List of FIFA World Cup records and statistics
This is a list of records of the FIFA World Cup and its qualification matches.
General statistics by tournament
Teams: Tournament position
Teams having equal quantities in the tables below are ordered by the tournament the quantity was attained in (the teams that attained the quantity first are listed first). If the quantity was attained by more than one team in the same tournament, these teams are ordered alphabetically.
- Most titles won
- 5, Brazil (1958, 1962, 1970, 1994, 2002)
- Most finishes in the top two
- 8, Germany (1954, 1966, 1974, 1982, 1986, 1990, 2002, 2014)
- Most finishes in the top three
- 12, Germany (1934, 1954, 1966, 1970, 1974, 1982, 1986, 1990, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014)
- Most finishes in the top four
- 13, Germany (1934, 1954, 1958, 1966, 1970, 1974, 1982, 1986, 1990, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014)
- For a detailed list of top four appearances, see FIFA World Cup results
- Most finishes in the top eight
- 18, Brazil (every tournament except 1934, 1966 and 1990)[lower-alpha 1]
- Most finishes in the top 16
- 21, Brazil (every tournament)
- Most World Cup appearances
- 21, Brazil (every tournament)
- For a detailed list, see National team appearances in the FIFA World Cup.
- Most second-place finishes
- 4, Germany (1966, 1982, 1986, 2002)
- Most third-place finishes
- 4, Germany (1934, 1970, 2006, 2010)
- Most fourth-place finishes
- 3, Uruguay (1954, 1970, 2010)
- Most eliminated in semi-final
- 5, Germany (1934, 1958, 1970, 2006, 2010)
- Most eliminated in quarter-final
- 8, England (1950, 1954, 1962, 1970, 1982, 1986, 2002, 2006)[lower-alpha 2]
- Most eliminated in round of 16
- 14, Mexico (1930, 1950, 1954, 1958, 1962, 1966, 1978, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018)[lower-alpha 3]
- Most eliminated in first round
- 7, South Korea (1986, 1990, 1994, 1998, 2006, 2014, 2018)
- Most titles won by a confederation
- 12, UEFA (1934, 1938, 1954, 1966, 1974, 1982, 1990, 1998, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018)
- Most final appearances by confederation
- 28, UEFA (1934 x 2, 1938 x 2, 1954 x 2, 1958, 1962, 1966 x 2, 1970, 1974 x 2, 1978, 1982 x 2, 1986, 1990, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006 x 2, 2010 x 2, 2014, 2018 x 2)
- Confederation with most number of teams who qualified for the finals at least once
- 90% (9 out of 10), CONMEBOL (all but Venezuela)
- Confederation with fewest teams who qualified for the finals at least once
- 15.38% (2 out of 11 current and 2 former), OFC (only Australia and New Zealand)
Consecutive
- Most consecutive championships
- 2, Italy (1934–1938) and Brazil (1958–1962)
- Most consecutive finishes in the top two
- 3, Germany (1982–1990) and Brazil (1994–2002)
- Most consecutive finishes in the top three
- 4, Germany (2002–2014)
- Most consecutive finishes in the top four
- 4, Germany (2002–2014)
- Most consecutive finishes in the top eight
- 16, Germany (1954–2014)
- Most consecutive finishes in the top 16
- 21, Brazil (1930–2018)[lower-alpha 4]
- Most consecutive finals tournaments
- 21, Brazil (1930–2018)
- Most consecutive second-place finishes
- 2, Netherlands (1974–1978) and West Germany (1982–1986)
- Most consecutive third-place finishes
- 2, Germany (2006–2010)
- Most consecutive fourth-place finishes
- No country has finished 4th in two consecutive tournaments
- Most consecutive 3rd-4th-place finishes
- 2, Sweden (1938–1950), Brazil (1974–1978), France (1982–1986), Germany (2006–2010)
- Most consecutive 5th-8th-place finishes
- 4, Switzerland (1934–1954)[lower-alpha 5]
- Most consecutive 9th-16th-place finishes
- 7, Mexico (1994–2018)
- Most consecutive 17th-32nd-place finishes
- 4, South Korea (1986–1998)
- Biggest improvement in position in consecutive tournaments
- Did not participate/qualify, then champion, Italy (1930–1934), Uruguay (1938–1950), West Germany (1950–1954), France (1994–1998)
- Most consecutive championships by a confederation
- 4, UEFA (2006–2018)
- Most consecutive top two appearances by confederation
- 17, UEFA (1954–2018)
Gaps
- Longest gap between successive titles
- 44 years, Italy (1938–1982)
- Longest gap between successive appearances in the top two
- 52 years, Germany (1938–1990)
- Longest gap between successive appearances in the top three
- 52 years, Germany (1938–1990)
- Longest gap between successive appearances in the top four
- 60 years, Spain (1950–2010)
- Longest gap between successive appearances in the finals
- 56 years: Egypt (1934–1990), Norway (1938–1994)[lower-alpha 6]
Host team
- Best finish by host team
- Champion: Uruguay (1930), Italy (1934), England (1966), West Germany (1974), Argentina (1978), France (1998)
- Worst finish by host team
- 17th–32nd position (FIFA final ranking of 20th): South Africa (2010)
Defending champion
- Best finish by defending champion
- Champion: Italy (1938), Brazil (1962)
- Worst finish by defending champion
- Did not participate: Uruguay (1934)
- Worst finish by defending champion who participates in the next tournament
- Group stage: Italy (1950), Brazil (1966), France (2002), Italy (2010), Spain (2014), Germany (2018)
Debuting teams
- Best finish by a debuting team
- Champion: Uruguay (1930), Italy (1934)[lower-alpha 7]
- Best finish by a debuting team after 1934
- Third place: Portugal (1966), Croatia (1998)
Other
- Most finishes in the top two without ever being champion
- 3, Netherlands (1974, 1978, 2010)
- Most finishes in the top three without ever being champion
- 4, Netherlands (1974, 1978, 2010, 2014)
- Most finishes in the top four without ever being champion
- 5, Netherlands (1974, 1978, 1998, 2010, 2014)
- Most appearances, never progressing from the first round
- 8, Scotland (1954, 1958, 1974, 1978, 1982, 1986, 1990, 1998)[lower-alpha 8]
- Most finals played, never lost
- 2, Uruguay (1930, 1950)[lower-alpha 9]
- Most semi-finals played, never lost
- 5, Argentina (1930, 1978, 1986, 1990, 2014)[lower-alpha 10]
- Most quarter-finals (or best eight round) played, never lost
- 2, Croatia (1998, 2018) and Portugal (1966, 2006)
- Most round of 16 (from 1986 to date) played, never lost
- 8, Germany (1986, 1990, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014)
- Most appearances, never winning a match
- 3, Bolivia (1930, 1950, 1994), Honduras (1982, 2010, 2014), Egypt (1934, 1990, 2018)
- Most played final
- 3, Argentina vs Germany (1986, 1990, 2014)
Teams: Tournament progress
All time
- Progressed from the first round as group winners the most times
- 15, Brazil (1950, 1954, 1958, 1962, 1970, 1982, 1986, 1990, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014 and 2018)
- Eliminated in the first round the most times
- 8, Scotland (1954, 1958, 1974, 1978, 1982, 1986, 1990, 1998)
- Most appearances, all progressing from the first round
- 3, Republic of Ireland (1990, 1994, 2002)[lower-alpha 11]
- Most appearances, never progressing from the first round
- 8, Scotland (1954, 1958, 1974, 1978, 1982, 1986, 1990, 1998)[lower-alpha 8]
- Fewest appearances, reaching quarter-finals
- 1, Cuba (1938), Wales (1958), East Germany (1974), Ukraine (2006)
- Most appearances, never reaching quarter-finals
- 8, Scotland (1954, 1958, 1974, 1978, 1982, 1986, 1990, 1998)
- Fewest appearances, reaching semi-finals
- 2, Turkey (2002)
- Most appearances, never reaching semi-finals
- 16, Mexico (1930, 1950, 1954, 1958, 1962, 1966, 1970, 1978, 1986, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018)
- Fewest appearances, reaching a final
- 5, Croatia (2018)
- Most appearances, never reaching a final
- 16, Mexico (1930, 1950, 1954, 1958, 1962, 1966, 1970, 1978, 1986, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018)
- Fewest appearances, winning a title
- 13, Uruguay (1930, 1950)
- Most appearances, never winning a title
- 16, Mexico (1930, 1950, 1954, 1958, 1962, 1966, 1970, 1978, 1986, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018)
Consecutive
- Most consecutive appearances in the first round
- 21, Brazil (every tournament)
- Most consecutive progressions from the first round
- 16, Germany (1954–2014)
- Most consecutive progressions from the first round as group winners
- 10, Brazil (1982–2018)
- Most consecutive eliminations from the first round
- 5, Mexico (1950–1966), Scotland (1974–1990)
- Most consecutive result by the same team
- 7, Round of 16, Mexico (1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018)
All-time table
Players
- Most championships
- 3, Pelé (Brazil, 1958, 1962 (only played in first two matches; medal awarded retroactively by FIFA in 2007[3]) and 1970)
- See here for a list of players who have won multiple FIFA World Cups.
