Sports
World Cup moments: Viking row and minnows sparkle
July 19, 2026
Source: Yahoo Sports · Read on source site
Lionel Messi is targeting a second World Cup triumph (ROBERTO SCHMIDT)The first 48-team World Cup has provided a thrilling spectacle and a string of compelling storylines.
>AFP Sport picks out some of the key talking points after more than five weeks of action in Canada, Mexico and the United States.
>Hotshots
>The race for the Golden Boot caught fire early and has remained absorbing until the final weekend.
>The names at the top of the charts are a who's who of the world's top marksmen -- including Lionel Messi, Kylian Mbappe, Erling Haaland and Harry Kane.
>Mbappe, who scored twice in France's 6-4 defeat by England in Saturday's third-place playoff, leads Messi by two goals with just Sunday's final to come.
>The Frenchman is also now the top goalscorer in World Cup history -- with 22 to his name across three tournaments, one ahead of Messi.
>Minnows sparkle
>Debutants Cape Verde finished the group stage unbeaten and advanced from a section that included former champions Spain and Uruguay.
>"To be honest, it feels like I'm living in a fairytale," said Deroy Duarte after his team set up a last-32 match against defending champions Argentina.
>The African nation pushed Lionel Messi's men to the brink, twice coming from behind, before a winner for Argentina in extra-time.
>Caribbean island Curacao -- the smallest country to compete at a World Cup by both population -- also had their moment of glory, holding Ecuador to a goalless draw after an opening 7-1 hammering by Germany.
>Argentina comebacks
>Time and again Argentina have appeared vulnerable at the 2026 World Cup, but they have always found a way.
>The defending champions cruised through their group but were taken to extra-time by Cape Verde and recovered from 2-0 down late in the game against Egypt.
>They needed extra-time again to beat Switzerland in the quarter-finals and were staring at defeat against England in the semi-finals before a late double.
>Argentina have not played the silkiest football but their never-say-die attitude is their superpower.
>Balogun row
>The World Cup was remarkably free of off-field controversy until Folarin Balogun found himself at the centre of a political storm.
>The US forward, who scored three goals, was sent off in his team's last-32 match against Bosnia-Herzegovina, ruling him out of the next game.
>But FIFA stepped in and suspended his ban, leading to widespread condemnation, especially when it emerged that US President Donald Trump had intervened.
>The host nation were outclassed 4-1 by Belgium in the last 16, with Balogun making little impact.
>Afterwards, the 25-year-old admitted the episode had put extra pressure on the team.
>Haaland goes viral
>Erling Haaland fired Norway to their best-ever World Cup finish -- and also became a social media sensation with his quirky posts.
>The towering Manchester City forward has gained 30 million Instagram followers since the start of the tournament to move to more than 71 million.
>Haaland, 25, whose team were beaten by England in the quarter-finals, now has far more Instagram followers than City's official account.
>One of his posts featured the "Viking row", which will be one of the abiding images of the tournament.
>The ritual featured players leading Norway fans in a rhythmic row in a pretend Viking boat.
>He also shared a picture of himself arriving back in Norway accompanied by a stuffed raccoon, explaining: "It followed me home."
>Falklands dispute
>The build-up to the semi-final between Argentina and England was dominated by talk over the contested Falkland Islands, known in Spanish as the Malvinas.
>Argentina recovered from a goal down to win 2-1 and reach their third final in four World Cups.
>After the final whistle the players held a banner that read: "Las Malvinas son Argentinas" (The Falklands are Argentine).
>Britain called for FIFA to look into the incident and the governing body put out a statement saying it was "assessing the match reports".
>jw/gj
