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Sixty years. That is how long England have waited to play in a World Cup final — and standing between them and that date in 2026 is the one opponent the Three Lions have never quite been able to shake: Argentina, Lionel Messi, and the full weight of the most loaded rivalry in international football.
England versus Argentina at a World Cup is not just a football match. It is a recurring nightmare for one side and a recurring masterclass for the other — and yet here we are again, the two nations meeting at the semi-final stage with everything on the line.
For England, this is the moment the last six decades have been building toward. Since Geoff Hurst's hat-trick at Wembley in 1966, the Three Lions have reached two semi-finals — Italia '90 and Euro '96 — and lost both on penalties. They have been close. They have been agonising. They have never been back to the final.
For Argentina, this is the defence of a title. Messi lifted the trophy in Qatar in 2022 — the one he had been chasing his entire career — and at 39 years old, he arrives at this tournament as a man with nothing left to prove and everything left to give. That combination is the most dangerous thing in football.
England fans do not need reminding, but the timeline demands it. Diego Maradona's Hand of God in 1986. David Beckham's red card in 1998, England eliminated on penalties. The 2002 group stage: Beckham's penalty, a 1-0 England win — and then nothing, because the two nations kept missing each other in the knockout rounds.
Now they are here. Same stage, different era, same electricity.
Messi was not in the 1986 squad. He was not born for the 1966 final. But he carries Argentina's footballing identity on his back in a way that makes history feel present whenever he plays — and England know better than most what it feels like to be on the wrong side of an Argentine moment of genius.
England arrive at this semi-final with genuine belief — and given the squad depth available to the Three Lions in 2026, that is not misplaced. England have the attacking quality to hurt Argentina, the defensive structure to contain them, and the tournament experience — finally — to not crumble under the occasion.
The key question is whether England can handle Messi. Not just tactically, but psychologically. Argentina's captain has a habit of making semi-finals feel like exhibitions when the mood takes him. England's backline will need to be at its absolute best.
Messi, for his part, has never looked like a man who plays for the occasion. He just plays football — and the occasion tends to arrange itself around him.
Every generation of England fans has been told their tournament is the one. This time, the squad is deeper, the manager has experience, and the draw has delivered the ultimate test at the ultimate moment. There is no hiding from what this is.
England versus Argentina. A World Cup semi-final. Sixty years of hurt against the defending champions.
Somebody's story ends here.
Sixty years. That is how long England have waited to play in a World Cup final — and standing between them and that date in 2026 is the one opponent the Three Lions have never quite been able to shake: Argentina, Lionel…
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“Stays on England — different angle, same beat.”
INTEngland are in a World Cup semi-final against Argentina, and Roy Keane has something to say about it. Of course he does. After a 2-1 quarter-final win over Norway sent Gareth Southgate's — or whoever'
“Stays on England — different angle, same beat.”
INTEngland are in a World Cup semi-final against Argentina, and Roy Keane has something to say about it. Of course he does. After a 2-1 quarter-final win over Norway sent Gareth Southgate's — or whoever'