The Tottenham striker won the battle for sharpshooting supremacy, which involved some of the best strikers in the world
Getty1John Stones | England | 2 goals, 7 games
Defenders are not usually known for their goalscoring abilities, but England centre-back John Stones has shown himself to be a serious threat from set-pieces in Russia. The Manchester City man may not be likely to challenge his compatriot Kane for the Golden Boot, but he was eager to contribute more goals as the Three Lions went in search of a second world title. Unfortunately for Stones, he had a potential winner in the semi-final against Croatia cleared off the line as England lost in extra-time.
He, like his team-mates, did not find the net in their 2-0 loss to Belgium in the third-place game.
Advertisement2Andreas Granqvist | Sweden | 2 goals, 5 gamesThe Sweden captain earned his side an opening-game win in the World Cup when his penalty saw off South Korea. He then struck a superb spot-kick in their final group fixture against Mexico to put Sweden 2-0 up and, in doing so, became the first defender to score two penalties in regular time at the same World Cup since current Spain coach Fernando Hierro in 2002.Getty Images3Son Heung-Min | South Korea | 2 goals 3 gamesThe Tottenham forward scored two of his country's three goals at the World Cup. He scored a late consolation in the 2-1 defeat by Mexico in their second game before putting the seal on a remarkable 2-0 victory over Germany in their final group game. With Germany trailing 1-0 deep into stoppage-time, and with goalkeeper Manuel Neuer high up the pitch, a long ball sent Son clear and he had the simple task of scoring into an empty net.Getty Images4Mile Jedinak | Australia | 2 goals, 3 games
Mile Jedinak is part of a very exclusive group as one of Australia's 13 World Cup goalscorers and his strikes in Russia mean that he has now moved behind Tim Cahill as the second-highest Socceroos scorer at the tournament.