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Lionel Messi scored a historic hat‑trick against Algeria in Argentina’s 2026 World Cup opener at the Kansas City Stadium, tying Miroslav Klose as the competition’s all‑time leading scorer with 16 goals, Afrik Foot reports.
The Argentine captain, just a week shy of his 29th birthday, became the oldest player ever to net a World Cup hat‑trick and the first to score in five different editions of the tournament.
Messi’s connection with Nigeria at the World Cup began in 2010 in South Africa, when Super Eagles goalkeeper Vincent Enyeama delivered one of the tournament’s most memorable goal‑keeping performances, denying the then‑Barcelona star four times.
Goalkeeper Vincent Enyeama saved a free kick from Lionel Messi. Copyright: ImagoFour years later in Brazil, Messi turned the tables. In Argentina’s final group‑stage match against the Super Eagles in 2014, he struck a shot into the roof of the net to break the deadlock, finally overcoming the Enyeama curse, before adding a curled free‑kick that the goalkeeper didn’t even attempt to stop, turning away in frustration after his wall failed to do its job.
How Super Eagles played a key role in Messi’s World Cup record
Messi entered the 2026 World Cup with 13 goals, three shy of Klose’s record of 16 set across four tournaments between 2002 and 2014.
Against Algeria, he fired Argentina into the lead in the 17th minute before capitalising on a goalkeeper error to complete his brace, then curling into the bottom corner to seal a historic first‑career World Cup hat‑trick.
The Super Eagles’ fingerprints are all over the journey that brought him to that moment.
Lionel Messi and Vincent Enyeama in Nigeria’s World Cup game in 2014. Copyright: ImagoJavierxGarciaxMartino / Photogamma.The Super Eagles’ fingerprints are all over the journey that brought him to that moment under the Kansas City lights.
Of Messi’s 13 goals heading into the 2026 tournament, three—his fourth, fifth, and sixth World Cup strikes—came directly against Nigeria in the 2014 and 2018 tournaments.
Without those goals against the Super Eagles, Messi would have arrived at this World Cup needing six goals to equal Klose, not three.
Argentina Lionel Messi. Photo by: Imagoxwalid Ibrahim/JNA PressIn a cruel twist of irony, the Super Eagles were not even in North America to witness the milestone they helped create.
Nigeria failed to qualify for the 2026 World Cup, falling to DR Congo on penalties in the CAF playoff final after a torturous qualification campaign.
The side that once denied Messi in 2010, and then handed him three goals across 2014 and 2018, is watching from home as the man they tormented, and ultimately aided, writes his name into football history.
DR Congo, meanwhile, just scored their first‑ever World Cup goal against Portugal, courtesy of Newcastle United striker Yoane Wissa.

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