Lionel Scaloni had barely sat down before he admitted the obvious. Argentina had put its own supporters through unnecessary suffering. Yet the manager was in no mood to apologise for the chaos. What he had witnessed in Atlanta, he felt, was something larger than a comeback win over Egypt, larger even than simple qualification. It was proof of the sort of team Argentina is, a team which never gives up.

    “We made our people suffer even though we didn’t play a bad game,” Scaloni said after the 3-2 victory. “I am a coach for moments like this. The calibre of what we saw today goes beyond just going through. We would be out if we didn’t fight.”

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    Scaloni insisted Argentina had not been as poor as the scoreline at one stage suggested. Egypt, he said, was “an excellent team” which converted its openings well, but he pointed to the chances his own side had created long before the late surge. “We had three or four clear chances and if we had scored nobody would talk about it,” he said. “We had to dig in.”

    Even when Argentina fell two goals behind and the stadium tightened with dread, Scaloni said he never felt the game had gone beyond reach. “You feel concerned when you are not in control, but today we were,” he said. “I saw the game going our way as we created chances.” It was, in effect, an argument that Argentina’s suffering came not from inferiority but from wastefulness.

    The emotional centre of Scaloni’s night, though, was Lionel Messi. The captain had missed a penalty and looked, for a while, like the tragic figure in Argentina’s elimination story. Instead, he became one of the authors of its rescue, and Scaloni spoke of him with awe. “Messi is a role model for all the players,” he said. “He missed a penalty, but he still asks for the ball and goes on and on.”

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    He stopped short of placing the “epic” night alongside the World Cup final in Qatar but suggested it belonged to the same emotional universe. Messi, he said, “lives football for moments like this”, and Argentina wanted him to keep enjoying them while he still could.

    Scaloni was careful not to let the story become only about him or his captain. “It’s useless to say we win because of my actions,” he said. “We have these great players, and you use them when you need them. That’s not genius. The players are making the difference. And this goes for the whole team.”

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    Published on Jul 08, 2026

    Published on 7 July 2026 by sportstar

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