
Lionel Messi has called England 'a powerhouse' and described the prospect of facing them in a World Cup semi-final as 'special'. Coming from the man who has won the thing, those two words carry more freight than a full press conference from anyone else.
Messi's comments, reported by Football365, are brief — but brevity from him tends to mean something. 'A powerhouse' is not diplomatic filler. It is the kind of label you attach to a team you have genuinely studied, a team you know will not fold. Whether that reads as respect or as a quiet warning probably depends on which shirt you're wearing.
He also called the fixture 'special' — and on that, at least, there is no argument from anyone.
Argentina and England at a World Cup semi-final would be, without exaggeration, one of the most loaded ninety minutes in football history. The 1986 quarter-final in Mexico City — Diego Maradona's Hand of God, then the Goal of the Century, a 2-1 Argentina win — sits permanently in the mythology of the sport. The 1998 round of sixteen in Saint-Étienne, David Beckham's red card, the penalty shootout, the long walk — that one still stings in certain parts of England.
A semi-final, though? That has never happened. If Messi's comments were specifically about this stage of the competition — and that appears to be the most charitable reading of the Football365 report — then he is technically correct. The two nations have never shared a World Cup semi-final. The rivalry has always ended earlier, and always badly for England.
This is, for now, a single-source story from Football365, and the tournament context has not been independently corroborated. Treat the fixture as reported rather than confirmed until further outlets pick it up. The quotes are attributed to Messi; the framing around them deserves a second source before anyone books flights.
Even as a reported story, the narrative writes itself. Messi — eight-time Ballon d'Or winner, 2022 World Cup champion, the player a generation of England fans grew up watching and occasionally resenting — calling their national team a powerhouse on the eve of a potential semi-final is exactly the kind of moment that makes international football feel like it actually matters.
England have been here before, in the sense of being talked about respectfully by the best players in the world right up until the moment it goes wrong. Messi knows that too. He watched Maradona's tapes.
Lionel Messi has called England 'a powerhouse' and described the prospect of facing them in a World Cup semi-final as 'special'. Coming from the man who has won the thing, those two words carry more freight than a full…
Sources
Football365
Flagside articles are original write-ups synthesised from multiple sources. We cite every outlet that fed into the piece.
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