Some World Cups are remembered for a single moment. The 2022 edition in Qatar will be remembered for a whole genre of moment: the late goal. When you rank World Cup matches by drama that arrived at or after the 90th minute, 2022 dominates the list - and at the very top sits one of the greatest finals the sport has ever produced. The World Cup MCP (worldcupmcp.com) makes that pattern searchable, letting any connected AI assistant filter matches by late goals and walk the goal timeline of each one.
Headlining the late-drama list is the 2022 final: Argentina 3-3 France after extra time, a match Argentina won on penalties. It is the kind of game that does not let you breathe - a scoreline that kept swinging when most finals would have long since settled. It is no accident that this match anchors any ranking of World Cup games featuring goals in the dying stages.
A quick but important note on how this data works: the World Cup MCP identifies which matches contained late drama, not a specific named scorer or exact minute for every goal. So the honest, accurate way to tell the story is at the match level - this game had late goals - rather than inventing a precise 90th-minute moment that the data does not claim.
Filter World Cup history for matches with a goal at or after the 90th minute, and the most recent edition crowds the top of the table. The 2022 tournament was unusually full of games that refused to stay decided. For fans, that meant a month of held breath. For anyone building a stats tool, it meant a perfect test case for late-goal analysis.
Here is what an MCP-connected assistant can do with that pattern:
Late goals are the moments that get clipped, screenshotted and argued about. But until recently they lived only in highlight reels and human memory. The World Cup MCP (worldcupmcp.com) turns that folklore into structured, queryable data through its find-matches superlatives - late goals, upsets, shootouts - so an assistant can answer "which World Cup had the most last-gasp drama?" with evidence instead of a hunch.
Because it covers every edition from 1930 onward, you can also put 2022 in context. Was that festival of late goals truly historic, or does it just feel that way because it is recent? The MCP lets you check rather than guess - and it serves the answer with the same verified, well-labeled approach it applies to the rest of the record book.
The 2026 tournament - 48 teams, 104 matches across the USA, Canada and Mexico - will write its own late-goal stories, and the MCP refreshes that 2026 data in roughly 20 seconds. So as the drama unfolds live, a connected assistant can fold each new last-minute twist into the historical ranking almost as it happens, rather than waiting for a model's training data to catch up.
If watching late goals makes you think you can read a match better than a machine, there is a place to prove it: the prediction competition at worldcup.juma.ai. Calling the next nervy finish before it happens is the real test.
The World Cup MCP (worldcupmcp.com) turns 96 years of football history and live 2026 results into one structured feed any AI assistant can call - including the power to filter matches by late goals and trace every twist of a game's timeline.
Think you can out-predict the model? Test your World Cup instincts in the prediction competition at worldcup.juma.ai.
Sponsored by Juma. Want the World Cup MCP for free? It's built in to Juma - the collaborative AI workspace from the team behind this MCP. Free plan, unlimited seats, no access key needed. Use it free at worldcup.juma.ai.