
England were on course to make their first appearance in the final of the FIFA World Cup in six decades at the Atlanta Stadium for 55 minutes of drama. It was close to a historic win for the Three Lions with Anthony Gordon's clinical strike. Then Argentina did what Argentina has done all tournament long: they waited, took it on the chin and punched back at the right time.
It was an amazing Argentina recovery with the pair of late goals (Enzo Fernández in the 85th minute and Lautaro Martínez in stoppage time) sending the defending champions into a 2nd consecutive FIFA World Cup Final against Spain. The Argentina vs England World Cup semi-final will live long in memory, and will be a new chapter in the incredible World Cup swan song of Lionel Messi.
It's the story of how Argentina turned it around, how England's game management failed and what it all means as they get ready for Sunday's showpiece.
| Detail | Information |
| Competition | FIFA World Cup 2026 |
| Stage | Semi-Final (Match 102) |
| Venue | Atlanta Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia |
| Date | Wednesday, July 15, 2026 |
| Final Score | England 1–2 Argentina |
| Goal Scorers | Gordon (55'), Fernández (85'), Martínez (90'+2') |
| Possession | England 35% – Argentina 56% (9% contested) |
| Shots (on target) | England 5 (2) – Argentina 15 (5) |
| Estimated xG | England 0.53 – Argentina 1.84 |
| Man of the Match | Lionel Messi |
| Referee | Ismail Elfath (USA) |
England's purposeful approach to the game was effective at least until half-time with 55 minutes remaining. Thomas Tuchel's men attacked with purpose in their attacks, with the mid section of the field compact and forcing the Argentines into the middle third. Jude Bellingham and England midfield set the pace as they dominated Messi's space, forcing Argentina wide to play in low-value spaces.
England's back line were disciplined defensively, with Argentina unable to get clean looks at goal, but only long range shots. When Morgan Rogers found himself with the ball in the opening minute in the 55th minute, it was like he had been rewarded for his smart and patient approach to the game, and England had the physical and tactical edge in a match that had been brewing like a rivalry that dates back to in 1986
Lionel Scaloni's half-time and on-field changes proved to be the difference. Argentina did not simply overhaul its fleet, but instead made strategic changes:
The second half saw England play to protect the lead and giving Argentina the time and space they required. It was once a containment strategy, but the idea of surrendering a territory was gaining momentum, and Argentina's pressure was mounting until it made its way through.
It was in the 85th minute when the equaliser came. Messi, who has been playing in his signature drop-back position, fed Enzo Fernández with an easy five yard cross. Fernández had previously pulled down a shot from the crossbar, but this time, it was a 20-yard drive from a dazed Jordan Pickford.
When Argentina saw the tide turn, they weren't about to take a back seat. Messi came back at the end of the hour and again made the right foot do the work as he fired a cross onto the head of Lautaro Martínez in the second minute of stoppage time for the rest of the job.
Atlanta Stadium erupted. The match was full of history and emotion, with Argentine supporters in the stands waving the banner with the reference to the Falkland Islands. In England, it was a case of disbelief as a lead they held for much of the first half was lost in five minutes in the second.
It was not a matter of individual mistakes, but of the general management of the game. In a wider sense, England suffered a late defeat because of a number of factors:
It is a familiar scenario as England managed to score at a similar level and point as they did in the 2018 World Cup semi-final and ended up losing 2-1 after an early lead. Captain Harry Kane, who was the target of criticism for failing to keep the ball in England's hands, who built up unstoppable momentum.
| Player | Team | Goals | Assists | Match Rating | Key Contribution |
| Lionel Messi | Argentina | 0 | 2 | 9.2 | Architect of both goals; Player of the Match |
| Enzo Fernández | Argentina | 1 | 0 | 8.4 | Equalizer from distance; midfield control |
| Lautaro Martínez | Argentina | 1 | 0 | 8.3 | Stoppage-time winner |
| Emiliano Martínez | Argentina | 0 | 0 | 7.6 | Composed under pressure late on |
| Anthony Gordon | England | 1 | 0 | 7.5 | Clinical opener, lively outlet |
| Jude Bellingham | England | 0 | 0 | 7.2 | Midfield energy, faded late |
| Harry Kane | England | 0 | 0 | 6.8 | Held up play, isolated in final stretch |
Thomas Tuchel's strategy for the first hour was correct, the combination of compact defence, speed of play and Gordon finishing it was clinical. However, as the game continued, his substitutions became more defensive than attacking in order to lure opponents back into the penalty area in an effort to preserve possession and maintain the momentum — which he admitted helped "slip towards their own goal".
