
Argentina are into the World Cup semi-finals. It took 120 minutes, a red card, and the kind of stubborn Swiss resistance that makes these knockout ties so hard to call — but the defending champions are through, 3-1 after extra time in Kansas City.
Switzerland came to Kansas City with a plan, and for long stretches they made Argentina work for every inch of it. The tie went the full distance — 120 minutes of World Cup quarterfinal football, the sort of match that ages managers and delights neutrals in equal measure.
It was Breel Embolo's red card that cracked the tie open. The Swiss were competitive and dangerous until the moment they went down to ten men — and then Argentina made them pay. BBC Sport and Capital Sports both confirm the dismissal as the decisive turning point in a match that had been level and tight until that moment.
The final score, 3-1, flatters the margin slightly. A one-goal game for most of its life, this only opened up once the Swiss were reduced to ten men — at which point Argentina, as Argentina tend to do, found the spaces and finished the job.
Embolo has been one of Switzerland's most important players across this tournament — physical, direct, a constant problem for defenders. Losing him in a quarterfinal against the world champions is not a footnote. It is the match.
Playing a man down in extra time against a side with Argentina's quality in the final third is a different proposition entirely. Switzerland held on for as long as they could. They couldn't hold on forever.
The defending champions are now in the last four of the 2026 World Cup — still standing, still grinding, still finding ways through. The semi-final draw will determine who stands between them and another final, but this Argentina side has shown across this tournament that they do not need to be at their best to win.
They just need to be better than you. On Saturday in Kansas City, they were.
Switzerland will feel the red card robbed them of a fair fight. They are probably right. That is also, unfortunately, football.
Argentina are into the World Cup semi-finals. It took 120 minutes, a red card, and the kind of stubborn Swiss resistance that makes these knockout ties so hard to call
Fuentes
Capital Sports
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“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
SELECCIONESThere are football matches, and then there are events — moments where the sport stops being a sport and becomes something closer to a reckoning. England vs Argentina in a 2026 World Cup semi-final is
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
SELECCIONESThere are football matches, and then there are events — moments where the sport stops being a sport and becomes something closer to a reckoning. England vs Argentina in a 2026 World Cup semi-final is