For thirty-six long years, Argentina lived beneath a cloud of expectation, criticism, and repeated heartbreak, a nation haunted by near-misses and shattered dreams on football’s grandest stage. That burden weighed heaviest on Lionel Messi, whose international career unfolded under relentless scrutiny despite unparalleled club success. When Argentina arrived in the deserts of Qatar three years ago, memories of the 2014 World Cup final defeat in Brazil still lingered painfully. That night in Rio de Janeiro, when glory slipped away at the final hurdle, had carved a deep wound into Messi’s legacy and into the collective consciousness of Argentine football.
Ironically, it was that pain which became the foundation of redemption. The journey in Qatar began not with triumph, but with shock. A stunning opening defeat to Saudi Arabia sent tremors through the tournament and revived old doubts. Critics were swift and unforgiving, many declaring that the World Cup was destined to remain beyond Messi’s reach. Yet amid the uncertainty, Argentina found strength in unity. Messi led with quiet authority, refusing to bow to despair. On the sidelines, Lionel Scaloni orchestrated calm and clarity, while on the pitch a fearless generation of players rallied around their captain, determined to rewrite history.
With each passing match, Argentina rediscovered belief. The team grew sharper, braver, and more cohesive, transforming adversity into momentum. That journey culminated on 18 December at Lusail Stadium, a night now immortalised in football folklore. Facing defending champions France, the same opponents who had ended Argentina’s 2018 campaign, Messi and his teammates produced a final of breathtaking drama. Regulation time and extra time could not separate the sides, before a nerve-shredding penalty shootout delivered Argentina’s first World Cup title since 1986. As Messi finally lifted the golden trophy, his career reached a moment of profound completion, echoing the legacy Diego Maradona had forged decades earlier.
Yet football, like time, never truly stands still. Another World Cup now approaches, promising a new chapter rather than an epilogue. On 12 June, the United States, Canada, and Mexico will host the largest tournament in history, expanded to 48 teams. As reigning champions, Argentina will arrive carrying both confidence and expectation, once again viewed as serious contenders. Across the world, a single question dominates conversations among supporters and neutrals alike: can Messi do it again?
Within the Argentine camp, the dream is shared. Teammates speak openly of their desire to give their captain a final, crowning farewell. Though advancing age has altered his role, Messi’s influence remains undiminished. The hunger in his eyes still burns brightly, and his ambition endures. On 20 June at MetLife Stadium, he may yet attempt to summon the magic of 2022 once more.
History rarely offers such opportunities. Few players have ever stood on the brink of winning multiple World Cups. For Lionel Messi, the door remains ajar. Whether destiny grants him one final golden triumph, or preserves Qatar as his ultimate masterpiece, will define the closing chapter of one of football’s greatest stories.
