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Argentina's Title Defence Is More Than Messi

Mac Allister, Alvarez and Lautaro did the scoring. Messi pulled the strings. Argentina are into the World Cup 2026 semi-finals on the strength of a whole squad, not one man - and that is exactly what makes the champions so hard to knock out.

The easy story of Argentina's World Cup is a story about one man. It is also the wrong one. The champions reached the 2026 semi-finals by beating a 10-man Switzerland 3-1 after extra time, and the most telling detail is who put the ball in the net: Alexis Mac Allister, Julian Alvarez and Lautaro Martinez. Lionel Messi did not score. He did not need to. That is the point, and it is the thread that runs through this entire title defence.


The payoff: a whole team, not a one-man act

Against Switzerland, Argentina led early through Alexis Mac Allister on 10 minutes, controlling long spells without turning them into a comfortable scoreline. Dan Ndoye levelled for Switzerland just after the hour, and the tie briefly opened up. The turning point came soon after, when Breel Embolo was shown a second yellow and Switzerland were reduced to ten. Even then, the champions had to wait: it took until the 112th minute for Julian Alvarez to bend a shot into the top corner, and Lautaro Martinez added a third in the dying seconds of extra time.

Three different scorers, none of them Messi. A team that could not force the breakthrough in normal time and simply kept its composure until the game bent its way. This is what a deep tournament side looks like - the danger does not switch off when the headline name is quiet.

Context and depth: the pattern was already there

This was not a one-off. Look back at the Round of 16 and the same quality shows up in a different form. Argentina fell 2-0 behind to Egypt and looked, for a spell, like a champion on the way out. What followed was a comeback for the ages: Cristian Romero headed in from a Messi cross on 79 minutes, Messi struck himself on 83, and Enzo Fernandez completed a 3-2 win in stoppage time - and Messi had even had a penalty saved earlier in that match.

Put the two knockout games together and a clear identity emerges. Argentina have been taken to the brink and to extra time, have had penalties saved and goals conceded, and have still found a way through every time. Some of that is Messi. A lot of it is everyone else. The spread of contributions - Mac Allister, Alvarez, Lautaro, Romero, Fernandez - is the real engine of a title defence, and it is the hardest thing for an opponent to plan against.

The player angle: who is carrying the champions

Lionel Messi remains the gravitational centre. He arrived at the quarter-finals as one of the tournament's leading scorers on eight goals, having found the net in every game he had played, and his creativity set up the decisive moments against Egypt. That he can now influence a knockout tie without scoring only widens the threat.

Around him, the supporting cast keeps delivering the biggest moments. Mac Allister opened the scoring against Switzerland and offers control and goals from midfield. Alvarez produced the moment of quality that broke a stubborn 10-man block. Lautaro Martinez, so often the man for the decisive late touch, applied the finish that sealed it. These are not fringe names filling in for an absent star - they are elite players carrying real load, which is precisely why Argentina do not live or die on one performance.

Switzerland deserve their credit in this story too. Dan Ndoye scored the goal that briefly threatened an upset, and a side that reached its first World Cup quarter-final since 1954 - surviving a penalty shootout against Colombia to get there - pushed the world champions to extra time and to ten men before falling. Their run ends with the pride of having made the champions work for every inch.

What it sets up

The reward is a semi-final against England in Atlanta, a heavyweight meeting of two of the tournament's form teams and a fixture heavy with history. Argentina arrive as champions who have proven they can win ugly, win late, and win without their talisman scoring. England arrive on their own wave of momentum. The likely development, and the question most analysts will focus on, is whether Argentina's spread of match-winners can be contained across ninety-plus minutes, or whether England's control can finally silence a team that keeps finding a different answer each round.


Reading the depth before the drama

The lesson under all of it is that a champion's strength is often in its second and third options, not just its first. Argentina's semi-final place was built on Mac Allister, Alvarez and Lautaro as much as on Messi, and that kind of distributed threat is readable in the performance data long before it decides a knockout tie. Following squad-wide form and value early, rather than reacting to the headline name, is exactly the edge SVMarkets is built around at sportvalue.app.

Argentina are into the last four, and they got there the way great tournament teams do: with a whole squad taking turns to be decisive. Messi is still the story everyone reaches for first. The champions keep proving he does not have to be.

Author: John Dawson

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