- Most tournaments appearance
- 5, Antonio Carbajal (Mexico, 1950–1966), Lothar Matthäus (Germany, 1982–1998), Rafael Márquez (Mexico, 2002–2018)
; Most finishes in the top two : 3, Nílton Santos (Brazil 1950, 1958, 1962), Carlos José Castilho (Brazil 1950, 1958, 1962), Pelé (Brazil 1958, 1962, 1970), Pierre Littbarski (West Germany 1982, 1986, 1990), Lothar Matthäus (West Germany 1982, 1986, 1990), Cafu (Brazil, 1994, 1998, 2002)
(Ronaldo of Brazil had also appeared in 3 occasions, 1994–2002, but did not play at 1994.) - Most finishes in the top three
- 4, Miroslav Klose (Germany, 2002–2014)
- Most appearances in All-Star Team
- 3, Djalma Santos (Brazil, 1954–1962), Franz Beckenbauer (West Germany, 1966–1974), Philipp Lahm (Germany, 2006–2014)
- Most matches played
- 25, Lothar Matthäus (Germany, 1982–1998)
- Most knockout games played
- 14, Miroslav Klose (Germany, 2002–2014)
- Most minutes played
- 2,217 minutes, Paolo Maldini (Italy, 1990–2002)
- Most qualifier matches played
- 68, Iván Hurtado (Ecuador, 1994–2010)
- Most matches won
- 17, Miroslav Klose (Germany, 2002–2014)
- Most appearances in a World Cup final
- 3, Cafu (Brazil, 1994, 1998, 2002)[lower-alpha 12]
- Most different teams played in tournaments
- 2, Luis Monti (Argentina, 1930 and Italy, 1934), Robert Prosinečki (Yugoslavia, 1990 and Croatia, 1998 and 2002)
- Most appearances as captain
- 17, Rafael Márquez (Mexico, 2002–2018)[4]
- Most tournaments as captain
- 5, Rafael Márquez (Mexico, 2002–2018)[4]
- Most appearances as substitute
- 11, Denílson (Brazil, 1998–2002)
- Youngest player
- 17 years, 41 days, Norman Whiteside (Northern Ireland), vs Yugoslavia, 17 June 1982
- Youngest player, final
- 17 years, 249 days, Pelé (Brazil), vs Sweden, 29 June 1958
- Youngest player, qualifying match
- 13 years, 310 days, Souleymane Mamam (Togo), vs Zambia, 6 May 2001, 2002 CAF Group 1[lower-alpha 13]
- Youngest captain
- 21 years, 109 days, Tony Meola (United States), vs Czechoslovakia, 10 June 1990[lower-alpha 14]
- Youngest player to ever be named to a FIFA World Cup squad
- 16 years, 339 days, Edu (Brazil), 1966
- Oldest player
- 45 years, 161 days, Essam El-Hadary (Egypt), vs Saudi Arabia, 25 June 2018
- Oldest player, final
- 40 years, 133 days, Dino Zoff (Italy), vs West Germany, 11 July 1982
- Oldest player, qualifying match
- 46 years, 175 days, MacDonald Taylor Sr. (United States Virgin Islands), vs Saint Kitts and Nevis, 18 February 2004, 2006 CONCACAF First Round.[6]
- Oldest captain
- 45 years, 161 days, Essam El-Hadary (Egypt), vs Saudi Arabia, 25 June 2018
- Oldest player to debut in a World Cup finals tournament
- 45 years, 161 days, Essam El-Hadary (Egypt), vs Saudi Arabia, 25 June 2018
- Oldest player to ever be named to a FIFA World Cup squad
- 45 years, 150 days, Essam El-Hadary (Egypt), 2018[7]
- Largest age difference on the same team
- 24 years and 42 days, 1994, Cameroon (Rigobert Song: 17 years and 358 days; Roger Milla: 42 years and 35 days)
- Largest age difference on a champion team
- 21 years and 297 days, 1982, Italy (Dino Zoff: 40 years and 133 days; Giuseppe Bergomi: 18 years and 201 days)
- Longest period between World Cup finals appearances as a player
- 15 years and 363 days, Faryd Mondragón (Colombia, 1998–2014)
- Longest span of World Cup finals appearances as a player
- 16 years, Antonio Carbajal (Mexico, 1950–1966); Elías Figueroa (Chile, 1966–1982); Hugo Sánchez (Mexico, 1978–1994); Giuseppe Bergomi (Italy, 1982–1998); Lothar Matthäus (Germany, 1982–1998); Rigobert Song (Cameroon, 1994–2010); Faryd Mondragón (Colombia, 1998–2014); Samuel Eto'o (Cameroon, 1998–2014); Rafael Márquez (Mexico, 2002–2018)
- Longest period between World Cup finals appearances, overall
- 44 years, Tim (Brazil, 1938, as a player; and Peru, 1982, as coach)
Goalscoring
Individual
- Most goals scored, finals
- 16, Miroslav Klose (Germany, 2002–2014)[4]
- Most goals scored, qualifying
- 39, Carlos Ruiz (Guatemala, 2002–2016)[8]
- Most goals scored, single tournament
- 13, Just Fontaine (France, 1958)[4]
- Most goals scored in a match
- 5, Oleg Salenko (Russia), vs Cameroon, 1994[4]
- Most goals scored in a lost match
- 4, Ernst Wilimowski (Poland), vs Brazil, 1938[lower-alpha 15]
- Most goals scored in a qualifying match
- 13, Archie Thompson (Australia), vs American Samoa, 2002 OFC Group 1
- Most goals scored in a final match
- 3, Geoff Hurst (England), vs West Germany, 1966
- Most goals scored in all final matches
- 3, Vavá (Brazil), 2 vs Sweden in 1958 & 1 vs Czechoslovakia in 1962; Pelé (Brazil), 2 vs Sweden in 1958 & 1 vs Italy in 1970; Geoff Hurst (England), 3 vs West Germany in 1966 and Zinedine Zidane (France), 2 vs Brazil in 1998 & 1 vs Italy in 2006
- Scored goal(s) in multiple final matches
- Vavá (Brazil, 1958 & 1962), Pelé (Brazil, 1958 & 1970), Paul Breitner (West Germany, 1974 & 1982) and Zinedine Zidane (France, 1998 & 2006).
- Most matches with at least one goal
- 11, Ronaldo (Brazil, 1998–2006), Miroslav Klose (Germany, 2002–2014)
- Most consecutive matches with at least one goal
- 6, Just Fontaine (France, 1958) and Jairzinho (Brazil, 1970)
- Most matches with at least two goals
- 4, Sándor Kocsis (Hungary, 1954), Just Fontaine (France, 1958), Ronaldo (Brazil, 1998–2006) and Miroslav Klose (Germany, 2002–2010)
- Most consecutive matches with at least two goals
- 4, Sándor Kocsis (Hungary, 1954)
- Most hat-tricks
- 2, Sándor Kocsis (Hungary, 1954), Just Fontaine (France, 1958), Gerd Müller (West Germany, 1970) and Gabriel Batistuta (Argentina, 1994 & 1998)
- Most consecutive hat-tricks
- 2, Sándor Kocsis (Hungary, 1954) and Gerd Müller (West Germany, 1970)
- Fastest hat-trick
- 8 minutes, László Kiss (Hungary), scored at 69', 72' and 76', vs El Salvador, 1982
- Most goals scored by a substitute in a match
- 3, László Kiss (Hungary), vs El Salvador, 1982
- Olympic goals (goals from a corner) scored in a World Cup
- 1, Marcos Coll (Colombia), vs Soviet Union, 1962
- Hat-tricks from the penalty spot
- Never occurred in the final tournament, four times in qualification: Kubilay Türkyilmaz (Switzerland), vs Faroe Islands, 7 October 2000, 2002 UEFA Group 1; Henrik Larsson (Sweden), vs Moldova, 6 June 2001, 2002 UEFA Group 4; Ronaldo (Brazil), vs Argentina, 2 June 2004, 2006 CONMEBOL; Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (Gabon), vs Niger, 15 June 2013, 2014 CAF Second Round Group E
- Scoring in every match of a team in a World Cup (at least three matches)
- György Sárosi (Hungary), 5 goals in 4 matches (1938), Arne Nyberg (Sweden), 3 goals in 3 matches (1938), Alcides Ghiggia (Uruguay), 4 goals in 4 matches (1950), Just Fontaine (France), 13 goals in 6 matches (1958), Omar Oreste Corbatta (Argentina), 3 goals in 3 matches (1958), Ferenc Bene (Hungary), 4 goals in 4 matches (1966), Jairzinho (Brazil), 7 goals in 6 matches (1970), Teófilo Cubillas (Peru), 5 goals in 4 matches (1970), James Rodríguez (Colombia), 6 goals in 5 matches (2014)
- Most tournaments with at least one goal
- 4, Pelé (Brazil, 1958–1970), Uwe Seeler (West Germany, 1958–1970), Miroslav Klose (Germany, 2002–2014) and Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal, 2006–2018)
- Most tournaments with at least two goals
- 4, Uwe Seeler (West Germany, 1958–1970) and Miroslav Klose (Germany, 2002–2014)
- Most tournaments with at least three goals
- 3, Jürgen Klinsmann (Germany, 1990–1998), Ronaldo (Brazil, 1998–2006) and Miroslav Klose (Germany, 2002–2010)
- Most tournaments with at least four goals
- 3, Miroslav Klose (Germany, 2002–2010)
- Most tournaments with at least five goals
- 2, Teófilo Cubillas (Peru, 1970, 1978), Miroslav Klose (Germany), (2002–2006) and Thomas Müller (Germany, 2010–2014)
