World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
A minor injury to the soleus muscle tore open Argentina's entire left flank. The goalkeeper had broken fingers, the left side was patched up by a center back, the four midfielders were just about to cash in on a season's worth of chemistry, and up front, Lautaro and Álvarez were still vying for position. And Messi, at 38, was about to play his 200th international match and his sixth World Cup—likely his final dance. That night in Kansas was the world's first glimpse of a "patched up" defending champion.
At Kansas City's training ground, this night was so unusual that the beat reporters collectively froze for a second.
As per routine, the first part of Argentina's training session is open to the media. Before the players start their "rondo" drills, the head coach usually stands on the sidelines, either jotting down training plans or whispering to an assistant. This has been the "Leo-style" preparation we've known for a decade—quiet, restrained, almost never wasting a single extraneous gesture.
Not this time.
Scaloni called everyone together. More than twenty players formed a semicircle, and he stood in the middle, speaking for about a minute. No laughter, no tactical board pointing, certainly no high-fives with anyone. No one knows what he said, but the atmosphere on the training ground tightened palpably.
For the defending champion's first World Cup match, the head coach actually resorted to a "pre-game pep talk."
This detail translates into just one sentence: The psychological threshold of this national team squad isn't as stable as it appears.
Behind this pep talk lies an increasingly long injury list. The opening match against Algeria kicks off at dawn on June 17th, Beijing time—Argentina's time to patch things up before the tournament is down to these final training days.
First, a piece of news that allows Argentine fans to breathe a little easier: Dibu Martínez can play.
Emiliano Martínez, who fractured the ring finger on his right hand during the Europa League final, has had his cast removed. Wearing custom protective gear, he has completed full training with the team. Scaloni confirmed at the pre-match press conference: This guy is starting.
It was an expected choice. Even if his finger is still held together by pins, Dibu will stand there. You can break his finger, but you cannot break his obsession with guarding the goal line. That's his character.
The coaching staff has also kept a backup plan: River Plate's Santiago Beltrán has been kept close as a substitute goalkeeper just in case. This isn't superstition; it's a math problem. Dibu's finger isn't fully healed. If he takes another hit in the opening match, Argentina's goal line would collapse entirely.
The goalkeeper being okay doesn't mean the defense is fine.
The heaviest blow comes from the left-back position.
Nicolás Tagliafico, 33, a Lyon starter and a veteran of that 2022 championship run. In the friendly against Honduras on June 7th, he played only 45 minutes before being substituted. The examination result: a minor tear in his left calf (soleus muscle).
The injury isn't severe. For a 33-year-old veteran, a minor tear would normally heal in a few weeks according to medical standards. But the World Cup doesn't wait.
The coaching staff's plan is clear: He won't play the opener, targeting a return for the second group stage match against Austria on June 22nd. In the interim, Argentina has to hold the fort without a proper left-back.
The problem lies in how unappealing the replacement options are. Let's take a closer look.
There is no natural left-back backup in the squad. Facundo Medina is a center-back, temporarily pulled over to fill in; Lisandro Martínez is also a center-back, who has occasionally played there; otherwise, there's Valentín Barco, a more attack-minded wide option.
None of these three is a genuine left-back.
Medina's problem is his nearly non-existent offensive contribution. Making him run up and down the left flank would essentially hand over the entire left corridor to the opponent. Lisandro has been repurposed at Manchester United, and plugging him back into left-back temporarily raises questions about chemistry. Barco can attack, but defensively, he's a black hole.
Making matters worse, even a winger who could have helped rescue the situation is having issues.
Nico González, usually Scaloni's regular choice on the left wing, has muscle overload, casting doubt on his form. This means even Argentina's Plan B—using a forward to deputize as left-back—is compromised.
One left flank, two positions, both sounding the alarm simultaneously. This isn't the players' fault; it's the concentrated payback from the schedule, age, and muscle fatigue.
But every cloud has a silver lining.
Amidst these weeks of bad news stacking up, Julián Álvarez, the Atlético Madrid forward being tracked by Arsenal, Barcelona, Real Madrid, and Paris Saint-Germain simultaneously, has finally recovered from his ankle injury.
He got hurt in the Champions League semi-final in May and was sidelined for over a month. Scaloni confirmed before the match: Spiderman can play, and he's an option to start.
Note: "an option," not "a confirmed starter."
Based on the current situation, Lautaro Martínez still holds a slight lead in the starting competition—he just won the Serie A title with Inter Milan and is in hot form, which is a natural advantage. But Álvarez's return provides Scaloni with a safety net for rotation. This is the luxury of a defending champion: having two "capable" players to choose from in the same position.
Even more interesting is the "Atlético faction" within the Argentine squad.
