1. Diego Maradona, Argentina (1986)
This is the benchmark, the one-man show against which all others are measured. In Mexico ’86, Diego Maradona wasn't just Argentina’s best player; he was their force of nature, their divine inspiration,
and their street-smart hustler all rolled into one. He scored or assisted 10 of Argentina’s 14 goals, but his legacy was sealed in 240 seconds of the quarter-final against England. First, the infamous “Hand of God,” a mischievous punch over the goalkeeper that he cheekily credited to divinity. Then, just four minutes later, he delivered the “Goal of the Century.” Picking the ball up in his own half, he slalomed through half the English team with the ball glued to his foot before slotting it home. It was the perfect encapsulation of Maradona: the devil and the angel, the cheat and the genius. He was simply unstoppable, dragging a solid but unspectacular Argentina side to glory.
2. Pelé, Brazil (1958)
Before he was the global icon known by one name, he was Edson Arantes do Nascimento, a 17-year-old unknownquantity recovering from a knee injury. He didn’t even play Brazil's first two games. Then, the knockout stages began, and a king was born. Pelé scored the lone goal in the quarter-final against Wales. He then dropped a stunning second-half hat-trick on France in the semi-final. But his masterpiece was the final against host nation Sweden. He announced his genius by flicking the ball over a defender's head in the box, volleying it home, and then sealed the 5-2 win with a looping header. The images of the teenage prodigy weeping with joy on his teammate’s shoulder became iconic. It wasn't just a win; it was the arrival of football’s first global superstar and the start of Brazil's long love affair with the World Cup trophy.
3. Paolo Rossi, Italy (1982)
This is the ultimate redemption story. Paolo Rossi entered the 1982 World Cup in Spain as a pariah. He had just returned from a two-year ban for his alleged involvement in a betting scandal and was woefully out of form. The Italian press savaged him and the coach for picking him. Through the first four games, he was invisible, and Italy looked uninspired. Then came the decisive second-round match against Brazil, a magical team considered one of the greatest never to win the cup. Rossi exploded. He scored a hat-trick to secure a legendary 3-2 victory. The floodgates were open. He scored both goals in the 2-0 semi-final win over Poland. And, inevitably, he scored the opening goal in the final against West Germany. In the span of three games, Rossi went from national disgrace to national hero, securing the Golden Boot and the Ballon d'Or in the process.
4. Zinedine Zidane, France (2006)
This wasn’t a coronation; it was a tragic opera. Zinedine Zidane, the maestro of his generation, had retired from international football but was lured back for one last campaign. In the group stage, France looked old and slow. But once the knockouts began, 'Zizou' decided he wasn't going home. He put on a masterclass of control and vision to dismantle Spain. Against Brazil, he delivered one of the great individual performances, a ballet of flicks and turns that left the defending champions mesmerized. He scored the decisive penalty against Portugal to reach the final. There, he gave France the lead with an audacious Panenka penalty. For 110 minutes, he was authoring the perfect farewell. Then, it all unraveled with the most infamous headbutt in sports history. His violent exit was shocking, but it didn't erase the genius that preceded it; it just sealed his story in a shroud of myth and tragedy.
5. Lionel Messi, Argentina (2022)
For nearly two decades, Lionel Messi’s career had one glaring hole: a World Cup title. He’d won everything else, but the ultimate prize remained elusive. The 2022 tournament in Qatar was billed as his last dance, the final chance to complete football. After a shocking opening loss to Saudi Arabia, Messi put Argentina on his back. He scored in every single knockout game—a World Cup first. He delivered a magical assist against the Netherlands, a brilliant opening goal against Croatia, and then played the starring role in what might be the greatest final of all time against France. He scored twice and coolly converted his penalty in the shootout. This wasn't the explosive, youthful dominance of Maradona. It was the work of a master craftsman using every ounce of his experience, grit, and enduring genius to finally, definitively, claim his throne.






