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KANSAS CITY — Lionel Andres Messi is two games from football immortality; from undisputed, unassailable G.O.A.T. status; from removing any doubt or rebuttal over who’s the best to ever do it.

MOREArgentina 3-1 Switzerland

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Same goes for Argentina, on all points, from a team perspective. Only two teams have ever done it — win the World Cup back-to-back — and the last time was 64 years ago. Italy in the ’30s and Brazil in ’58 and ’64. They’d be the best ever, forever.

And those are the impossible expectations they face — that he faces — every time they take the field, just like they did Saturday night against Switzerland in the 2026 quarterfinals. In the end, they did what was required and they live to play another game, but Argentina are currently underdogs against England in the second semifinal on Wednesday (3 pm ET).

The defending champions. With the greatest player ever. Underdogs.

Maybe they do it, maybe they don’t, but we’ll certainly never see anyone get this close again in our lifetimes.

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“May our fans enjoy the semifinal just like us,” Messi said after Argentina survived another scare and won 3-1 in extra-time. “This team has gotten people used to it by doing extraordinary things. We need to savor it to the fullest, because we don’t know if it will happen again.”

Wise words, Leo.

Up until tonight, it had been him dragging Argentina through games that were far closer than they ever should have been. Messi’s magic will have you believing that impossible is nothing for him, but the eye test tells us Argentina are flat out not the best team at this tournament; at no point in the knockout rounds have they looked head or shoulders above the opposition; and it’s more than fair to say they’re still overly reliant on a 39-year-old who has somehow to this point managed to defy time as we know it. It’s not exactly a winning formula to inspire confidence, on paper.

And still, you’re not betting against them. You want to end up on the wrong side of history? Against that guy? That team? Not a chance.

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They just find a way. Again and again, and again now.

Only this time, it was more like Argentina dragging Messi over the line when he wasn’t at his typically dominant, most very best. Anything short of Messi’s best, and Argentina would have been out to either one of Cape Verde or Egypt in the last two rounds. It was the question — will someone other than Messi step up? — coming into this World Cup, and five games into it we were no closer to an answer.

Perhaps Julian Alvarez and Lautaro Martinez, Messi’s running mates up top, heard the chatter. How could they not? Well, they answered.

Switzerland made it abundantly clear from the opening whistle that they were not going to let Messi beat them. They crowded him with and without the ball and forced him out wider than he wanted to be. Murat Yakin’s side executed their game plan to near perfection and they got to within eight minutes of a penalty shootout.

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If Messi wasn’t going to beat them, then who would? We waited 90 minutes plus two-thirds of extra-time waiting, wondering if we’d find out tonight, or maybe never.

Messi was just standing around, a spectator like the rest of us, when it happened, 112th minute. Alvarez had been given far too much space standing at the corner of the penalty area, and he knew it. He called for it and Jose Manuel Lopez gave it to him, the ball played out in front for Alvarez to run on to and look for goal. One touch cushioned, next touch a wave of the wand. About as top corner as you can put it, over Gregor Kobel’s outstretched mitts and tucked just under the crossbar, side netting for good measure.

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