- Most qualification tournaments with at least one goal
- 5, Rafael Márquez (Mexico, 2002–2018) and Carlos Ruiz (Guatemala, 2002–2018)
- Longest period between a player's first and last goals overall
- 12 years, Uwe Seeler (West Germany, 8 June 1958 – 14 June 1970), Pelé (Brazil, 19 June 1958 – 21 June 1970), Diego Maradona (Argentina, 18 June 1982 – 21 June 1994), Michael Laudrup (Denmark, 8 June 1986 – 24 June 1998), Henrik Larsson (Sweden, 16 July 1994 – 20 June 2006), Sami Al-Jaber (Saudi Arabia, 25 June 1994 – 14 June 2006), Cuauhtémoc Blanco (Mexico, 20 June 1998 – 17 June 2010), Miroslav Klose (Germany, 1 June 2002 – 8 July 2014), Ivica Olić (Croatia, 8 June 2002 – 18 June 2014), Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal, 17 June 2006 – 20 June 2018) and Lionel Messi (Argentina 16 June 2006 – 26 June 2018)
- Longest period between successive goals
- 12 years, Michael Laudrup (Denmark, 1986–1998) and Ivica Olić (Croatia, 2002–2014)
- First goalscorer
- Lucien Laurent (France), vs Mexico, 13 July 1930
- Youngest goalscorer
- 17 years, 239 days, Pelé (Brazil), vs Wales, 19 June 1958
- Youngest hat-trick scorer
- 17 years, 244 days, Pelé (Brazil), vs France, 24 June 1958
- Youngest goalscorer, final
- 17 years, 249 days, Pelé (Brazil), vs Sweden, 29 June 1958
- Oldest goalscorer
- 42 years, 39 days, Roger Milla (Cameroon), vs Russia, 28 June 1994
- Oldest hat-trick scorer
- 33 years, 130 days, Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal), vs Spain, 15 June 2018
- Oldest goalscorer, final
- 35 years, 264 days, Nils Liedholm (Sweden), vs Brazil, 29 June 1958
- Only player to score in his teens, his twenties and his thirties
- Lionel Messi (Argentina) (2006, 2014, and 2018)[9][10]
- Most penalties scored (excluding shoot-outs)
- 4, Eusébio (Portugal, 4 in 1966), Rob Rensenbrink (Netherlands, 4 in 1978) – both records for one tournament – and Gabriel Batistuta (Argentina, 2 each in 1994 and 1998)
- Most penalties missed (excluding during shoot-outs)
- 2, Asamoah Gyan (Ghana), vs Czech Republic, 2006 and vs Uruguay, 2010
- First substitute winning goalscorer, final
- Came on 86th minute, Mario Götze (Germany), vs Argentina, 2014
- Fastest goal from kick-off
- 11 seconds, Hakan Şükür (Turkey), vs South Korea, 2002
- Fastest goal by a substitute
- 16 seconds, Ebbe Sand (Denmark), vs Nigeria, 1998
- Fastest goal in a final
- 90 seconds, Johan Neeskens (Netherlands), vs West Germany, 1974 final
- Fastest goal in a qualifying match
- 8.1 seconds, Christian Benteke (Belgium), vs Gibraltar, 2018 UEFA Group H[11]
- Fastest brace scored
- 69 seconds, Toni Kroos (Germany), vs Brazil, 2014
- Latest goal in regular time
- 97th minute, Neymar (Brazil), vs Costa Rica, 2018
- Latest goal from kick-off
- 121st minute, Alessandro Del Piero (Italy), vs Germany, 2006 and Abdelmoumene Djabou (Algeria), vs Germany, 2014
- Latest goal from kick-off in a final
- 120th minute, Geoff Hurst (England), vs Germany, 1966 (see "They think it's all over")
- Latest goal from kick-off, with no goals scored between
- 119th minute, David Platt (England), vs Belgium, 1990 and Fabio Grosso (Italy), vs Germany, 2006
- Latest goal from kick-off in a final, with no goals scored between
- 116th minute, Andrés Iniesta (Spain), vs Netherlands, 2010
Own goals
Assisting
- Most assists provided, overall finals
- 10, Pelé (Brazil, 1958–1970)
- Most assists provided in a tournament
- 7, Pelé (Brazil, 1970)[12]
- Most assists provided in finals
- 3, Pelé (Brazil, 1958 and 1970)
- Most tournaments with at least one assist
- 4, Lionel Messi (Argentina, 2006-2018)[13]
- Most consecutive tournaments with at least one assist
- 4, Lionel Messi (Argentina, 2006-2018)[13]
Penalties
Penalty shoot-outs
By team
- Most played
- 5, Argentina (1990, 1990, 1998, 2006, 2014)
- Most played in one tournament
- 2, Argentina (1990), Spain (2002), Costa Rica and Netherlands (2014), Croatia and Russia (2018)
- Most won
- Most won in one tournament
- Most lost
- Most played shoot-out
Extra time
By team
- Most played
- 11, Germany (1938, 1966, 1970, 1970, 1982, 1986, 1990, 2006, 2006, 2014, 2014) and Italy (1934, 1934, 1938, 1970, 1990, 1994, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2006)
- Most tournaments playing extra time
- 8, Germany (1938, 1966, 1970, 1982, 1986, 1990, 2006, 2014) and Italy (1934, 1938, 1970, 1990, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006)
- Most consecutive tournaments playing extra time
- Most played in one tournament
- Most consecutive played in one tournament
- Most won (excluding replays and shoot-outs)
- Most lost (excluding replays and shoot-outs)
- Most won in one tournament (excluding replays and shoot-outs)
- Most consecutive won in one tournament (excluding replays and shoot-outs)
- Most played match
- Most consecutive played match
Tiebreakers
- Cases when replays were used
- 1934 quarter-finals – To determine who advanced to the semi-finals (Italy vs Spain)
- 1938 round of 16 – To determine who advanced to the quarter-finals (Switzerland vs Germany) and (Cuba vs Romania)
- 1938 quarter-finals – To determine who advanced to the semi-finals (Brazil vs Czechoslovakia)
- Cases when play-offs were used
- 1954 group stage – To determine second place in Group 2 (West Germany vs Turkey) and Group 4 (Switzerland vs Italy)
- 1958 group stage – To determine second place in Group 1 (Northern Ireland vs Czechoslovakia), Group 3 (Wales vs Hungary) and Group 4 (Soviet Union vs England)
- Cases when drawing of lots was used
- 1954 group stage – To determine first place in Group 1 (Brazil ahead of Yugoslavia) and Group 3 (Uruguay ahead of Austria)
- 1970 group stage – To determine first place in Group 1 (Soviet Union ahead of Mexico)
- 1990 group stage – To determine second place (Republic of Ireland) and third place (Netherlands) in Group F
- Cases when fair play was used
- 2018 group stage – To determine second place in Group H (Japan qualified over Senegal due to having received fewer yellow cards)
Goalkeeping
- Most clean sheets (matches without conceding)
- 10, Peter Shilton (England, 1982–1990) and Fabien Barthez (France, 1998–2006)[4]
- Most consecutive minutes without conceding a goal (finals)
- 517 mins (5 consecutive clean sheets), Walter Zenga (Italy, 1990)
- Most consecutive minutes without conceding a goal (qualifying)
- 921 mins (9 consecutive clean sheets[lower-alpha 16]), Richard Wilson (New Zealand, 1982)
- Most goals conceded
- 25, Antonio Carbajal (Mexico) and Mohamed Al-Deayea (Saudi Arabia)
- Most goals conceded, one tournament
- 16, Hong Duk-Yung (South Korea), 1954
- Most goals conceded, one match
- 10, Luis Guevara Mora (El Salvador), 1982 (vs Hungary)
- Fewest goals conceded, one tournament, champions
- 2, Fabien Barthez (France), 1998, Gianluigi Buffon (Italy, 2006) and Iker Casillas (Spain, 2010)
- Fewest goals conceded, one tournament
- 0, Pascal Zuberbühler (Switzerland), 2006[lower-alpha 17]
- Fewest goals conceded, penalty shoot-outs, one match
- 0, Oleksandr Shovkovskyi (Ukraine), vs Switzerland, 2006
- Most saves, one match
- 16, Tim Howard (United States), vs Belgium, 2014
- Most penalties saved, one tournament (excluding during shoot-outs)
- 2, Jan Tomaszewski (Poland), 1974 and Brad Friedel (United States), 2002
- Most penalties saved overall (excluding during shoot-outs)
- 2, Jan Tomaszewski (Poland, both in 1974), Brad Friedel (United States, both in 2002), and Iker Casillas (Spain, 1 in 2002 and 1 in 2010)
- Most penalties saved in one penalty shoot-out
- 3, Ricardo (Portugal), vs England, 2006 and Danijel Subašić (Croatia), vs Denmark, 2018
