Most Saves in a World Cup Game: The All-Time Record

Every World Cup produces a goalkeeper who turns one match into a personal masterpiece, standing alone against a storm of shots and refusing to break. In 2026, Curaçao’s Eloy Room delivered exactly that, a 15-save wall against Ecuador that put him right beside the legends. So who holds the record for the most saves in a single World Cup game, and where does Room’s heroic performance rank?

The all-time mark belongs to a famous American performance, and the story behind the number, including a quirk in how saves are counted, is one of the great goalkeeping tales in tournament history. Here is the full picture.

The chart below ranks the biggest single-game goalkeeping performances in World Cup history. Take a look, then we’ll break down the record.

Most Saves in a World Cup Game
The greatest single-match goalkeeping feats
The Record
16
Tim Howard, 2014
Newest Feat
15
Eloy Room, 2026
Stat Since
1966
saves official
Room’s Result
0-0
clean sheet
Most saves in a single World Cup match
Since saves became an official stat in 1966
Saves Goalkeeper Year Match & Result
16 Tim Howard (USA) 2014 vs Belgium, lost 2-1 (R16, extra time)
15 Eloy Room (Curaçao) 2026 vs Ecuador, drew 0-0 (group)
~10 to 12 Various keepers multiple Several elite single-game displays
Per ESPN Research and FIFA. Save tallies before modern tracking are harder to verify, so the all-time list focuses on the clear modern record holders. Howard’s 16 is the official FIFA figure.
Howard vs Room: two ways to make history
  Tim Howard (2014) Eloy Room (2026)
Saves 16 (FIFA) 15
Opponent Belgium Ecuador
Stage Round of 16 Group stage
Went to extra time? Yes No (90 min)
Result Lost 2-1 Drew 0-0
Clean sheet? No Yes
Room’s 15 saves are the most ever in a World Cup match that did not go to extra time, and the most by a keeper who kept a clean sheet. Howard’s came over 120 minutes in a loss.
The Counting Quirk
Why the record number is disputed
Source Howard 2014 Room 2026
FIFA 16 15
Opta / StatsPerform 15 15
Stat providers disagree because one of Howard’s “saves” came from a shot some count as off-target. By FIFA’s count he leads 16 to 15; by Opta’s, the two are tied at 15.
Howard’s “Secretary of Defense” night
In the 2014 Round of 16, Tim Howard made a record 16 saves against Belgium, an iconic performance, though the US still lost 2-1 in extra time and were eliminated.
Room’s wall for Curaçao
In 2026, Eloy Room made 15 saves to earn Curaçao, the smallest World Cup nation ever, its first-ever point, a 0-0 draw with Ecuador, just days after a 7-1 loss to Germany.
A shutout makes it sweeter
Unlike Howard, Room kept a clean sheet, the most saves ever in a World Cup game without conceding, turning a likely defeat into a historic point for his island nation.

The Record: Tim Howard’s 16 Saves

The most saves in a single World Cup game belongs to American goalkeeper Tim Howard, who made 16 stops for the United States against Belgium in the Round of 16 at the 2014 World Cup. The performance was so dominant it earned him the nickname “Secretary of Defense” and became one of the most celebrated individual displays in tournament history. There is a bittersweet twist, though: despite Howard’s heroics, the United States lost the match 2-1 in extra time and were knocked out. The record stands as the official FIFA mark for the most saves in a World Cup match since saves became an officially tracked statistic in 1966.

Eloy Room Joins the Conversation

In 2026, Curaçao’s Eloy Room produced a performance worthy of that company. Facing a relentless Ecuador side, the 37-year-old goalkeeper made 15 saves to secure a 0-0 draw, earning Curaçao, the smallest nation ever to reach a World Cup, its first-ever point. What makes Room’s display historically significant is the context: his 15 saves are the most ever in a World Cup match that did not go to extra time, and the most by a goalkeeper who kept a clean sheet. Coming just days after Curaçao had been beaten 7-1 by Germany, it was a stunning turnaround and an instant cult-hero moment.

The Counting Controversy

Here is where it gets interesting: the record number itself is disputed, depending on who is counting. FIFA officially credits Howard with 16 saves, which keeps him ahead of Room’s 15. But other statisticians, including Opta and ESPN’s data provider StatsPerform, record only 15 for Howard, because one of his “saves” came from a shot they judged to be off-target. By that count, Howard and Room are tied at 15. So whether Room equaled the all-time record or fell one short comes down to which statistical authority you trust, a fitting quirk for two performances separated by twelve years.

What Makes a Great Goalkeeping Performance

Raw save totals do not tell the whole story. A high number of saves often means a goalkeeper’s team is being overwhelmed, so the stat is as much about a team under siege as individual brilliance. What elevates Howard’s and Room’s nights is the quality and difficulty of the stops, made under sustained pressure against world-class attackers. Room faced 28 shots from Ecuador worth more than three expected goals, meaning the scoreline statistically “should” have been a comfortable Ecuador win. Keeping it 0-0 against those odds is what separates a historic performance from a merely busy one. If you want to understand how goalkeeping and offside interact, see our explainer on the offside rule.

Goalkeepers Who Defined a World Cup

Great goalkeeping has shaped the World Cup throughout its history, even before saves were tracked as a formal stat. Lev Yashin, the only goalkeeper ever to win the Ballon d’Or, set the standard in the 1960s. Iceland’s Hannes Halldorsson saved a Lionel Messi penalty on the way to a famous 2018 draw with Argentina. Time and again, a single keeper’s performance has rescued an underdog or carried a favorite through a knockout tie. Room’s 15-save night fits squarely in that tradition: a goalkeeper, on his day, can be the difference between elimination and history, which is exactly why these performances become legend.

The Bottom Line

The record for the most saves in a single World Cup game is Tim Howard’s 16 for the United States in 2014, though some statisticians count it as 15, which would tie him with Curaçao’s Eloy Room from 2026. Either way, both nights belong among the greatest goalkeeping performances the tournament has ever seen. Howard’s came in a heartbreaking loss, while Room’s earned a historic clean sheet and a first-ever point for the smallest nation in World Cup history. They are proof that even in a sport defined by goals, sometimes the most unforgettable hero is the one stopping them.