The FIFA World Cup account has already posted the Golden Boot race update, so the practical way to “put your Twitter post on FIFA’s handle” is to reply, quote-post, or tag them in a relevant post rather than expecting them to publish it directly. FIFA’s recent post says, “The adidas Golden Boot race is heating up” on @FIFAWorldCup, and FIFA also promotes Golden Boot top-scorer coverage on its official site.

Best way to get noticed

  1. Post your content on X with a clear football angle.
  2. Tag the right FIFA account, usually @FIFAWorldCup for men’s World Cup content or @FIFAcom for general FIFA posts.
  1. Use the same topic language FIFA already uses, such as “Golden Boot race,” “top scorers,” and the relevant tournament hashtag.
  1. Keep it short, factual, and visual if possible, because accounts like FIFA often surface concise, event-linked posts.

Example caption

You could write something like:

The Golden Boot race is heating up — who’s leading your bracket? #FIFAWorldCup @FIFAWorldCup

That matches the topic FIFA is already posting about and makes it easier for their social team to spot it.

If you want FIFA to reshare it

  • Make the post timely.
  • Add a strong stat, graphic, or clean visual.
  • Tag only the most relevant FIFA account.
  • Avoid spammy wording or too many hashtags.
  • Reply to one of FIFA’s Golden Boot posts with your graphic or opinion, since direct replies are easier to notice than random posts.

Handle to use

For World Cup Golden Boot content, use @FIFAWorldCup ; for broader FIFA football content, use @FIFAcom. FIFA also has official tournament channels that point followers to those handles, which confirms the correct account family to target.

TL;DR

Post your Golden Boot content on X, tag @FIFAWorldCup , use the same event language FIFA is already using, and reply to or quote-post their existing Golden Boot content for the best chance of attention.