Haaland's record pace raises the prospect of an extraordinary Norway haul
Posted on July 01, 2026, updated on July 01, 2026
Erling Haaland’s scoring rate for Norway is so extreme that, in theory, he could finish on 260 international goals if he keeps playing and scoring at something close to his current pace. That projection is obviously speculative, but it shows how far ahead of normal international standards he is.
The key figure is his strike rate: 60 goals in 53 senior appearances, or one goal every 0.88 games. By comparison, Cristiano Ronaldo’s all-time men’s international record is 145 goals in 231 matches, which is a much slower rate.
Why the number is possible
The projection depends on three big assumptions: that Haaland stays fit, remains elite for many years, and that Norway keep qualifying for tournaments. If those things hold, he could reach Ronaldo’s current total in roughly seven years and keep adding to it well beyond that.
His tournament scoring is especially important because he only recently began producing at the biggest events. Until this World Cup, Norway had not reached a major tournament during his senior career, so his earlier goals came mostly in qualifiers and friendlies.
Why he stands out
Haaland does not need many touches to decide a game, and that was true again against Ivory Coast. He had just 27 touches, made only 10 passes, and still scored the winning goal with a striker’s instinct at exactly the right moment.
That combination of efficiency and timing is why Norway see him as the greatest player they have ever had. If his health and motivation hold up, the idea of him ending on a staggering international total is no longer absurd at all.
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