This time, the squad list includes a full six players from the Atlético Madrid system—Álvarez, Giuliano Simeoni (the son of old Simeone), Thiago Almada, Nahuel Molina, Nico González, and Rodrigo De Paul.
Having played a season under Simeone, these guys share a natural harmony in body language, pressing intensity, and transition rhythm. To some extent, Argentina's midfield and attack are a direct translation of Atlético's tactical template.
Although González and Molina are carrying knocks, they have recovered from their muscle issues. Whether they can play the opener is a question mark, but at least they aren't out. This "Atlético line" might be one of the few intact axes of this injury-ravaged team.
Looking inward, the midfield is currently Argentina's most stable sector.
Enzo Fernández, De Paul, Mac Allister, Thiago Almada—this combination has developed considerable chemistry in recent friendlies and South American World Cup qualifiers.
Enzo handles the rhythm and the final pass, De Paul provides box-to-box coverage and toughness, Mac Allister has excellent positional sense on the left side of midfield, and Almada is a key link in forward pressing and build-up play.
Of the four, only Almada might have to fill in on the left flank—bringing us back to the collapse on the left side. Argentina's Plan B is: Almada plays on the left wing, sacrificing some of his attacking talent for defensive balance, while Medina slots in as left-back, forming a "right-footed player combination."
How long this makeshift setup can hold depends on whether Almada is willing to accept this "workhorse" role. He's a player capable of creating explosive moments in attack; pinning him down in defense for chores is like throwing away half the gunpowder on the flank.
Another question mark is Leandro Paredes. This veteran is recovering from injury. He won't start, but the target is for him to make the substitute list. Once the game gets bogged down, his experience and set-piece ability could be Scaloni's last card.
As for Guido Rodríguez? With Paredes's recovery progress, he has essentially fallen out of the squad competition.
Another heavy weight of the opening match rests on one man.
Lionel Messi, 38 years old. This is his sixth World Cup and his 200th international match for Argentina.
The first person to achieve this milestone.
The numbers sound cold: 200 matches mean he hasn't missed a single significant moment in Argentine football over these twenty years. From Germany 2006 to the USA 2026, from the curly-haired teenager on the bench to the captain lifting the World Cup, to the number 10 now moving forward with an aging body.
In the 3-0 friendly victory against Iceland on June 9th, Messi's form was universally described as "convincing." Scaloni couldn't help but smile at the press conference: You're worried about Messi? Don't worry, he's our cornerstone.
But the other side of the numbers is: There really aren't many World Cups left for him.
This trip to the USA is likely the final dance.
A defending champion fielding a depleted squad, trying to piece together a winning formula for the opener, with their "most important man" already 38 years old. This narrative is too cliché, almost enough to make you want to skip it.
But it just so happens to be taking place on June 17th, 2026, this night in Kansas City.
Finally, let's be blunt.
On paper, Argentina's strength still ranks in the top tier of contenders. This is the natural advantage of the 2022 core not having dispersed, with everyone's sense of honor fully charged. But the term "depleted squad" takes on new meaning in this tournament.
At the goal line: Dibu starts with an unhealed finger. On the left flank: Tagliafico is absent, Medina fills in as left-back, Almada might be pulled back as a workhorse. In midfield: It's stable, but Paredes is still finding form, and Guido Rodríguez is basically out of contention. Up front: Lautaro and Álvarez, one plus Messi; Álvarez's ankle is still fighting residual pain. In defense: Romero is back, a good sign; but Otamendi is 38, paired with the also-not-young Lisandro or the emergency call-up Senesi—the latter replacing the injured Baleerdi, another unlucky soul with a calf tear; on the right, Molina and Montiel both lack match rhythm.
This patchwork feel is a completely different team from the well-oiled Argentina of 2022.
But the World Cup has never been about paper lineups. It's about whether those 11 men can grit their teeth until the final whistle, whether someone on the bench can step up in the 80th minute, and whether Dibu's broken finger can hold out without cramping for 120 minutes.
The opener is against Algeria.
African teams are known for their physicality, strength, and set-piece threats—no pushovers. If Argentina plays it by the book, the problem shouldn't be huge; but if they play it by the book, the story wouldn't be very interesting.
What's truly worth watching is how this depleted squad manages to sustain the spirit of 2022.
It's whether Almada can cover when Medina gets targeted on the left; whether Paredes can come on in the 60th minute and pull off a crucial interception; whether Lautaro's instinct in the box can compensate for Álvarez's post-injury sluggishness; and whether Dibu's broken finger can make that potentially game-changing save in the 90th minute.
That's what's truly worth watching on opening night.
As for Messi on his 200th match?
He just needs to walk into the box. The other ten men, with two legs, one injury, and a heart that hasn't cooled yet, have to get him to where he wants to go.