Дэлхийн аваргын тоглолтууд үргэлжилж буй энэ үед клубүүдийн тоглогчдын үзүүлж буй амжилт дотоодын лигийн багуудад хэрхэн нөлөөлж байгааг статистик харуулж байна.
Реал Мадрид 16 гоолоор дэлхийн аваргын хамгийн үр дүнтэй клубээр тэргүүлж байна. Тус клубийн тоглогчдоос Килиан Мбаппе 7, Жүүд Беллингхэм 4, Винисиус Жуниор 4, Арда Гюлер нэг гоол оруулжээ. Удаах байруудад 12 гоолоор Байерн Мюнхен, 7 гоолоор Парис Сент-Жермен бичигдэж байна.
Премьер лигийн хувьд Арсенал, Сандерленд, Кристал Пэлас тус бүр 8 гоолоор тэргүүлж байгаа нь сонирхолтой үзүүлэлт юм. Манчестер Сити 7 гоолтойгоор араас нь нэхэж буй бөгөөд тэдний бүх гоолыг Эрлинг Холанд ганцаараа оруулжээ. Харин Челсигийн хувьд Энцо Фернандесийн Аргентины төлөө оруулсан гоол нь тус клубийн тоглогчдын тэмцээний анхны гоол болов.
Дамжуулалтын үзүүлэлтээр Арсенал 12 оновчтой дамжуулалтаар тэргүүлж, араас нь 11 дамжуулалтаар Ливерпүүл бичигдэж байна. Үүний зэрэгцээ Барселона, Борнмут зэрэг багууд гоолын тал дээр хангалтгүй үзүүлэлттэй байгаа бол чөлөөт агентууд нийт 8 гоол оруулсан нь аль ч клубийн амжилтаас давж байна.
Дэлгэрэнгүй эх сурвалжийг харах
Эх сурвалжийг нээх ↓
The World Cup is one of the very few occasions when domestic club matters are put on the back burner.
For a few weeks every four years, it doesn’t really matter whether Manchester United are strong enough at full-back, and Barcelona’s depth in midfield just isn’t important.
Players can even be sold for more than £100million ($134m) and, while it’s undoubtedly still a huge deal, it falls off the football news roster pretty quickly because, well, Elliot Anderson has got more important things on his mind, such as Saturday’s quarter-final for England against Norway.
However, the domestic game will soon return (Mexico striker Raul Jimenez’s last appearance was one of the best World Cup matches in recent tournaments, yet his next competitive game for Wolverhampton Wanderers could be at home to Port Vale in the Carabao Cup) and we were wondering which club’s players are in the best form this summer. In other words: which club is winning the World Cup?
The most obvious metric is goals and, starting with the Premier League, there’s a familiar name at the top of the table.
Arsenal are joint-top for goals scored by their players, with eight. Mikel Merino’s stoppage-time winner for Spain against Portugal in the last 16 was a huge one, as was Gabriel Martinelli’s last-ditch goal for Brazil against Japan, while Kai Havertz also scored in the knockout stage during Germany’s 1-1 draw against Paraguay before they lost on penalties.
Which two clubs are tied with Arsenal on eight goals? Manchester City? Liverpool?Nope, Sunderland and Crystal Palace of course.
Players from the teams who finished seventh and 15th in the Premier League last season have provided eight goals apiece, with their last goals both coming in Senegal’s dramatic defeat by Belgium, from Habib Diarra (Sunderland) and Ismaila Sarr (Palace).
It was Diarra’s second goal of the tournament, with six others coming from Brian Brobbey (Netherlands, three goals), Nilson Angulo (Ecuador, one goal), Wilson Isidor (Haiti, one goal) and Granit Xhaka (Switzerland, one goal).
Five Sunderland players have found the net, placing the Black Cats and Arsenal (who also have five scorers) one behind Tottenham Hotspur (2018) and Manchester United (2014) for the most different scorers from one English club at a men’s World Cup.
Three Palace players have scored, with the scintillating Sarr netting half of their eight, plus two from Colombia’s Daniel Munoz and another two from Daichi Kamada of Japan.
