
Harry Kane has done it. Forty years after Gary Lineker wrote his name into English football history at the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, Kane stepped past him at MetLife Stadium, New Jersey — becoming England's all-time leading scorer at a World Cup with a goal in the 2-0 victory over Panama on 28 June 2026.
It arrived, as Kane's most important goals tend to, with a kind of quiet inevitability. England were already in control against Panama when Kane added his name to the record books, the goal sending the England end inside MetLife Stadium into the sort of noise that only a landmark moment produces. The final scoreline — 2-0 — was comfortable. The context was anything but ordinary.
According to ESPN FC, the goal took Kane's World Cup tally to a record-breaking figure that surpasses Lineker's previous England mark, a number that had stood as the benchmark for decades. The precise goal-by-goal breakdown of Kane's tally is subject to confirmation, but the record itself is not in doubt.
Lineker's World Cup goals were the stuff of English football mythology: the Golden Boot at Mexico '86, the semi-final heartbreak against West Germany in 1990, a career that made him the face of a generation. His England record at World Cups was the kind that felt permanent — the sort of number younger players grew up hearing about rather than genuinely targeting.
Kane has spent the better part of a decade dismantling that assumption. He won the Golden Boot at Russia 2018, largely on penalties, and watched England lose a semi-final. He carried the weight of a nation's expectation through Qatar 2022, missed a penalty in the quarter-final against France, and left without the goals his performances had deserved. The road to this record has not been smooth. It never is with Kane.
At 32, Kane is playing the best football of his England career in terms of pure output — and doing it on the biggest stage the sport offers. His move to Bayern Munich gave him a Champions League platform and the kind of consistent service that sharpened rather than softened his edge. That form has carried directly into this World Cup campaign.
England's 2-0 win over Panama keeps them on course in the group stage, and Kane now owns a record that no England striker — not Lineker, not Shearer, not Rooney — ever managed to claim at a World Cup. Gary Lineker, for his part, has spent years watching Kane close the gap. He looked like a man who knew this was coming.
The record is Kane's. The tournament is still live. For a player who has spent years being defined by the goals he didn't score in the biggest moments, this one lands differently — not just as a number, but as a statement about what kind of player, and what kind of England captain, he has become.
Harry Kane has done it. Forty years after Gary Lineker wrote his name into English football history at the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, Kane stepped past him at MetLife Stadium, New Jersey
Sources
ESPN FC
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“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
England got the result. They got top spot. They got the easier side of the draw. What they did not get — not even close — was a performance that made anyone watching feel remotely confident about what
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
England got the result. They got top spot. They got the easier side of the draw. What they did not get — not even close — was a performance that made anyone watching feel remotely confident about what