Hat-Trick: The Cricket Term That Became Football's Most Celebrated Individual Feat
March 28, 2026 · 4 min read
The Fact
The phrase 'hat-trick' in football refers to scoring three goals in a single match; it originates from cricket in the 19th century.
Where the Hat Actually Comes From
The origin story of the hat-trick is specific enough to be traced quite precisely. In cricket, a bowler who dismissed three consecutive batsmen with three consecutive deliveries — a feat of skill and precision requiring both technical excellence and some fortune — was traditionally rewarded by the crowd or club with a hat. The physical presentation of a hat to mark an outstanding individual achievement was a Victorian convention, and the term "hat-trick" emerged from this tradition in the 1850s.
The earliest documented use of "hat-trick" in cricket dates to 1858, when H. H. Stephenson of the All-England Eleven took three wickets on three consecutive balls in a match in Hyde Park, Sheffield. The crowd took up a collection and presented him with a hat. The term soon became standard cricket vocabulary for any three consecutive wicket achievement.
From cricket, the phrase migrated to other sports over the following decades. The migration reflects both the cultural dominance of cricket in Victorian England and the period's habit of borrowing successful terminology across sports rather than inventing new language for each achievement.
How Hat-Tricks Work in Football
In football, a hat-trick refers to any player scoring three goals in a single match, though the exact definition has historically varied by context and competition. In its strictest interpretation, the three goals should be consecutive — scored one after another without an intervening goal from another player. This is sometimes called a "pure hat-trick" to distinguish it from the more common usage where three goals by the same player in the same match qualify regardless of the order in which other goals were scored.
Most football contexts now use the broader definition: any three goals by one player in a single match counts as a hat-trick. This is how the term is applied in official statistical records by FIFA, UEFA, and domestic leagues.
A variant called the "perfect hat-trick" requires one goal with the right foot, one with the left foot, and one with the head. This is rarer and considered a more complete demonstration of the scorer's all-around ability, though it carries the same statistical classification as any other hat-trick.
The Significance of Three Goals
Three goals in a single match is significant because it represents a threshold that distinguishes an exceptional individual performance from a merely very good one. Two goals, while valuable, occurs with enough regularity at the top level to be considered a normal outstanding performance. Three goals in a single match — against defenders, goalkeepers, and organizational systems specifically designed to prevent scoring — is uncommon enough to mark a genuine individual highlight.
The rarity varies by playing level. In the highest divisions of professional football, a hat-trick by any player in a single season is considered significant. In lower leagues, they occur more frequently. For international football, where defensive organization is generally strongest, hat-tricks are rare enough that each one generates considerable attention. The record for most international hat-tricks is held by multiple players who have achieved the feat only a handful of times despite lengthy careers.
Hat-Tricks in Other Sports
The term's spread from cricket went beyond football. In ice hockey, three goals by one player in a game is a hat-trick, and the tradition of fans throwing their hats onto the ice to celebrate is a separate but parallel custom that developed independently in North America. In rugby, three tries by one player in a match is also informally called a hat-trick, though the term is less standard than in football.
The phrase has also entered general language as a metaphor for three consecutive successes of any kind — three wins in a row, three consecutive promotions, three successful product launches. Language that begins in sport regularly acquires broader cultural application, and the hat-trick is a particularly durable example of a sporting term that has become a general expression for achieving the same notable thing three times over.
FactOTD Editorial Team
Published March 28, 2026 · 4 min read
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