- Most penalties saved overall in penalty shoot-outs
- 4, Harald Schumacher (Germany, 2 vs France in 1982 and 2 vs Mexico in 1986), Sergio Goycochea (Argentina, 2 vs Yugoslavia in 1990 and 2 vs Italy in 1990), and Danijel Subašić (Croatia, 3 vs Denmark, 2018 and 1 vs Russia, 2018)[15]
- Youngest goalkeeper
- 19 years, 191 days, Lee Chang-myung (North Korea), vs Soviet Union, 12 July 1966
- Youngest goalkeeper to save a penalty (excluding during shoot-outs)
- 21 years, 27 days, Iker Casillas (Spain), vs Republic of Ireland, 16 June 2002
- Youngest goalkeeper to save a penalty in a shoot-out
- 21 years, 27 days, Iker Casillas (Spain), vs Republic of Ireland, 16 June 2002
- Oldest goalkeeper
- 45 years, 161 days, Essam El-Hadary (Egypt), vs Saudi Arabia, 25 June 2018
- Oldest goalkeeper to save a penalty (excluding during shoot-outs)
- 45 years, 161 days, Essam El-Hadary (Egypt), vs Saudi Arabia, 25 June 2018
- Oldest goalkeeper to save a penalty in a shoot-out
- 36 years, 232 days, Jens Lehmann (Germany), vs Argentina, 30 June 2006
Coaching
- Most matches coached
- 25, Helmut Schön (West Germany, 1966–1978)
- Most matches won
- 16, Helmut Schön (West Germany, 1966–1978)
- Most tournaments won
- 2, Vittorio Pozzo (Italy, 1934–1938)
- Most tournaments
- 6, Carlos Alberto Parreira (1982, 1990–1998, 2006, 2010)
- Most nations coached
- 5, Bora Milutinović (Mexico, 1986; Costa Rica, 1990; United States, 1994; Nigeria, 1998; China, 2002), and Carlos Alberto Parreira (Kuwait, 1982; United Arab Emirates, 1990; Brazil, 1994 and 2006; Saudi Arabia, 1998, South Africa, 2010)
- Most consecutive tournaments
- 5, Bora Milutinović (Mexico, 1986; Costa Rica, 1990; United States, 1994; Nigeria, 1998; China, 2002)[16]
- Most consecutive tournaments with same team
- 4, Walter Winterbottom (England, 1950–1962); Helmut Schön (West Germany, 1966–1978) (note that Sepp Herberger took Germany/West Germany to four tournaments, (1938, 1954, 1958, 1962) omitting the 1950 competition from which Germany was banned)
- Most consecutive wins
- 11, Luiz Felipe Scolari (Brazil, 2002, 7 wins; Portugal, 2006, 4 wins – Portugal "won" its next match, the quarter-final against England, by penalty shoot-out, which technically counts as a draw)
- Most consecutive matches without a loss
- 12, Luiz Felipe Scolari (Brazil, 2002, 7 matches; Portugal, 2006, 5 matches)
- Youngest coach
- 27 years, 267 days, Juan José Tramutola (Argentina, 1930)
- Youngest coach, champions
- 31 years, 252 days, Alberto Suppici (Uruguay, 1930)
- Oldest coach
- 71 years, 317 days, Otto Rehhagel (Greece, 2010)
- Oldest coach, champions
- 59 years, 200 days, Vicente del Bosque (Spain, 2010)
- Quickest substitution made
- 4th minute, Cesare Maldini, Giuseppe Bergomi for Alessandro Nesta (Italy, vs Austria, 1998); Sven-Göran Eriksson, Peter Crouch for Michael Owen (England, vs Sweden, 2006)
- Most championship wins as player and head coach
- 3, Mário Zagallo, Brazil (1958 & 1962 as player, 1970 as coach)[lower-alpha 18]
- Most tournament appearances as player and head coach
- 5, Mário Zagallo, Brazil (1958 & 1962 as player, 1970, 1974 & 1998 as coach); Franz Beckenbauer, West Germany (1966–1974 as player, 1986 & 1990 as coach); Berti Vogts, West Germany (1970–1978 as player, 1994 & 1998 as coach); Diego Maradona, Argentina (1982–1994 as player, 2010 as coach)
- Won tournaments as both player and head coach
- Mário Zagallo, Brazil (1958 & 1962 as player, 1970 as coach), Franz Beckenbauer, West Germany (1974 as player, 1990 as coach) and Didier Deschamps, France (1998 as player, 2018 as coach)
- First World Cup player to coach a team in a World Cup
- Milorad Arsenijević, Serbia (1930 as player, 1950 as coach, both times for Yugoslavia)
- Won tournament as a foreign head coach
- No foreign coach has won a tournament (all winning head coaches were natives of the country they coached)
- Best finish for a foreign head coach
- Runners-up, George Raynor (England, coached Sweden in 1958) and Ernst Happel (Austria, coached Netherlands in 1978)
Refereeing
- Most tournaments
- 3 – John Langenus (Belgium, 1930–1938), Ivan Eklind (Sweden, 1934–1950), Benjamin Griffiths (Wales, 1950–1958), Arthur Ellis (England, 1950–1958), Juan Gardeazábal (Spain, 1958–1966), Jamal Al Sharif (Syria, 1986–1994), Joël Quiniou (France, 1986–1994), Ali Mohamed Bujsaim (United Arab Emirates, 1994–2002), Óscar Ruiz (Colombia, 2002–2010), Carlos Eugênio Simon (Brazil, 2002–2010), Marco Rodríguez (Mexico, 2006–2014), Joel Aguilar (El Salvador, 2010–2018), Ravshan Irmatov (Uzbekistan, 2010–2018)
- Most matches refereed, overall
- 11 – Ravshan Irmatov (Uzbekistan, 2010–2018)
- Most matches refereed, one tournament
- 5 – Benito Archundia (Mexico, 2006), Horacio Elizondo (Argentina, 2006), Ravshan Irmatov (Uzbekistan, 2010) and Néstor Pitana (Argentina, 2018)
- Youngest referee
- 24 years and 193 days – Juan Gardeazábal (Spain, 1958)
- Oldest referee
- 53 years and 236 days – George Reader (England, 1950)
Discipline
Note: There are no official records for cautions issued in tournaments before the introduction of yellow cards in 1970.[17]
- Fastest caution
- 11 seconds, Jesús Gallardo (Mexico), vs Sweden, 2018
- Fastest sending off
- 56 seconds, José Batista (Uruguay), vs Scotland, 1986
- Fastest sending off, qualification
- 37 seconds, Rashed Al Hooti (Bahrain), vs Iran, 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification
- Latest caution
- during penalty shoot-out: Edinho (Brazil), vs France 1986; Carlos Roa (Argentina), vs England, 1998
- Latest sending off
- after penalty shoot-out: Leandro Cufré (Argentina), vs Germany, 2006 (Cufré was red carded for kicking Per Mertesacker in an altercation following the match)
- Sent off from the bench
- Claudio Caniggia (Argentina), vs Sweden, 2002
- Most cards (all-time, player)
- 7, Javier Mascherano (Argentina, 2006–2018)[18]
- Most cautions (all-time, player)
- 7, Javier Mascherano (Argentina, 2006–2018)[18]
- Most sendings off (all-time, player)
- 2, Rigobert Song (Cameroon, 1994 and 1998) and Zinedine Zidane (France, 1998 and 2006)
- Most sendings off (tournament)
- 28 (in 64 games), 2006
- Most sendings off (all-time, team)
- 11 (in 97 games), Brazil
- Most sendings off (match, both teams)
- 4 (2 each) in Portugal vs Netherlands, 2006 (also known as Battle of Nuremberg)
- Most sendings off (final match)
- 2, Pedro Monzón & Gustavo Dezotti (both Argentina), v West Germany, 1990
- Most cautions (tournament)
- 345 (in 64 matches), 2006
- Most cautions (all-time, team)
- 88 (in 64 games until 2006), Argentina[19]
- Most cautions (match, one team)
- 9, Portugal, 2006, vs Netherlands & Netherlands, 2010, vs Spain
- Most cautions (match, both teams)
- 16 – Portugal vs Netherlands, June 25, 2006;[20] and Cameroon v Germany, June 11, 2002[21]
- Most cautions (match, player)
- 3 (61', 90', 93') Josip Šimunić (Croatia), vs Australia, 2006 (referee: Graham Poll)[lower-alpha 19]
- Most cautions (final match, both teams)
- 14, 5 (Spain) and 9 (Netherlands) 2010[22]
- Most suspensions (tournament, player)
- 2, André Kana-Biyik (Cameroon 1990)[lower-alpha 20]
Suspension
Offence | Qualifying | Final Round |
---|---|---|
Doping | Many cases |
|
Misconduct |
| |
Fair Play Violation |
|
none |
Fine
Offence | Qualifying | Final Round |
---|---|---|
Doping | Many cases | |
Misconduct |
| |
Fair Play Violation | none | none |
Other | none | none |
Other sanction
Offence | Qualifying | Final Round |
---|---|---|
Doping | Many cases | none |
Misconduct |
|
none |
Fair Play Violation | Chile banned from the qualifiers for the 1994 FIFA World Cup | none |
Other | none | none |
Teams: Matches played/goals scored
