World Cup winners Argentina return ahead of welcome home party
Argentina's coach Lionel Scaloni (C) alongside Argentina's players celebrate on board a bus with supporters after winning the Qatar 2022 World Cup tournament as they leave Ezeiza International Airport en route to the Argentine Football Association (AFA) training centre in Ezeiza, Buenos Aires province, Argentina on December 20, 2022. (Photo by Luis ROBAYO / AFP)
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Argentina's World Cup
winners led by captain Lionel Messi returned home from Qatar in the early hours
of Tuesday morning ahead of a welcome home party in the nation's capital.
Having beaten France
in Sunday's thrilling final, the players will now spend the night at the
Argentine Football Association (AFA) training complex near the Ezeiza Airport
where they arrived in Buenos Aires and where thousands of supporters were
waiting to greet them.
They will then head
to the iconic Obelisk monument for a tour of the Buenos Aires city center from
midday on Tuesday with millions expected out in the streets on what is a public
holiday.
"We will be here
all night and tomorrow as well," student Ayrton Kerdocas, 25, told AFP
outside the airport.
"Tomorrow we are
not working, we won't do anything and we'll go directly to the Obelisk with
Argentina."
Argentina won the
final in Qatar 4-2 on penalties after a rollercoaster 3-3 draw over 120
minutes of unparalleled drama for their first world title in 36 years.
Messi, who scored
twice in the final, was the first player to emerge from the plane, holding the
World Cup aloft, with coach Lionel Scaloni right behind him.
Forward Julian
Alvarez, a revelation in Qatar with his four goals, was one of the next players
out of the Aerolinas Argentinas Airbus A330.
A picture of Messi
was emblazoned on the plane's tail with the words: "one team, one country,
one dream" on its side.
The players made their way from the plane along a red carpet straight to a white open-top bus with the words "world champions" and three stars on its side as their World Cup theme song "Muchachos" by ska band La Mosca blared out.
Excitement had been
brewing since the party that began after Sunday's final ahead of the players'
arrival.
A private reception
at a VIP suite in the airport had been arranged to greet the returning players.
"I came because
of my passion for Argentina. I love Messi, I love the entire team," Alejandra
Diaz, 55, a kindergarten teacher told AFP outside the airport.
Welder Javier Merina,
41, a Messi "fanatic" said he had come to the airport to try to get
the star to sign a picture.
"If he doesn't I
will go to Rosario, to Funes (Messi's home town) to see if I can get Messi's
autograph," said Merina.
Messi, 35, finally
crowned his record-breaking career with football's biggest prize as he produced
one of the greatest World Cup final performances, scoring a first-half penalty
and netting again in extra time.
In doing so he
emulated his predecessor as Argentina's idol, Diego Maradona who inspired the
country to their second world title with a series of match-winning displays at
Mexico 1986.
"I remember '86
but this victory yesterday was much more emotional and much more
stressful," architect Ricardo Grunfeld, 65, told AFP.
"I don't know if
there's any difference with '86 but this comes at a good time," added
Zulema Guereri, 80.
Argentina had led 2-0
with 10 minutes of normal time left and 3-2 with only two minutes of extra-time
to go but Kylian Mbappe completed only the second World Cup final hat-trick in
history to take the gripping final to penalties, before Gonzalo Montiel swept
home the decisive spot kick.
Despite the huge
numbers of revelers during Sunday's festivities "people acted in a very
positive way," a spokesperson for the municipality said.
Fewer than 20 people were arrested for isolated incidents of violence or theft.
France's beaten
players were given a rousing reception by fans in central Paris on Monday after
their return from Qatar.
They appeared on the
balcony of the Crillon Hotel overlooking the Place de la Concorde.
"Frankly, it's
magnificent, it warms the heart, it's a great pleasure to see that we were able
to make so many French people proud and happy," forward Marcus Thuram told
TF1 TV.
They landed at
Paris's Charles de Gaulle airport just before 8:00 pm (1900 GMT) where a
caravan of coaches took them straight to the center of Paris.
Goalkeeper and
captain Hugo Lloris told TF1 that it was a chance to "greet them (the
fans), to thank them for their support and, after yesterday's pain, to seek
their consolation."
The captivating final
rounded off one of the most controversial World Cups in history.
Qatari organisers
faced persistent questions about the country's treatment of migrant workers and
its laws on homosexuality.
Football's world governing body FIFA said the cumulative stadium attendance was 3.4 million spectators and that more than one million visitors travelled to Qatar to watch the matches.

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