Sports

Kylian Mbappe Makes Stance Clear on Lionel Messi And Cristiano Ronaldo's Rivalry

For nearly two decades, soccer fans picked a side. You were either a Cristiano Ronaldo fan or a Lionel Messi fan, there wasn't much room in between. The debate ran through friend groups, family dinners and social media timelines for years.

Now, with the 2026 World Cup underway across North America, that argument feels a little different. Both men are appearing in a sixth World Cup, a milestone no men's player has ever reached, and at 41 and 38 years old respectively, they're still the ones their countries are leaning on.

Kylian Mbappe has seen both sides of this from closer than almost anyone. He grew up with Ronaldo on his bedroom walls and later shared a locker room with Messi at Paris Saint-Germain. That kind of perspective doesn't come around often and when the Real Madrid star was asked about the rivalry recently, he made his feelings clear.

 Portugal forward Cristiano Ronaldo (7) before playing against Uruguay in the 2022 World Cup. Yukihito Taguchi-Imagn Images
Portugal forward Cristiano Ronaldo (7) before playing against Uruguay in the 2022 World Cup. Yukihito Taguchi-Imagn Images Yukihito Taguchi-Imagn Images

Mbappe Pushes Back on the Messi-Ronaldo Talent vs. Work Narrative

Mbappe's issue is with the version of this debate that gets recycled most often: that Messi is pure natural talent, while Ronaldo is all grinding work ethic. He called that take out directly.

"Messi and Ronaldo are really different. Their rivalry was great because they truly are opposites in everything," Mbappe said, per Kalshi Sports. "The idea that one of Messi or Ronaldo is work and the other is talent is said by someone who does not play football. If you say Ronaldo has no talent or Messi has not worked, then you have never put boots on to train every single day."

Hard to argue with a man who's trained alongside one and idolized the other his entire life.

What Messi and Ronaldo Each Bring to the 2026 World Cup

Ronaldo walks into this tournament carrying some unfinished business. Portugal's run in Qatar ended against Morocco and Ronaldo spent portions of that knockout stage on the bench.

At 41 and now playing his club football at Al-Nassr, he's adapted under manager Roberto Martínez without losing the drive that made him great. His 143 international goals for Portugal tell their own story and he remains central to one of the deeper squads in this tournament.

Messi arrives in a different headspace entirely. Qatar lifted something off him. Winning the World Cup with Argentina answered every remaining question about his legacy and he steps into 2026 without that weight. His game has always been built on vision, composure and a reading of the sport that very few players have ever matched.

Both men are here and still competing at this level, which won't always be the case. The window is closing and anyone who loves the game knows it. Whatever side of the debate you've been on all these years, there's something worth appreciating in just watching them while it's still possible.

Related: Cristiano Ronaldo Draws Tom Brady Comparison Ahead of 2026 World Cup

Copyright 2026 The Arena Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved

This story was originally published June 5, 2026 at 3:25 PM.

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