All time
- Most matches played
- 109, Germany, Brazil
- Fewest matches played
- 1, Indonesia (as Dutch East Indies)
- Most wins
- 73, Brazil
- Most losses
- 27, Mexico
- Most draws
- 21, Italy, England
- Most points
- 237, Brazil
- Most average points/match
- 2.17, Brazil
- Most matches played without a point (win or a draw)
- 6, El Salvador
- Most matches played without a win
- 9, Honduras
- Most matches played until first win
- 17, Bulgaria
- Most goals scored
- 229, Brazil
- Most goalscorers
- 80, Brazil
- Most goals conceded
- 125, Germany
- Fewest goals scored
- 0, Canada, China, Indonesia (as Dutch East Indies), Trinidad and Tobago and DR Congo (as Zaire)
- Fewest goals conceded
- 2, Angola
- Best goal difference
- +124, Brazil
- Worst goal difference
- –38, Mexico
- Most matches played without scoring a goal
- 3, Canada, China, Trinidad and Tobago and DR Congo (as Zaire)
- Most matches played always conceding a goal
- 6, El Salvador
- Highest average of goals scored per match
- 2.72, Hungary (87 goals in 32 matches)
- Lowest average of goals conceded per match
- 0.67, Angola (2 goals in 3 matches)
- Highest average of goals conceded per match
- 6, Indonesia (as Dutch East Indies)
- Lowest average of goals both scored and conceded per match
- 1, Angola
- Highest average of goals both scored and conceded per match
- 6, Indonesia (as Dutch East Indies)
- Most meetings between two teams
- 7 times, Brazil vs Sweden (1938, 1950, 1958, 1978, 1990 and twice in 1994), Germany vs Yugoslavia /Serbia (1954, 1958, 1962, 1974, 1990, 1998 and 2010) and Argentina vs Germany (1958, 1966, 1986, 1990, 2006, 2010 and 2014)
- Most meetings between two teams in the knockout stage
- 5 times, Argentina vs Germany (1986 final, 1990 final, 2006 quarter-final, 2010 quarter-final and 2014 final)
- Most meetings between two teams, final-four or final (not counting 3rd place match)
- 3 times, Argentina vs Germany (1986 final, 1990 final, 2014 final), Brazil vs Sweden (1950 final group, 1958 final, 1994 semi-final), Brazil vs Italy (1938 semi-final, 1970 final, 1994 final), Germany vs Italy (1970 semi-final, 1982 final, 2006 semi-final)
- Most meetings between two teams, final match
- 3 times, Argentina vs Germany (1986, 1990, 2014)
- Most frequent matchup without a loss
- Brazil vs Sweden, 5 wins and 2 draws
- Most frequent matchup with a perfect record
- Argentina vs Nigeria, 5 wins (1994, 2002, 2010, 2014, 2018)
- Most frequent matchup in the knockout stage with a perfect record
- Brazil eliminated Chile 4 times (1962 semi-final, 1998 round of 16, 2010 round of 16 and 2014 round of 16)
- Most consecutive meetings between two teams
- 5 times, Italy vs Argentina (1974, 1978, 1982, 1986, 1990)
- Most consecutive meetings between two teams in the knockout stage
- 3 times, Germany vs Yugoslavia /Serbia (1954 quarter-final, 1958 quarter-final and 1962 quarter-final), Argentina vs Germany (2006 quarter-final, 2010 quarter-final and 2014 final)
- Most consecutive meetings between two teams, final match
- 2 times, Argentina vs Germany (1986–1990)
- Most knockout wins
- [lower-alpha 21] 35, Germany
- Most knockout losses
- [lower-alpha 22] 14, Germany
- Most tournaments unbeaten
- [lower-alpha 23] 7, Brazil (1958, 1962, 1970, 1978, 1986, 1994, 2002)
- Most tournaments eliminated without having lost a match
- [lower-alpha 23] 3, England (1982, 1990,[lower-alpha 24] 2006)
- Most tournaments eliminated without having won a match
- 6, Mexico (1930, 1950, 1954, 1958, 1966, 1978) and Bulgaria (1962, 1966, 1970, 1974, 1986, 1998)
In one tournament
- Most wins
- 7, Brazil, 2002[lower-alpha 25]
- Fewest wins, champions
- 3, Uruguay, 1950 (out of 4)[lower-alpha 26]
- Most matches not won, champions
- 3, Italy, 1982 (out of 7)
- Most wins by non-champion (excluding third-place playoff)
- [lower-alpha 27] 6, Netherlands, 2010[lower-alpha 28]
- Most matches not won
- [lower-alpha 23] 5, Yugoslavia, 1974; Argentina, 1974; West Germany, 1978; Belgium, 1986; Republic of Ireland, 1990; Argentina, 1990
- Most matches not won in regulation time
- 6, Belgium in 1986 and England in 1990
- Most losses
- 3 (28 teams, of which only Mexico has accomplished this feat at three different tournaments: 1930, 1950, and 1978)
- Most losses, champions
- 1, Germany, 1954 and 1974; Argentina, 1978; Spain, 2010
- Most victories over former World Cup winning teams
- [lower-alpha 23] 3, Brazil, 1970; Italy, 1982; Argentina, 1986; Germany, 2010 and 2014[lower-alpha 29]
- Most matches against former World Cup champions and staying unbeaten
- [lower-alpha 23] 4, Argentina, 1986[lower-alpha 30]
- Most matches between former World Cup champions
- [lower-alpha 23] 7, 1970[lower-alpha 31]
- All matches won without extra time, replays, penalty shoot-outs or playoffs
- Uruguay in 1930 (4 matches), Brazil in 1970 (6 matches), and Brazil in 2002 (7 matches)
- Highest finish without winning a match
- [lower-alpha 23] Quarter-finals, Republic of Ireland (1990)
- Highest finish, winning at most one match
- [lower-alpha 23] Fourth, Sweden (1938)[lower-alpha 32]
- Most goals scored
- 27, Hungary, 1954[lower-alpha 33]
- Fewest goals conceded
- 0, Switzerland, 2006[lower-alpha 33]
- Most goals conceded
- 16, South Korea, 1954[lower-alpha 33]
- Most matches gone into extra time
- 3, Belgium, 1986; England, 1990; Argentina, 2014; Croatia, 2018
- Most minutes without conceding a goal
- 517 mins, Italy, 1990[lower-alpha 33]
- Highest goal difference
- +17, Hungary, 1954[lower-alpha 33]
- Highest goal difference, champions
- +14, Brazil, 2002; Germany, 2014[lower-alpha 33]
- Lowest goal difference
- −16, South Korea, 1954[lower-alpha 33]
- Lowest goal difference, champions
- +6, Italy, 1938 and 1982; Spain, 2010[lower-alpha 33]
- Highest average of goals scored per match
- 5.40, Hungary, 1954;[lower-alpha 33]
- Highest average goal difference per match
- +3.2, Hungary, 1954
- Highest average goal difference per match, champions
- +3.0, Uruguay, 1930
- Most goals scored, champions
- 25, West Germany, 1954[lower-alpha 33]
- Fewest goals scored, champions
- 8, Spain, 2010[lower-alpha 33]
- Fewest goals scored, finalists
- 5, Argentina, 1990[lower-alpha 33]
- Fewest goals conceded, champions
- 2, France, 1998; Italy, 2006; Spain, 2010[lower-alpha 33]
- Most goals conceded, champions
- 14, West Germany, 1954[lower-alpha 33]
- Lowest average of goals scored per match, champions
- 1.14, Spain, 2010[lower-alpha 33]
- Most unbeaten teams
- 5, 2006 (Switzerland, Argentina, England, France, Italy)[lower-alpha 23]
- Fewest unbeaten teams
- 0, 1954
- Most matches to qualify for World Cup finals
- 22, Australia (2018)
- Longest distance travelled in a single qualifying campaign
- 155,000 miles: Australia (2018)
- Most brothers in the same team in the finals
- 3, Honduras (Johnny Palacios, Jerry Palacios, Wilson Palacios, 2010)[29]
Teams: Overall performance (winning percentage)
All time
- Best overall performance
Team | Pld | W | D | L | Win % | GF | GA | GD | GD/M | GF/M |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Uruguay (1930) | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 100 | 15 | 3 | +12 | +3.0 | 3.8 |
Brazil (1970) | 6 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 100 | 19 | 7 | +12 | +2.0 | 3.2 |
Brazil (2002) | 7 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 100 | 18 | 4 | +14 | +2.0 | 2.6 |
Italy (1938) | 4 | 4* | 0 | 0 | 100 | 11 | 5 | +6 | +1.5 | 2.8 |
* one of the wins was after extra time
- Worst overall performance
- Because a large number of teams have had lost all their matches in a World Cup, only teams with a goal difference/match <= −4.0 are included.