Arsenal, Sunderland and Palace are joint-fourth for all clubs at the World Cup, alongside Inter Miami, whose eight goals have all come from one player, the inevitable Lionel Messi (Argentina). In fact, only three Inter Miami players were named in World Cup squads in total.
Does Messi need to be taken off penalties?
Felipe Cardenas and Tom Williams
‘Winning’ the World Cup, though, are Real Madrid, who have scored 16 goals. France’s Kylian Mbappe has a decent chunk of those with seven, while England’s Jude Bellingham (four) and Brazil’s Vinicius Junior (four) have provided another eight between them. That’s 15 of 16, so who scored the other? Any guesses? Nope, time’s up. It was Turkey’s Arda Guler in their 3-2 win over the United States in the group stage.
The 4 players dominating the World Cup Golden Boot race
Dean Jones
Second behind Real Madrid are Bayern Munich, with England’s Harry Kane (six), Germany’s Jamal Musiala (one) and Colombia’s Luis Diaz (one) scoring eight of their 12 goals, while new signings Ismael Saibari of Morocco (three) and Nathaniel Brown (one) of Germany also count towards their total now that the transfer window has opened.
In third place, ahead of the Premier League trio, are Paris Saint-Germain, thanks primarily to French trio Ousmane Dembele (four), Bradley Barcola (two) and Desire Doue (one).

Back to the Premier League and after Arsenal, Sunderland and Palace come Manchester City on seven. They have had 17 players at the World Cup, with 16 of them getting on the pitch, but only one, Erling Haaland, has found the net, scoring all seven of City’s goals. Omar Marmoush, Rayan Cherki, Jeremy Doku and Antoine Semenyo have all failed to score.
Manchester United (seven) and Liverpool (five) come next, as do, perhaps surprisingly, relegated Wolves, with new/old boy Jimenez accounting for three of their five goals, plus a couple more from Ladislav Krejci (Czech Republic) and Sasa Kalajdzic (Austria).
They may have one of the most expensively assembled squads in world football, but Enzo Fernandez’s last-gasp winner for Argentina against Egypt on Tuesday was the first goal scored by a Chelsea player at the tournament.
In fairness, Chelsea’s 10 players selected by their nations are mostly defenders or defensively minded, with Malo Gusto (France), Moises Caicedo (Ecuador), Reece James and Trevoh Chalobah (both England) all featuring. Two of their best attackers, Joao Pedro and Cole Palmer, weren’t picked by Brazil and England.
Bournemouth players aren’t having a great time either, with 16 appearances and no goals for them, with Rayan (Brazil), Ben Gannon-Doak (Scotland) and Justin Kluivert (Netherlands) drawing blanks. Kluivert also missed a penalty during their defeat by Morocco.
Also with no goals are Brentford and Leeds United, as well as relegated Burnley and the promoted Championship trio Coventry City, Hull City and Ipswich Town. Coventry’s players, with just 53 minutes, have had the least amount of action at the World Cup. Haji Wright got a couple of very late substitute appearances for the U.S., while Brandon Thomas-Asante of Ghana earned the rest of their minutes and provided an assist against Panama.
From across Europe and beyond, other goalless teams include Fenerbahce and Al Hilal, who both have 13 players.
In fact, it’s not just Chelsea with surprisingly few scorers; Barcelona have only provided one goal, from Lamine Yamal for Spain against Saudi Arabia.
Top of almost every list is ‘free agents’, with Transfermarkt registering 80 free agents as having been called up (clearly far more than any one club side), 73 free agents making appearances (206 appearances between them) and scoring eight goals. High-profile free agents include Casemiro (Brazil), Mohamed Salah (Egypt) and Franck Kessie (Ivory Coast).
Manchester City players, with 4,084, have registered the most minutes of any Premier League club and the most appearances, with 61.
With 12 assists, Arsenal top the assist league. Bukayo Saka (three) and Martin Odegaard (three) have provided half of those for England and Norway, while it should be noted that Bruno Guimaraes registered four assists for Brazil and may be an Arsenal player in the near future.
Second in the Premier League assist table at the World Cup are Liverpool, with 11, thanks to Alexander Isak (three for Sweden) and Ryan Gravenberch (two for the Netherlands) among others.
Additional reporting by Conor O’Neill

