Messi and Lewandowski's World Cup dreams in the balance

Lionel Messi
and Robert Lewandowski head into Wednesday's showdown between Argentina and
Poland with the futures of what could be their final World Cup adventures
hanging in the balance.
Either one of
two of the biggest stars of European club football could fail to qualify for
the knockout stages in Qatar and end their careers without tasting glory at the
most prestigious tournament of all.
Messi has
already netted twice in his last attempt to emulate Diego Maradona and win the
World Cup for Argentina and is trying to drag the Albiceleste out of Group C
after they were stunned by Saudi Arabia in their opening match.
Argentina
beat Mexico 2-0 to salvage their campaign and sit second, level on three points
with the Saudis and one behind leaders Poland and only a win will guarantee
that 35-year-old Messi's Qatar campaign continues into December.
An Argentine
exit would devastate fans back home and a worldwide army of Messi fans
desperate to see him lift the World Cup.
It would
also be a fitting climax to the career of one of football's greatest ever
players, but coach Lionel Scaloni sees such histrionics as unnecessary.
"It's
hard to make people understand that the sun will rise tomorrow, win or
lose," he said after his side beat Mexico to get their challenge back on
track.
"What
matters is how you do things."
Lewandowski
was brought to tears by fulfilling his "childhood dream" of scoring
his first ever World Cup goal in what was his fifth match at the finals, a 2-0
win over the Saudis.
The
Barcelona forward knows he might not get another chance on this stage should
the Poles exit the tournament on Wednesday.
"I'm
aware it might be my last World Cup and I wanted to be able to say that I've
played and scored at World Cups," said the 34-year-old.
Lewandowski
is a safer bet to make the last 16 as Poland will be through with a win or a
draw, and even if they lose they are only sure to be knocked out if the Saudis
beat Mexico.
Poland coach
Czeslaw Michniewicz insisted it wasn't simply a contest between the forwards
despite the inevitable focus on the two big stars.
"It's
not only a match between Lewandowski and Messi, it's not tennis," he said.
USA send
Iran out
On Tuesday,
the United States reached the knockout phase by beating Iran 1-0 in a battle of
geopolitical foes, earning a second round meeting with the Netherlands.
Christian
Pulisic's winner in the 38th minute of an absorbing contest in Doha eliminated
the Iranians.
The meeting
of the bitter ideological rivals had been marked by a bad-tempered buildup,
with Iran's Football Federation demanding on Sunday that FIFA punish US Soccer
for posting a modified version of their country's flag on social media.
The defeat
ended a fraught campaign for Iran, whose every move in Qatar has been
scrutinised for signs the players are showing support for mass anti-government
protests that have shaken the Islamic republic.
"The
dream is over," coach Carlos Queiroz said. "Unfortunately football
always punishes the team that doesn't score."
The
Americans finished two points behind England in Group B after Gareth
Southgate's team cruised past Wales 3-0 in a one-sided 'Battle of Britain'
decided by a Marcus Rashford brace and another strike from Manchester City star
Phil Foden.
Rashford
said his double, which included a stunning free-kick to open the scoring in the
50th minute at the Ahmad bin Ali Stadium, was "what I play football
for".
"I have
massive ambition for this team and think we can play even better than we showed
today," added Rashford.
England will
face Senegal on Sunday after Chelsea defender Kalidou Koulibaly snatched a 2-1
win over Ecuador to finish second behind the Dutch in Group A and knock out the
South Americans.
Koulibaly
said he would give late Senegalese icon Papa Bouba Diop's family his
man-of-the-match award after firing the Lions of Teranga into the last 16 for
the second time in their history.
Cody Gakpo
his third goal of the tournament as the Netherlands booked their place last 16
as group winners with a straightforward 2-0 victory over hosts Qatar.
Qatar, which
has spent $200 billion to host the World Cup, bow out of their own tournament
with the worst ever performance by a host nation -- zero points and just one
goal scored.
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