Team | Pld | W | D | L | Win % | GF | GA | GD | GD/M | GF/M |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
South Korea (1954) | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 16 | −16 | −8.0 | 0.0 |
Bolivia (1950) | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 8 | −8 | −8.0 | 0.0 |
Dutch East Indies (1938) | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 6 | −6 | −6.0 | 0.0 |
United States (1934) | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 7 | −6 | −6.0 | 1.0 |
Zaire (1974) | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 14 | −14 | −4.7 | 0.0 |
Saudi Arabia (2002) | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 12 | −12 | −4.0 | 0.0 |
Bolivia (1930) | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 8 | −8 | −4.0 | 0.0 |
Scotland (1954) | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 8 | −8 | −4.0 | 0.0 |
El Salvador (1982) | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 13 | −12 | −4.0 | 0.3 |
Haiti (1974) | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 14 | −12 | −4.0 | 0.7 |
Host team
- Best overall performance
Team | Pld | W | D | L | Win % | GF | GA | GD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Uruguay (1930) | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 100 | 15 | 3 | +12 |
- Worst overall performance
Team | Pld | W | D | L | Win % | GF | GA | GD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Spain (1982) | 5 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 20 | 4 | 5 | −1 |
Defending champion
- Best overall performance
Team | Pld | W | D | L | Win % | GF | GA | GD | GD/M | GF/M |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Italy (1938) | 4 | 4* | 0 | 0 | 100 | 11 | 5 | +6 | +1.5 | 2.8 |
* one of the wins was after extra time
- Worst overall performance
Team | Pld | W | D | L | Win % | GF | GA | GD | GD/M | GF/M |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
France (2002) | 3 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 3 | −3 | −1.0 | 0.0 |
Champion
- Best overall performance
- see all-time best overall performance above
- Worst overall performance
Team | Pld | W | D | L | Win % | GF | GA | GD | GD/M | GF/M |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Italy (1982) | 7 | 4 | 3 | 0 | 57 | 12 | 6 | +6 | +0.9 | +1.7 |
* one of the wins was after extra time
Non-champion
- Best overall performance
Team | Pld | W | D | L | Win % | GF | GA | GD | GD/M | GF/M |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Italy (1990) | 7 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 86 | 10 | 2 | +8 | +1.1 | +1.4 |
- Worst overall performance
- see all-time worst overall performance above
Upsets
Teams eliminated by penalty shoot-outs are not considered as defeated.
- Biggest upset in the group stage, per FIFA rankings
- +74 – South Africa (2010) ranked 83 – won 2–1 over France (ranked 9)
- Biggest upset in the knockout stage, per FIFA rankings
- +34 – South Korea (2002) ranked 40 – won 2–1 over Italy (ranked 6)[lower-alpha 34]
- Biggest upset of a former champion, per FIFA rankings
- +74 – South Africa (2010) ranked 83 – won 2–1 over France (ranked 9)
- Biggest upset of a defending champion, per FIFA rankings
- +56 – South Korea (2018) ranked 57 – won 2–0 over Germany (ranked 1)
- Biggest upset of a top ranked team, per FIFA rankings
- +56 – South Korea (2018) ranked 57 – won 2–0 over Germany (ranked 1):-0- Senegal (2002) ranked 48- won 1-0 over France (ranked 1)
Continental Records
- Biggest upset by an African team, per FIFA rankings
- +74 – South Africa (2010) ranked 83 – won 2–1 over France (ranked 9)
- Biggest upset by an Asian team, per FIFA rankings
- +56 – South Korea (2018) ranked 57 – won 2–0 over Germany (ranked 1)
- Biggest upset by a European team, per FIFA rankings
- +29 – Slovakia (2010) ranked 34 – won 3–2 over Italy (ranked 5)
- Biggest upset by an Oceanian team, per FIFA rankings
- +24 – Australia (2006) ranked 42 – won 3–1 over Japan (ranked 18)
- Biggest upset by a North American team, per FIFA rankings
- +21 – Costa Rica (2014) ranked 28 – won 3–1 over Uruguay (ranked 7)
- Biggest upset by a South American team, per FIFA rankings
- +15 – Ecuador (2002) ranked 36 – won 1–0 over Croatia (ranked 21)
Hat-tricks
Streaks
- Most consecutive successful qualification attempts
- [lower-alpha 35] 9, Spain (1986–2018)
- Most consecutive failed qualification attempts
- 20, Luxembourg (1934–2018)
- Most consecutive wins
- 11, Brazil, from 2–1 Turkey (2002) to 3–0 Ghana (2006)
- Most consecutive matches without a loss
- 13, Brazil, from 3–0 Austria (1958) (group stage) to 2–0 Bulgaria (1966) (group stage)
- Most consecutive losses
- 9, Mexico, from 1–4 France (1930) to 0–3 Sweden (1958)
- Most consecutive matches without a win
- 17, Bulgaria, from 0–1 Argentina (1962) to 0–3 Nigeria (1994)
- Most consecutive draws
- 5, Belgium, from 0–0 Netherlands (1998) to 1–1 Tunisia (2002)
- Most consecutive matches without a draw
- 16, Portugal, from 3–1 Hungary (1966) to 1–0 Netherlands (2006)
- Most consecutive matches scoring at least one goal
- 18, Brazil (1930–1958) and Germany (1934–1958)
- Most consecutive matches scoring at least two goals
- 11, Uruguay (1930–1954)
- Most consecutive matches scoring at least three / four goals
- 4, Uruguay (1930–1950) and Hungary (1954) (four goals); also Portugal (1966), West Germany (1970), Brazil (1970)
- Most consecutive matches scoring at least six / eight goals
- 2, Hungary (1954) (eight goals); also Brazil (1950) (six goals)
- Most consecutive matches without scoring a goal
- 5, Bolivia (1930, 1950 and 1994), Algeria (1986 and 2010), and Honduras (1982 and 2010–2014)
- Most consecutive matches without conceding a goal (clean sheets)
- 5, Italy (1990) and Switzerland (2006–2010)
- Most consecutive minutes without conceding a goal
- 559, Switzerland (1994, 2006–2010)[30][31]
- Most consecutive matches conceding at least one goal
- 22, Switzerland (1934–1994)
- Most consecutive matches conceding at least two goals
- 9, Mexico (1930–1958)
- Most consecutive matches conceding at least three goals
- 5, Mexico (1930–1950)
- Most consecutive matches conceding at least four goals
- 3, Bolivia (1930–1950), Mexico (1930–1950)
- Most consecutive matches conceding at least five / six / seven goals
- 2, South Korea (1954) (seven goals); also United States (1930–1934) (six goals); also Austria (1954) (five goals)
Team
- Biggest margin of victory
- 9, Hungary 9–0 South Korea, 1954; Yugoslavia 9–0 Zaire, 1974 and Hungary 10–1 El Salvador, 1982
- Biggest margin of victory, qualifying match
- 31, Australia 31–0 American Samoa, April 11, 2001, 2002 OFC Group 1
- Most goals scored in a match, one team
- 10, Hungary 10–1 El Salvador, 1982
- Most goals scored in a match, both teams
- 12, Austria 7–5 Switzerland, 1954
- Highest scoring draw
- 4–4, England vs Belgium (a.e.t.), 1954, and Soviet Union vs Colombia, 1962
- Largest deficit overcome in a win
- 3 goals, Austria, 1954 (coming from 0–3 down to win 7–5 vs Switzerland) and Portugal, 1966 (coming from 0–3 down to win 5–3 vs North Korea)
- Largest deficit overcome in a draw
- 3 goals, Colombia, 1962 (coming from 0–3 down to draw 4–4 vs Soviet Union) and Uruguay, 2002 (coming from 0–3 down to draw 3–3 vs Senegal)
- Most goals scored in extra time, both teams
- 5, Italy 3–2 West Germany, 1970
- Most goals scored in a final, one team
- 5, Brazil, 1958
- Most goals scored in a final, both teams
- 7, Brazil 5–2 Sweden, 1958
- Fewest goals scored in a final, both teams
- 0, Brazil 0–0 Italy, 1994
- Biggest margin of victory in a final
- 3, Brazil 5–2 Sweden, 1958, Brazil 4–1 Italy, 1970, and France 3–0 Brazil, 1998
- Largest deficit overcome in a win in a final
- 2, West Germany, 1954 (coming from 0–2 down to win 3–2 vs Hungary)
- Most goals in a tournament, one team
- 27, Hungary, 1954
- Most individual goalscorers for one team, one match
- 7, Yugoslavia, vs Zaire, 1974 (Dušan Bajević, Dragan Džajić, Ivica Šurjak, Josip Katalinski, Vladislav Bogićević, Branko Oblak, Ilija Petković)
- Most individual goalscorers for one team, one tournament
- 11, incl. an own goal by an opponent, Belgium, 2018 (Michy Batshuayi, Nacer Chadli, Kevin De Bruyne, Marouane Fellaini, Eden Hazard, Adnan Januzaj, Romelu Lukaku, Dries Mertens, Thomas Meunier, Jan Vertonghen, and an own goal by Brazil's Fernandinho)[lower-alpha 36]
- Largest goal difference improvement in consecutive matches
- [lower-alpha 37] +10: Turkey (1954) – lost 1–4 to West Germany, then won 7–0 over South Korea; and West Germany (1954) – lost 8–3 to Hungary, then won 7–2 over Turkey
- Largest goal difference worsening in consecutive matches
- −12: Sweden (1938) – won 8–0 over Cuba, then lost 5–1 to Hungary; Turkey (1954) – won 7–0 over South Korea, then lost 7–2 to West Germany; Hungary (1982) – won 10–1 over El Salvador, then lost 1–4 to Argentina
Tournament
- Most goals scored in a tournament
- 171 goals, 1998 and 2014
- Fewest goals scored in a tournament
- 70 goals, 1930 and 1934
- Most goals per match in a tournament
- 5.38 goals per match, 1954
- Fewest goals per match in a tournament
- 2.21 goals per match, 1990
- Most matches without a scoreless draw
- 63 matches, 2018
- Most consecutive matches without a scoreless draw
- 36 matches, 2018
- Most knockout matches without a scoreless draw
- 16 matches, 2018
- Most scorers in a tournament
- 122, 2018
- Most players scoring at least two goals in a tournament
- 37, 1998
- Most players scoring at least three goals in a tournament
- 21, 1954
- Most players scoring at least four goals in a tournament
- 11, 1954
- Most players scoring at least five goals in a tournament
- 6, 1994 - Hristo Stoichkov (Bulgaria), Oleg Salenko (Russia), Romário (Brazil), Jürgen Klinsmann (Germany), Roberto Baggio (Italy) and Kennet Andersson (Sweden)
- Most players scoring at least six goals in a tournament
- 4, 1954 - Sándor Kocsis (Hungary), Erich Probst (Austria), Max Morlock (West Germany) and Josef Hügi (Switzerland)
- Most players scoring at least seven goals in a tournament
- 2, 1970 - Gerd Müller (West Germany) and Jairzinho (Brazil)
- Longest distance covered by a player in a tournament
- 84 km, 2014 - Thomas Müller (Germany)[32]
Top scoring teams by tournament
- 1930: Argentina, 18 goals
- 1934: Italy, 12 goals
- 1938: Hungary, 15 goals
- 1950: Brazil, 22 goals
- 1954: Hungary, 27 goals
- 1958: France, 23 goals
- 1962: Brazil, 14 goals
- 1966: Portugal, 17 goals
- 1970: Brazil, 19 goals
- 1974: Poland, 16 goals
- 1978: Argentina & Netherlands, 15 goals each
- 1982: France, 16 goals
- 1986: Argentina, 14 goals
- 1990: West Germany, 15 goals
- 1994: Sweden, 15 goals
- 1998: France, 15 goals
- 2002: Brazil, 18 goals
- 2006: Germany, 14 goals
- 2010: Germany, 16 goals
- 2014: Germany, 18 goals
- 2018: Belgium, 16 goals
Teams listed in bold won the tournament. Fewer than half of all World Cup tournaments have been won by the highest scoring team.
