
Lionel Messi didn't score. He didn't need to. Argentina ground past Switzerland 3-1 after extra time on 12 July to reach the World Cup 2026 semi-finals — and somewhere in the middle of it all, Messi quietly rewrote the record books again. According to Foot Mercato, the Argentina captain set a new all-time World Cup record during the quarter-final, adding to a tournament in which he had already registered eight goal contributions heading into the match. The exact nature of the milestone is subject to verification, but the pattern is familiar enough by now: Messi plays, history moves.
Switzerland made Argentina work for it. The Swiss, organised and physical as ever on the biggest stage, pushed this one deep into extra time before Argentina finally pulled clear. The 3-1 scoreline flatters neither side — this was a proper quarter-final, the kind that leaves fingerprints on a tournament.
Messi's fingerprints were everywhere, even without a goal to his name. That's the thing about this version of Messi at this World Cup: the assists, the movement, the moments that don't show up cleanly in a box score but that teammates and opponents both feel. He arrived at this match having already contributed to eight goals in the tournament. By the time the final whistle went in extra time, a new record had been set.
Foot Mercato reported the milestone without specifying the exact category — whether it relates to assists, overall goal contributions, or appearances at the World Cup stage. Flagside is working to confirm the precise detail before updating this piece. What can be said without hesitation: Messi has now broken or equalled multiple all-time World Cup records across his career, and at 38, at what is almost certainly his final tournament, he is still the one setting the terms.
He didn't celebrate like a man chasing records. He never does.
Argentina are in the semi-finals of the World Cup. The defending champions, the team built around the greatest player the sport has produced, keep advancing — and Messi keeps finding ways to matter even when the goals aren't coming. That's the story of this run. It's not always pretty. Extra time against Switzerland is not pretty. But the scoreboard says 3-1, and Argentina are still standing.
Whoever faces them next will know exactly what's coming. They'll prepare for it meticulously, set their shape, do everything right — and Messi will find a way regardless.
Lionel Messi didn't score. He didn't need to. Argentina ground past Switzerland 3-1 after extra time on 12 July to reach the World Cup 2026 semi-finals
Lähteet
Foot Mercato
Flagsiden jutut ovat omaperäisiä, monista lähteistä syntetisoituja kirjoituksia. Mainitsemme jokaisen median, joka ruokki juttua.
Yön otteluiden poiminta, mitä siirtoikkunassa tapahtuu, ja yksi kolumni, josta toimituksen pöytä väitteli. Ei mainoksia. Ei vinkkejä. Ei operaattoreita.
Yksi klikkaus poistaa tilauksesta. Emme jaa sähköpostiosoitteita.
“Stays on Argentina — different angle, same beat.”
Argentina are through to the World Cup semi-finals — but nobody watching made it look easy, least of all Nico Paz. The Como midfielder's reaction during the 3-1 extra-time win over Switzerland became
“Stays on Argentina — different angle, same beat.”
Argentina are through to the World Cup semi-finals — but nobody watching made it look easy, least of all Nico Paz. The Como midfielder's reaction during the 3-1 extra-time win over Switzerland became