Argentina snatched victory from the jaws of defeat with two late goals to eliminate England 2-1 in a thrilling FIFA World Cup semi-final at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Wednesday.
England appeared destined for their first World Cup final since lifting the trophy in 1966 after Anthony Gordon put Thomas Tuchel's side ahead midway through the second half. But Argentina launched a relentless late assault, with Enzo Fernandez equalising before substitute Lautaro Martinez headed home the winner in stoppage time.
Lionel Messi, playing what is widely expected to be the final World Cup of his illustrious career, provided both assists as the reigning champions advanced to Sunday's final against Spain in New York.
England's dream slips away
After a tightly contested first half filled with physical challenges and heated exchanges, England broke the deadlock in the 55th minute.
The move began when Nicolas Tagliafico's attempted clearance fell kindly to Declan Rice, who threaded a pass into Morgan Rogers. Rogers delivered a precise cross across the penalty area, allowing Anthony Gordon to guide the ball past Emiliano Martinez at the back post.
The goal sparked jubilant celebrations among England supporters and seemed to put the Three Lions on course for a historic final appearance.
However, rather than pushing for a second goal, England retreated deep into their own half, inviting relentless pressure from Argentina.
Messi sparks comeback
With England pinned back, an Argentine equaliser increasingly felt inevitable.
The breakthrough arrived in the 85th minute when Messi found Enzo Fernandez in space outside the penalty area. The Chelsea midfielder unleashed a superb 20-metre strike beyond Jordan Pickford and into the corner to level the match.
Argentina's pressure never eased.
Lautaro Martinez, introduced as a substitute in the 81st minute, completed the comeback in the second minute of stoppage time. Alexis Mac Allister's effort struck the post before Messi recovered possession on the right flank and delivered a perfectly weighted cross for Martinez to head home the winning goal.
The victory added another dramatic chapter to one of football's fiercest international rivalries, a fixture long defined by iconic World Cup meetings, political undertones and unforgettable moments.
Messi's influence extends beyond goals
Although Messi did not add to his tournament tally of eight goals, his influence was once again decisive.
The 39-year-old has now played every minute of Argentina's four knockout matches and continues to demonstrate his ability to conserve energy before producing match-winning moments.
After Argentina fell behind, Messi drifted toward the right wing, repeatedly creating dangerous opportunities with pinpoint deliveries into the box.
His pass created Fernandez's equaliser before his brilliant cross produced Martinez's winning header.
The two assists took Messi's World Cup assist tally to 12 -- a tournament record -- to go alongside his 21 World Cup goals.
If this proves to be his final World Cup, Sunday's final against Spain offers the opportunity to finish his international career at the pinnacle of world football.
Scaloni praises Argentina's resilience
Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni said his team consistently produces its best football when faced with adversity.
"We are truly unique, and that's not arrogance," Scaloni said after the match. "From the bottom of my heart, these players led us to victory. I'm lost for words. A joy for our country, for our people."
Reflecting on the comeback, Scaloni added that pressure brings out the very best in his squad.
"I honestly think this team plays its best football when it's under pressure," he said. "When we're struggling, and the opponent hesitates just a little, we smell blood and we go for it with everything we've got."
Scaloni highlighted that Argentina's response after conceding represented everything he believes football should be.
"Football isn't just tactics or strategy or playing attractive football. Everything we believe in was reflected during those final 40 minutes."
He also described his players as "warriors" who embrace responsibility rather than fear it.
"They're like a family. They never give up on a single ball. They fight until the very end," he said.
Looking ahead to Sunday's showdown with Spain, Scaloni insisted Argentina would give everything to defend their title.
"Honestly, we're going to try to win the final -- we're going to do everything we can -- but what more does this team have to do?"
Argentina's knockout resilience continues
Wednesday's comeback was the latest in a series of dramatic knockout victories for Argentina.
The defending champions needed extra time to overcome both Cape Verde and Switzerland before recovering from a 2-0 deficit to beat Egypt 3-2.
Against England, they once again demonstrated their remarkable ability to deliver under pressure, overturning a deficit in the closing stages to keep their title defence alive.
Martinez fulfils childhood dream
Goalscoring hero Lautaro Martinez described the winner as an emotional career highlight.
"This is really emotional," he said. "The first time my dad bought me a pair of boots, I always dreamed of scoring this goal."
He also praised Fernandez's equaliser and expressed confidence in Argentina's mentality.
"Enzo scored a brilliant goal and I'm confident this team is continuing to show what it's made of."
England left heartbroken after late collapse
England captain Harry Kane admitted the defeat was devastating after his side had controlled large portions of the contest.
"Just gutted for the boys, gutted for everyone—the team, the staff, the fans," Kane said.
"We played a good game for the large majority of it. Once we went 1-0 up, we seemed to just try and hold on. At this level, it's not enough."
Kane added that England had given everything throughout the tournament.
"We've worked so hard to be here and the lads have given every last bit of running, sweat, blood, tears, whatever it is. So to fall short like we did today... just gutted."
England manager Thomas Tuchel also defended his players' efforts despite the heartbreaking finish.
"The team gave everything and we were very, very close," the German coach said.
"The team was top. We couldn't bring it over the line, but at the moment, no regrets."
The semi-final lived up to its billing as one of football's greatest rivalries.
Argentina's supporters vastly outnumbered England's inside Atlanta's Mercedes-Benz Stadium, transforming the venue into a sea of sky blue and white that resembled Buenos Aires' famous La Bombonera.
England fans attempted a pre-match rendition of "Sweet Caroline," but it was drowned out by whistles from Argentina's passionate supporters.
Legendary ring announcer Michael Buffer set the tone before kick-off with his trademark "Let's get ready to rumble!" introduction, and the players responded immediately.
Tempers flared from the opening minutes, with the first half dominated by fierce tackles and heated confrontations rather than clear scoring opportunities.
The goals eventually came after the break, but once England took the lead they rarely threatened again, allowing Argentina to mount the sustained pressure that ultimately secured a dramatic place in Sunday's World Cup final against Spain.








