Hooligan Soccer
·11 de julio de 2026
Argentina vs. Switzerland: Match Preview

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsHooligan Soccer
·11 de julio de 2026

Lionel Messi and the defending champions have lived dangerously in every knockout game so far. Now, in the shadow of Arrowhead, they run out of margin for error against a Swiss side that refuses to lose.
Argentina’s path to this quarterfinal has been anything but smooth. Argentina needed extra time to beat Cape Verde 3-2 in the Round of 32. Then they trailed Egypt 0-2 with 23 minutes left in Atlanta before storming back to win 3-2, with Cristian Romero, Messi and Enzo Fernández scoring three times in a frantic final stretch. Through five matches, Argentina have won all five, and Messi has scored eight goals, the most of any player in the tournament.
Switzerland’s route has been the mirror opposite: controlled, patient, unspectacular. Murat Yakin’s men are yet to trail at any point across this whole World Cup campaign, grinding past Algeria before edging Colombia on penalties after a goalless draw. It’s the Nati’s first quarterfinal since 1954, and they arrive having claimed back-to-back knockout victories for the first time ever in a World Cup.
The history books lean heavily toward the Albiceleste. Switzerland have never beaten Argentina in seven previous meetings, though a place in the last four is on the line for both sides. The winner faces either Norway or England in an Atlanta semifinal on Wednesday, July 15.
Despite the chaos of the last two matches, Lionel Scaloni sounded remarkably calm heading into Kansas City. Asked about his lineup, he left the door open to consistency:
“I’ve repeated the same lineup before, so it wouldn’t be crazy if I did it again. It’s definitely a possibility. In general, despite how crazy the match was, I liked what the team showed the other day.”
He pushed back on the idea that Argentina are cracking defensively, framing the knockout stage as a work in progress rather than a warning sign:
“I think we’re in a good place. Despite the match against Cape Verde, where we played 120 minutes, the team created plenty of chances. Against Egypt, we created even more, but we made a few isolated mistakes. Overall, I think the team is doing well.”
On Messi, now 39 and still the tournament’s top scorer, Scaloni didn’t hold back:
“Leo Messi runs in matches much like he always has. He is decisive, and the team helps him. He prepared extremely well and is giving everything he has. When he senses that he can create danger, he’s a machine. It doesn’t surprise me. As long as he still has the desire, he’ll be the best.”
Scaloni also addressed the swirl of criticism and conspiracy talk that’s followed Argentina’s bumpy knockout run, turning it into a rallying cry:
“We use the criticism and the comments people make as motivation. We turn it into fuel to make the players perform even better. Argentina has always been talked about because we’re always competing at the highest level, and we come into this one as the defending champions.”
Pressed on accusations of favorable officiating, he was direct:
“Nowadays, with VAR, it’s very difficult for anyone to help you. Lisandro Martínez had his foot stepped on, it was a foul. Everything gets exaggerated on social media, but there is no favoritism.”
Perhaps the most revealing moment of the presser had nothing to do with tactics. Asked about what sustains this group through white-knuckle knockout football, Scaloni pointed to the barbecues, the mate, the card games:
“For us, the barbecue gatherings are some of the best moments of all. You’ll never experience those moments again. Sitting with your teammates, drinking mate, playing truco… If all you think about is the next match, you end up mentally exhausted. I’m coach because of things like that — group chemistry, celebration, talks, laughs with your teammates — not just tactics. Those are the things you remember. And when we grow stronger as a group, we become an even stronger team.”
Argentina have leaked four goals in their last two matches, and the back line isn’t happy about it. Lisandro Martínez struck a tone of quiet urgency:
“We’re growing with every game. There’s always room to improve, and right now we’re fully focused on the next match. We don’t like conceding goals, so we need to stay a little more focused. It’s better that this happened now, so we can be even more concentrated for the final stages of the tournament.”
Cristian Romero echoed the sentiment, while acknowledging the size of the task ahead:
“We’ve conceded too many goals lately, and as defenders, we don’t like that. We have to improve in that area. It’s going to be a difficult game — Switzerland are coming off a great performance against Colombia. When you’re losing, you naturally push forward and try to hurt the opponent. It’s nice to score, but our main job is to defend.”
Kickoff: 9 p.m. ET, Saturday, July 11Kansas City Stadium, MissouriWinner faces: Norway or England in the semifinal, Wednesday, July 15 (Atlanta)







































