Lionel Messi walked off the Arrowhead Stadium turf to a standing ovation Tuesday night having done something no player has done in 23 World Cups: scored a hat trick in his opening match while simultaneously tying the all-time record for World Cup goals. With the hat trick — his first-ever on the World Cup stage — his World Cup goals total reached 16, matching the tournament record set by Germany's Miroslav Klose. He also became the first player to ever appear in six men's World Cups.
The structural implication goes beyond biography. France's Kylian Mbappé scored a brace in his opener, moving to 14 career World Cup goals — putting the two on a collision course for the record this summer. Messi is now one goal away from becoming the outright all-time leading scorer, and he was taken off at the 80th minute, meaning Argentina's coaching staff will manage his minutes carefully heading into the June 22 rematch with Austria.