Argentina revel in 'home' support at World Cup
Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 - Quarter Final - Netherlands v Argentina - Lusail Stadium, Lusail, Qatar - December 10, 2022 Argentina fans with a drum of former Argentina player Diego Maradona and Argentina's Lionel Messi celebrate qualifying for the Semi Finals REUTERS/Carl Recine
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Lionel Messi
and Argentina's bid for a third World Cup crown is being boosted by hordes of
travelling fans that have transformed each of their matches in Qatar into
virtual home games.
Argentine
football venues are renowned for their seething intensity - iconic Buenos
Aires cauldrons such as the Bombonera or Monumental tremble with passionate
ferocity.
Those kinds
of scenes have been recreated regularly at Doha's Lusail Stadium, where tens of
thousands of Argentine fans have created a raucous wall of
blue-and-white-shirted sound.
Argentina
have already played three games at the glittering 88,966-seat arena, where
Messi and his team-mates will battle Croatia on Tuesday, aiming to book a place
in the World Cup final.
After most
Argentina games, the "Albiceleste" have lingered on the pitch long
after the final whistle, sharing a moment of emotionally charged communion with
their supporters.
"We
like to take advantage of these moments with the people who are here and in
Argentina, where everyone is euphoric," Messi said following Friday's
quarter-final win over the Netherlands.
According to
the Argentine embassy in Qatar, between 35,000 and 40,000 fans have travelled
to the World Cup to support the team, one of the largest contingents of
overseas supporters at the tournament.
That
sizeable support has been augmented by thousands of Qatar-based migrant workers
from India and Bangladesh, where Messi and Argentina enjoy widespread support.
"Compared
to France, Argentina aren't quite at the same level as a team -- but they are a
team who are benefiting from the support they have here," the
Argentina-born former France striker David Trezeguet told AFP.
At the end
of each of their victories at the World Cup, after joining supporters in
post-match singing, Argentina's players will repeat the line that they are
playing for "45 million" of their compatriots.
"What I
do, I do for the 45 million, They are going through a bad economic period.
Giving people joy is the best thing that I can do at the moment," said
Argentina goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez, the hero of Friday's penalty shootout
win over the Netherlands.
Economic
hardships
Trezeguet
believes the bond between Argentina's players and their supporters has been
forged by the economic crisis battering the country, where inflation has
skyrocketed.
"My
first memories of the Argentina team were in Mexico in 1986. It was crazy back
then, but nothing like as crazy as it is now," Trezeguet said. "The
socio-economic situation in Argentina at the moment has made the support for
the team more passionate than ever."
According to
reports in the media, many of the fans who have travelled to Qatar have spent
years saving up to make the trip, diligently converting their Argentine pesos
into US dollars in order to avoid the ravages of inflation.
Others such
as Beto, a fan in his 60s interviewed by AFP as he walked through Doha's Souq
Waqif, have travelled to Qatar from the United States or elsewhere after
emigrating overseas. The passion, however, remains as intense as ever.
"Even
though I've lived in the United States for a long time, if you cut my wrist, I
will bleed blue and white," Beto told AFP.
"We
have an immense passion for football. We suffer a lot on a daily basis because
there are problems in our country, the economy is not doing well. But football
gives us this energy which allows us to go from nothing to everything."
That passion
is evoked in two songs that have regularly reverberated around Qatar's stadiums
when Argentina are playing - "Vamos Argentina" and
"Muchachos", a de facto national anthem of the national team which
name-checks Messi, Diego Maradona and the 1982 Falklands War between Argentina
and Britain.
"Argentina
is a complex, politically fractured country. There are few subjects that unite
the country - but the Falklands and the football team do," said Edgardo
Esteban, director of the Falklands Museum in Buenos Aires.

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