Politics
A list of the 13 fastest goals in World Cup history
In the history of the World Cup, not all moments are measured by their length, but sometimes by their sheer brevity. Since the very first iteration of the tournament, early goals have served as a surprise factor capable of turning the tide of matches before the crowds have even caught their breath, turning the opening seconds into a stage for swift decisions.
According to a specialist report on the FIFA website, the goal scored by Turkey’s Hakan Şükür in the 2002 tournament stands out as the most notable example in this context, having found the net after just 11 seconds against South Korea — the fastest goal in the tournament’s history. This record has stood for more than two decades, despite significant developments in playing styles and tactical discipline.
However, the phenomenon is not a recent one, as its roots go back to the early editions of the tournament, where Germany’s Ernst Lener scored a goal after 25 seconds in the 1934 World Cup, before the feat was repeated in subsequent decades by players such as Czechoslovakia’s Václav Mašek (15 seconds — 1962) and England’s Bryan Robson (28 seconds — 1982).
As football entered the modern era, these goals did not disappear; rather, they continued at the same pace, as demonstrated by the American Clint Dempsey at the 2014 World Cup, when he scored after just 30 seconds, confirming that the element of surprise remains present despite digital analysis and tactical precision.
These goals reveal a common thread: early pressure, capitalising on defensive errors, and mental readiness from the very first moment. In World Cup matches, a single touch can be enough to completely rewrite the script, which is why the ‘start’ is sometimes more important than everything that follows.
The 13 fastest goals in World Cup history
- Hakan Şükür – 11 seconds (Turkey v South Korea) 2002
- Václav Mašek – 15 seconds (Czechoslovakia v Mexico) 1962
- Ernst Lener – 25 seconds (Germany v Austria) 1934
- Bryan Robson – 28 seconds (England v France) 1982
- Clint Dempsey – 30 seconds (USA v Ghana) 2014
- Bernard Lacombe – 31 seconds (France v Italy) 1978
- Arne Nyborg – 35 seconds (Sweden v Hungary) 1938
- Émile Finant – 35 seconds (France v Belgium) 1938
- Florian Albert (Hungary) – 50 seconds (Hungary v Bulgaria) 1962
- Tied. Adalbert Dezso (Romania) – 50 seconds (Romania v Peru) 1930
- Pak Song-jin – 50 seconds (North Korea v Portugal) 1966
- Celso Ayala – 52 seconds (Paraguay v Nigeria) 1998
- Mathias Jørgensen – 55 seconds (Denmark v Croatia) 2018
Featured image via Olympics
By Alaa Shamali
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