Messi meets England at last with World Cup final place on the line
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 - Semi Final - Argentina v Croatia - Lusail Stadium, Lusail, Qatar - December 13, 2022 Argentina's Lionel Messi celebrates after Julian Alvarez scores their third goal REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
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Lionel Messi has done just about everything possible in a
glorious career, but the 39-year-old Argentinian great has never taken on
England - he will finally get the chance in Wednesday's World Cup semi-final.
Messi won his 200th cap for the Albiceleste in the
group-stage victory against Algeria and dreams of leading his country to the
final once again.
The diminutive playmaker is surely in the final days of a
remarkable international career which began when he was a fresh-faced
18-year-old in 2005.
Having broken into the Barcelona team late the previous
year, Messi had just starred for Argentina as they won the Under-20 World Cup in
the Netherlands.
He was handed his Argentina bow by Jose Pekerman in a friendly
against Hungary in Budapest that August, replacing Lisandro Lopez in the 64th
minute and joining Hernan Crespo up front.
Ninety seconds later he was sent off for what the referee
saw as an elbow. It was quite the ignominious way for his Argentina career to
begin.
"An 18-year-old kid who is making his debut for the
national team and has so much hope -- he can't be punished like that. The
referee needed to be more understanding," said Crespo.
Messi might look back now and laugh at that incident, which
led to him being suspended for a friendly against England in Geneva three
months later.
The nations have not met since, and so Messi will play
against the Three Lions for the very first time under the roof of the Mercedes-Benz
Stadium in Atlanta.
"I have played against everyone except England and it
is special because they are a major nation, a powerhouse, and it is always nice
to play against a side like that, especially in a World Cup semi-final,"
said Messi after Argentina beat Switzerland in Kansas City in the last eight.
The man who emulated Diego Maradona by inspiring Argentina
to World Cup glory in Qatar four years ago will now hope to leave a similar
mark on England as his legendary predecessor.
Any meeting of these countries evokes memories of the 1986
quarter-final at the Estadio Azteca in Mexico City, when Maradona punched in to
score the 'Hand of God' opener and then ran past half the England defence for
his team's second goal -– perhaps the greatest World Cup goal of all time.
Messi has not scored one quite like that, but ahead of the
semi-finals of the current tournament he had scored more World Cup goals than
any other player.
With 21 goals from a tournament record 32 appearances, he
led France skipper Kylian Mbappe by one after the quarter-finals.
The Inter Miami player had found the net in nine consecutive
World Cup matches before the Switzerland game, when he let others -- notably
Julian Alvarez -- take over the goalscoring duties.
Argentina are now one game away from reaching another World
Cup final, as they aim to become the first team to retain the trophy since
Brazil in 1962.
It would be a third final in four World Cups, and Messi
could follow in the footsteps of Brazil great Cafu. The full-back played in
three in a row from 1994 to 2002 –- even Maradona only played in two.
"Getting to another semi-final is not a normal, mundane
thing, so this is something we should really enjoy because we don't know if it
will happen again," Messi said.
"It's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity," Nico
O'Reilly, who is likely to come up against Messi if he starts at left-back,
told BBC Radio 5 Live.
"He's coming towards the end of his career. For me
personally, he's the best player to ever touch a football pitch. And yeah, I
can't wait for the challenge."

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