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The all-time soccer draft game

World Cup winners by year

Every FIFA World Cup champion from 1930 to 2022 — plus who has the most, and whether Ronaldo and Messi ever lifted one. Then draft the all-time XI and settle it.

Build the GOAT XI →The greatest players

Every World Cup winner

2022ArgentinaQatar
2018FranceRussia
2014GermanyBrazil
2010SpainSouth Africa
2006ItalyGermany
2002BrazilSouth Korea / Japan
1998FranceFrance
1994BrazilUnited States
1990West GermanyItaly
1986ArgentinaMexico
1982ItalySpain
1978ArgentinaArgentina
1974West GermanyWest Germany
1970BrazilMexico
1966EnglandEngland
1962BrazilChile
1958BrazilSweden
1954West GermanySwitzerland
1950UruguayBrazil
1938ItalyFrance
1934ItalyItaly
1930UruguayUruguay

Most World Cup titles

Settle the GOAT debate on the pitch

Messi has a World Cup; Ronaldo doesn’t — but the argument never really ends. Draft them into the same all-time XI and let the season decide. Play the undefeated soccer team challenge, see the greatest soccer players of all time, or read how the ratings work.

Questions people actually ask

Who has won the most World Cups?

Brazil, with five (1958, 1962, 1970, 1994, 2002). Germany (including West Germany) and Italy have four each, Argentina three, France and Uruguay two, and England and Spain one apiece.

Has Cristiano Ronaldo won a World Cup?

No. Cristiano Ronaldo has played in five World Cups for Portugal (2006–2022); his best finish was fourth place in 2006. He has won the European Championship (2016) and the Nations League (2019), but never the World Cup.

Has Lionel Messi won a World Cup?

Yes. Lionel Messi won the 2022 World Cup with Argentina in Qatar, scoring twice in the final against France and taking the Golden Ball as the tournament’s best player — the title that settled much of the GOAT debate in his favour.

Who won the last World Cup?

Argentina won the 2022 World Cup, beating France on penalties after a 3–3 final — one of the greatest finals ever played.

Where is the next World Cup?

The 2026 World Cup is hosted across the United States, Canada and Mexico — the first 48-team edition. The 2030 tournament is a centenary edition shared by Spain, Portugal and Morocco, with opening matches in Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay.