
Lionel Messi has already done things in football that required the record books to be rewritten. On Sunday, he gets the chance to do it again — this time in a World Cup final against Spain, his third appearance on that stage, with a second winner's medal the prize if Argentina hold their nerve.
Most players go an entire career without reaching a World Cup final. Messi has now reached three. He was on the losing side in Brazil in 2014, when Germany's extra-time winner at the Maracanã left him collecting a Golden Ball that felt hollow in the moment. Eight years later, in Qatar, he got the ending the sport had been waiting for — a final against France that produced arguably the greatest match in the tournament's history, settled on penalties, with Messi lifting the trophy at last.
Now there is a third. Spain on Sunday, venue to be confirmed, and the possibility of a second World Cup winner's medal — something no player in the modern era has achieved, according to Foot Mercato, who first reported the significance of the record Messi is approaching. The precise framing of that record — whether it relates to final appearances, winner's medals, or a combination — has not been fully detailed in available sources, and is worth watching for official confirmation. What is not in doubt is the scale of what Sunday represents.
Argentina's road through this tournament has carried the familiar weight of a Messi campaign: moments of individual brilliance threading through collective pressure, a squad that knows exactly what it is doing and why. Messi, at 38, is not the player who terrorised defences at Barcelona for a decade — but he has never needed to be that player to win a World Cup. In Qatar he was a conductor. Here, he has been the same.
Spain, under Luis Enrique, arrive as one of the tournament's most cohesive sides — technically precise, positionally disciplined, with Lamine Yamal's tournament already the stuff of highlight reels. This is not a final Argentina will win by default.
Two World Cup winner's medals. Three finals. A career that already contains eight Ballon d'Or awards, a Copa América, a Champions League, and more league titles than most players see in a lifetime — and Messi would add the one thing that has no precedent in the modern game.
He didn't celebrate when Argentina won in Qatar. He stood there for a long moment, looking at the trophy, as if checking it was real.
Sunday gives him the chance to do something no one has ever had to check twice.
Lionel Messi has already done things in football that required the record books to be rewritten. On Sunday, he gets the chance to do it again
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Foot Mercato
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“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
Lionel Messi is going to a third World Cup final. Let that settle for a second. While England are left to process another tournament exit at the hands of Argentina, Messi — at this stage of his career
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
Lionel Messi is going to a third World Cup final. Let that settle for a second. While England are left to process another tournament exit at the hands of Argentina, Messi — at this stage of his career