Lionel Messi Dominates World Cup Buzz as Study Names Him 'Biggest Player on Planet'
Messi Named 'Biggest Player on Planet' by World Cup Study

Lionel Messi displayed his extraordinary skills during a World Cup training session, with a new study confirming he is the 'biggest player on the planet.' Research showed that 'Messi World Cup' achieved a peak relative interest index of 100 in both the US and global markets over a 24-month period leading up to the tournament.

Training in Kansas City

A storm was forecast, along with scorching temperatures in Kansas City. However, the world's greatest player barely broke a sweat while training with the reigning champions. Messi performed a little shimmy to send a teammate the wrong way, laughed through a game of head tennis, and remained relaxed as hundreds of cameras followed his every move.

England legend Paul Gascoigne paid tribute to Messi, not just for his skill but his longevity. He told the Mirror: 'I cannot believe he is about to play at his sixth World Cup. That is amazing. But he really looks after himself.'

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A long line of world media gathered to see the Argentine superstar, who turns 39 on June 24 and is playing in his sixth World Cup. Organisers estimate around 700,000 fans will visit Kansas, one of the host cities. It would be fair to say that Messi will be a star attraction for many of them.

Study Highlights Messi's Dominance

A study showed that 'Messi World Cup' scored a peak relative interest index of 100 in both the US and global markets across an entire 24-month window prior to the tournament. Every other player in the study was measured against him. French superstar Kylian Mbappe peaked at a Google Trends index of 72 due to an injury scare in February 2026, while Cristiano Ronaldo, confirmed in Portugal's squad at 41 and playing his last World Cup, peaked at 65.

Christian Pulisic, captain of the US and the most-capped outfield player, had a peak Google Trends index of four prior to the tournament, following his injury in the USA's impressive 4-1 victory over Paraguay. Cody C. Jensen, CEO of Searchbloom, the research experts who conducted the study using Google Trends data across the US market and globally in the two years to May, said the index 'does not lie'.

Harry Kane came ninth in the table. 'Messi does not have a steady baseline. He has valleys and spikes, and the spikes track news cycles with mechanical precision,' Jensen said.

Security and Media Frenzy

The Argentina team bus is led by a cavalcade of police outriders as it travels to training in Kansas. The motor patrol follows every move of Lionel Messi and his team, who are at the centre of a huge security operation. Media watching the world champion's training sessions are asked to park a mile away and take a yellow school bus to their £85m KC training base. 'It is a lot of work,' said one security official on duty.

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