Goal scoring by tournament
- 1930: 70 goals in 18 matches (15 group matches, 3 knockout matches). 3.89 goals per game (gpg)
- 1934: 70 goals in 17 matches (15 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off, 1 replay). 4.67 gpg
- 1938: 84 goals in 18 matches (14 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off, 3 replays). 3.56 gpg
- 1950: 88 goals in 22 matches (22 group matches). 4 gpg
- 1954: 140 goals in 26 matches (16 group matches, 7 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off, 2 progress play-offs). 5.38 gpg
- 1958: 126 goals in 35 matches (24 group matches, 7 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off, 3 progress play-offs). 3.6 gpg
- 1962: 89 goals in 32 matches (24 group matches, 7 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.78 gpg
- 1966: 89 goals in 32 matches (24 group matches, 7 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.78 gpg
- 1970: 95 goals in 32 matches (24 group matches, 7 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off) 3.96 gpg
- 1974: 97 goals in 38 matches (36 group matches, 1 final, 1 third place play-off). 2.55 gpg
- 1978: 102 goals in 38 matches (36 group matches, 1 final, 1 third place play-off). 2.68 gpg
- 1982: 146 goals in 52 matches (48 group matches, 3 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.81 gpg
- 1986: 132 goals in 52 matches (36 group matches, 15 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.54 gpg
- 1990: 115 goals in 52 matches (36 group matches, 15 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.21 gpg
- 1994: 141 goals in 52 matches (36 group matches, 15 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.71 gpg
- 1998: 171 goals in 64 matches (48 group matches, 15 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.67 gpg
- 2002: 161 goals in 64 matches (48 group matches, 15 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.52 gpg
- 2006: 147 goals in 64 matches (48 group matches, 15 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.3 gpg
- 2010: 145 goals in 64 matches (48 group matches, 15 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.27 gpg
- 2014: 171 goals in 64 matches (48 group matches, 15 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.67 gpg
- 2018: 169 goals in 64 matches (48 group matches, 15 knockout matches, 1 third place play-off). 2.64 gpg
Host records
- Most times hosted
- 2, Mexico, 1970 and 1986; Italy, 1934 and 1990; France, 1938 and 1998; Germany, 1974 and 2006; Brazil, 1950 and 2014
- Most times hosted, continent
- 11, Europe (1934, 1938, 1954, 1958, 1966, 1974, 1982, 1990, 1998, 2006, 2018)
- Best performance by host
- Winners, 6 times: Uruguay, 1930; Italy, 1934; England, 1966; West Germany, 1974; Argentina, 1978; France, 1998
- Worst performance by host
- South Africa in 2010 became the first host to be eliminated in the first round[33] Two other hosts: United States in 1994 and Spain in 1982 both reached the second round but finished with a worse overall W–D–L record than South Africa's, 1–1–1. However, South Africa had a worse goal difference of −2 and both United States and Spain finished the first round with a goal difference of 0.
- Had its best performance as hosts
- Champions: Uruguay (1930), Italy (1934), England (1966),[lower-alpha 38] West Germany (1974), Argentina (1978), France (1998)[34][35]
Runners-up: Sweden (1958)
Third place: Chile (1962)
Fourth place: South Korea (2002)
Quarter-finals: Switzerland (1954),[lower-alpha 39] Mexico (1970, 1986), Russia (2018)[lower-alpha 40]
Round of 16: Japan (2002)[lower-alpha 41]
Group stage of 32: South Africa (2010)[lower-alpha 42] - Stadium to host most World Cup matches
- Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico, 19 (10 in 1970 and 9 in 1986)
- Most times a stadium hosted a World Cup final
- 2, Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico (1970 and 1986) and Maracanã, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (1950 and 2014)
- City to host most World Cup matches
- Mexico City, Mexico, 23 (19 at Estadio Azteca and 4 at Estadio Olimpico Universitario)
- Most times a city hosted a World Cup final
- 2, Mexico City, Mexico (1970 and 1986); Rome, Italy (1934 and 1990); Paris, France (1938 and 1998); Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (1950 and 2014)
Attendance
- Final
- 114,600, Argentina v West Germany, 29 June 1986, Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico, 1986
- Decisive match
- 199,854, Uruguay v Brazil, 16 July 1950, Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1950[lower-alpha 43]
- Lowest match attendance in a World Cup tournament
- 300, Romania vs Peru, 14 July 1930, Estadio Pocitos, Montevideo, Uruguay, 1930
- Highest match attendance in a World Cup qualifying match
- 162,764, Brazil vs Colombia, 9 March 1977, Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1978 CONMEBOL Group 1
- Highest average of attendance per match
- 68,991, 1994
- Highest attendance (tournament)
- 3,570,000, 1994
- Lowest average of attendance per match
- 23,235, 1934
- Lowest attendance (tournament)
- 390,000, 1934
Others
- Most players provided by a club overall
- 128, Juventus[36]
- Most players provided by a club in one tournament
- 16, Seoul Army Club (1954),[37] Manchester City (2018)[7]
- Most players provided by a club for champions squads overall
- 25 (22 Italians), Juventus[38]
- Most players provided by a football association overall
- 1022, Premier League[36]
- Most players provided by a football association in one tournament
- 117, The Football Association (2010)
- Most players provided by a football association for champions squads overall
- 91, Serie A
Footnotes
- In the 1930, 1950 and 1982 competitions, FIFA retrospective rankings were used to determine 5th-8th places. If these rankings are excluded from consideration, then Brazil's 1930 and 1982 results drop out, and the leader is Germany with 17 (all tournaments except 1930, 1938, 1950 and 2018).
- In the 1930, 1950 and 1982 competitions, FIFA retrospective rankings were used. If these rankings are excluded from consideration, then England still has the most 5th-8th-place finishes (6).
- In the 1930, 1950 and 1982 competitions, FIFA retrospective rankings were used. If these rankings are excluded from consideration, then Mexico still has the most 9th-16th-place finishes (12).
- Until 1978 inclusive, all tournaments had 16 teams or fewer.
- In the 1930, 1950 and 1982 competitions FIFA retrospective rankings were used. If these rankings are excluded from consideration, then the record is 2, shared by several countries: Switzerland (1934–1938), Yugoslavia (1954–1958), Soviet Union (1958–1962), Hungary (1962–1966), Germany (1994–1998), England (2002–2006), Argentina (2006–2010), and Brazil (2006–2010).
- Turkey had a gap of 12 tournaments, equal to that of Egypt and Norway, from 1954 to 2002.
