup matches for Portugal.
Supporters of Messi point to his 2022 World Cup triumph and his decisive influence in Argentina’s knockout games, building on earlier near-misses in 2014 and multiple Copa América campaigns. Ronaldo’s camp highlights his historic scoring records, his titles in Europe’s major leagues and his status as the first man to score in five World Cups, arguing that another strong showing in 2026 would further cement his case.
A rivalry’s final act on the biggest stage
The 2026 tournament offers what is likely a last look at both icons sharing a World Cup, more than 20 years after they first appeared at Germany 2006 as teenage prodigies. Tournament organisers and broadcasters are already positioning their presence as a headline storyline, knowing that every appearance, goal or elimination could serve as a defining image of the competition.
For Argentina and Portugal, the presence of their long-time leaders brings experience and global attention but also complex tactical decisions for coaches managing ageing stars alongside new generations. Whatever happens on the field in North America, a shared sixth World Cup will ensure that Messi and Ronaldo’s rivalry is inscribed in the record books in a way that may prove difficult for any future players to match.