- In 1954, the West Germany ("Germany FR") team became world champions in what was the team's debut appearance representing the name and territory of West Germany. However, Germany (since 1949 officially Federal Republic of Germany) is since 1904 represented by the same governing body (Deutscher Fußball-Bund, DFB), and FIFA officially attributes all international results of the DFB team since 1908 to Germany, including the results of 1954–1990, when the team was often called West Germany. Thus, the 1954 participation is counted as the third appearance of the team, as Germany had previously appeared in the 1934 and 1938 World Cups.
- Other teams never progressing from the first round in at least two appearances are as follows: 5 appearances Tunisia (1978, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2018) and Iran (1978, 1998, 2006, 2014, 2018); 3 appearances Bolivia (1930, 1950, 1994), South Africa (1998, 2002, 2010), Honduras (1982, 2010, 2014), Ivory Coast (2006, 2010, 2014) and Egypt (1934, 1990, 2018); 2 appearances El Salvador (1970, 1982), New Zealand (1982, 2010) and Slovenia (2002, 2010).
- Although France did not lose any of their three games in 2006, they were runners-up after losing a penalty shoot-out against Italy. The match ended in a 1-1 draw.
- Although there were no semi-finals in the 1978 tournament, Argentina won second round group ahead of Brazil, who played in the third-place match against Italy; Argentina's second group round match against Brazil ended in a 0-0 draw.
- Other teams always progressing from the first round have only appeared in one tournament each. These are Cuba (1938), Wales (1958), East Germany (1974), Ukraine (2006) and Slovakia (excluding Czechoslovakia; 2010).
- Pelé, Lothar Matthäus, Pierre Littbarski and Ronaldo each appeared three times in the squads of the teams that reached the finals, but none of them played in all three games.
- FIFA official records claim he was born in 1987, but other sources claim he was born in 1985, which would mean he was 15 years and 320 days old when he played the match.
- According to the Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation,[5] Fuad Anwar Amin of Saudi Arabia would have been the youngest captain, at 21 years & 250 days in the 1994, but the source does not specify the match in which he was captain. It is listed that the starting captain was substituted in both the match against the Netherlands and the one against Sweden, in which Amin may have been given the armband on the captains' substitutions, but this information has not been verified. In any case, Meola still is the youngest starting captain, and players who received the captain's armband during the course of the match are generally not regarded as official captains.
- This was Wilimowski's only finals match. Uniquely, he therefore averages four goals per match.
- 9 consecutive clean sheets, 5 of them away from home over 2 qualifying rounds against 5 different oppositions from 2 Confederations.
- Zuberbühler kept goal throughout every minute of Switzerland's four matches. Other keepers have kept clean sheets only playing part of their team's matches. These are: Velloso (Brazil, 1930, 1 match of 2); Pedro Benítez (Paraguay, 1930, 1 of 2); József Háda (Hungary, 1938, 1 of 4); Giuseppe Moro (Italy, 1950, 1 of 2); István Ilku (Hungary, 1958, 1 of 4); Lorenzo Buffon (Italy, 1962, 2 of 3); Rogelio Domínguez (Argentina, 1962, 1 of 3); Adán Godoy (Chile, 1962, 1 of 6); Antonio Carbajal (Mexico, 1966, 1 of 3); Horst Wolter (West Germany, 1970, 1 of 6); József Szendrei (Hungary, 1986, 1 of 3); Viktor Chanov (USSR, 1986, 1 of 4); Manuel Bento (Portugal, 1986, 1 of 3); Plamen Nikolov (Bulgaria, 1994, 45 mins of 7); Vincent Enyeama (Nigeria, 2002, 1 of 3); Rami Shaaban (Sweden, 2006, 1 of 4); Santiago Cañizares (Spain, 2006, 1 of 4).
- Zagallo was also an assistant coach when Brazil won in 1994.
- Šimunić was given three yellow cards in the match as the referee failed to send him off the pitch after the second yellow, and was only red carded after the third yellow. The original FIFA match report listed all three cautions, however was revised shortly after, with the second caution (90') not being recorded; it is unknown whether this was for consistency in the reports, or whether the caution was retrospectively overturned.
- Biyik missed the team's second game after receiving a red card in the first; and then missed their fifth game after yellow cards in the third and fourth. Others, including Zinedine Zidane in 2006, have earned a second suspension in their team's final match of the tournament, not servable during the tournament.
- Including penalty shoot-out progressions
- Including penalty shoot-out eliminations
- A match decided by a penalty shoot-out is considered a draw for both sides.
- England did lose the third-place playoff in 1990, but had already been eliminated from any chance of winning the World Cup.
- In 1998, France had 6 match wins; however, the Italy match is regarded as drawn although France progressed via penalties. In addition, France's win against Paraguay happened after extra time, while Brazil won all their matches in regular time.
- Uruguay also qualified for the 1950 finals without playing a match as a result of withdrawals by other teams in South America.
- Poland in 1974, Italy in 1990, and Belgium in 2018 also won 6 matches, but one of them was the third-place playoff. Playing fewer matches, Argentina in 1930, Czechoslovakia in 1934, and Hungary in 1938 and 1954 won all the games but lost the final.
- Netherlands also won all eight of their qualification matches.
- Details as follows: Brazil in 1970 beat England (first round), Uruguay (semi-final) and Italy (final). Italy in 1982 beat Argentina (second group stage), Brazil (second group stage) and West Germany (final). Argentina in 1986 beat Uruguay (round of 16), England (quarter-final), and West Germany (final). Germany in 2010 beat England (round of 16), Argentina (quarter-final) and Uruguay (third-place match). In 2014, Germany beat France (quarter-final), Brazil (semi-final) and Argentina (final).
- Excluding Argentina themselves, there were 5 former World Cup champions in 1986. They draw Italy at group stage, then beat Uruguay (round of 16), England (quarter-final), and West Germany (final).
- Even though only five nations were crowned before 1970, the 1970 tournament obtained the most matches between former champions of totally. All five former champions qualified to the tournament, they all advanced to the knockout stage, and 4 of them advanced into semi-finals. Those seven matches were: Italy vs Uruguay and Brazil vs England (group stage), England vs West Germany (quarter-final), Brazil vs Uruguay and Italy vs West Germany (semi-final), Uruguay vs West Germany (third place), Brazil vs Italy (final).
- Sweden progressed to the last eight without playing a single match as a result of the withdrawal of Austria.
- Successful kicks in a penalty shoot-out are not counted as goals (but penalties scored in the normal course of play are counted).
- If penalty shoot-outs are considered, then the biggest knockout stage upset is Russia (ranked 70) winning over Spain (ranked 10) on penalties in the 2018 Round of 16.
- Excluding automatic qualification as hosts, as reigning champion, or by invitation.
- If own goals are excluded, then Belgium shares the record of 10 goalscorers with France in 1982 and Italy in 2006.
- Matches within one tournament. Otherwise, Hungary had a +11 swing between 2–4 v Italy in 1938 and 9–0 v South Korea in 1954; and again between 1–3 v France in 1978 and 10–1 v El Salvador in 1982; and likewise Germany between 0–3 v Croatia in 1998 and 8–0 v Saudi Arabia in 2002.
- Also had its only title at home.
- Switzerland's best position, the sixth place in 1950, relies on retrospective rankings, and had them eliminated in the group stage. While the Swiss also reached the quarter-finals in 1934 and 1938, both tournaments only required one win, in contrast to 1954's group stage format. 1954 also marked the last time Switzerland reached the top 8.
- Not counting the results as Soviet Union, who reached the semi-finals in 1966.
- Also reached this stage in 2010 and 2018.
- 2010 had hosts South Africa matching their 2002 record, falling in the group stage with one win, one tie and one draw, even if with a lower goal difference.
- Although the decisive match of the 1950 tournament, it was simply the last game of a final four-team group format to decide the winner. This is also the highest attendance for any World Cup match, or indeed any soccer match anywhere.
References
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- Yoesting, Travis (3 May 2018). "The Greatest Men's World Cup Records Of All Time". The18. Archived from the original on 16 July 2018. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
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[...] records of player discipline prior to the advent of yellow and red cards may not be complete.
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Small consolation but the Swiss set a new World Cup record of 559 minutes played without scoring a goal, to overtake Italy's mark of 550 minutes.
- "Attacking excellence, defensive distinction". FIFA.com. FIFA. 21 June 2010. Archived from the original on 25 June 2010. Retrieved 22 June 2010.
9 hours and 19 minutes without conceding a goal enabled Switzerland to set a new and impressive FIFA World Cup record today. The Swiss, who started the day in third place behind Italy (550 minutes) and England (501), rose to the No1 position midway through the second half, but only had eight minutes to savour their new status. That was when Chile's Mark Gonzalez became the first player to score against the Helvetians since Spain's Txiki Beguiristain at USA 1994.
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External links
- FIFA World Cup Superlatives at the Wayback Machine (archived 14 June 2010)
- FIFA World Cup biggest margin victories at the Wayback Machine (archived 16 June 2010)
- FIFA competitions biggest crowds at the Wayback Machine (archived 16 June 2010)
- The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF)
- (in German) Statistics and records at Worldcupportal.de