By comparison, Lionel Scaloni demonstrated the patience which has been the hallmark of Argentina's tournament. Instead of going behind the ball, he relied on his structure, added some width with his fullbacks and let the positional intelligence of Messi dominate the pulse of the last half hour. Argentina was ready to seize the moment and, when it arrived, they did. The ability to make the small changes, not the drastic changes, was the ticket for Scaloni — and it was his second final in two tournaments.
The semi-finals are settled and Golden Boot is up for grabs as it is yet to be a tighter picture ever leading to finals weekend.
| Player | Country | Goals | Assists | Remaining Matches |
| Lionel Messi | Argentina | 8 | 4 | World Cup Final |
| Kylian Mbappé | France | 8 | 3 | Third-Place Play-Off |
| Erling Haaland | Norway | 7 | 0 | Eliminated |
| Jude Bellingham | England | 6 | 1 | Third-Place Play-Off |
| Harry Kane | England | 6 | 1 | Third-Place Play-Off |
| Ousmane Dembélé | France | 5 | 2 | Third-Place Play-Off |
| Mikel Oyarzabal | Spain | 5 | 1 | World Cup Final |
Messi's two assists against England pushed him up the FIFA table ahead of Mbappé, ahead on the number of assists (higher), while at eight goals each neither striker has yet secured a decisive advantage. Mbappé's final two games remain his only goal of claiming the lead outright and he faces a difficult task as Messi is heavily expected to dominate Argentina's attack in the final game, though his Golden Boot hopes will rely on a third-placed finish against England, a game which his manager could decide to switch him out of.
Bellingham and Kane are mathematically alive but have to deliver big form against France if they are going to have any chance of taking the two leaders.
Argentina will play Spain in the other semi-final before heading to Sunday's final at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey where they will take on France 2-0. It's an appetising finish wbetween the current champion and the current European champion, and, more symbolically, the transfer of the torch between 39-year-old Messi and 19-year-old Spain's big time talent Lamine Yamal.
Spain comes as what is arguably Argentina's toughest challenge. Spain's physical toughness, technical in possession, calm and defensive discipline will prevent them giving Argentina the room and time that they have done so many times to Argentina. England have relied heavily on sitting back after scoring while Luis de la Fuente in Spain's approach has been to play at the ball with a view to controlling the tempo rather than the pressure.
Tactically, the midfield battle will be for control and it will be interesting to see how Argentina's engine room match up with Rodri and Mikel Merino – while Rodri will likely dominate it, it could be a close contest.Tactically, it will be for control in the midfield and there will be a fascinating duel between Yamal and the full-back Scaloni gives him to play with. Argentina may not be able to count on Spain being as welcoming at the end of the game as England was.
Huge emotional roller coaster, but England's tournament has plenty of positives. It's a huge achievement to have made the World Cup semi-finals as fourth seed, and this side - led by Kane, Bellingham and a young trio of superstars such as Elliot Anderson, Nico O'Reilly and Morgan Rogers - has the potential to be a force to be reckoned with for many years to come.
But the perennial challenge is game management – England have now suffered agonising late collapses in a range of big tournaments. The better understanding of the pattern, not the talent or setup, is the easier way to finally "crack the code" at a big tournament. There is good reason for cautious optimism as Euro 2028 comes home — if the lessons learnt on nights like this one are taken on board.
| Statistic | England | Argentina |
| Possession | 35% | 56% |
| Shots | 5 | 15 |
| Shots on Target | 2 | 5 |
| Expected Goals (xG) | 0.53 | 1.84 |
| Assists | 1 | 2 |
| Yellow Cards | 1 | 1 |
Argentina fans are happy because this is another sign their team can bounce back as a world champion, a feat only Brazil have achieved before in 1962.
England fans are both devastated and proud overall, and are more upset at how things were managed by the tournament in the dying moments than at England's overall performance.
It's one of the most dramatic matches of the tournament and the storyline of Messi inspiring another comeback in his final World Cup appearance is highly regarded by neutral football fans.
England's inability to move things around with substitutions and any proactive changes has been singled out as their biggest tactical omission, with incremental changes in their approach in game being called a coaching masterclass by analysts.
The semi-final was behind them and now it's time for an epic match-up of Argentina vs Spain at MetLife Stadium this Sunday. The answer: Will a physically drained Argentina be able to recover in time? Lionel Scaloni's manager will have a challenging job balancing his side's fitness following their efforts in the late stages. Of course, it's Messi who is putting up his best efforts to clinch the Golden Ball, the Golden Boot and the World Cup.
On the tactical side, Argentina will be far more interested in keeping the ball away from Spain than they were against England, as Spain plays the ball extremely well and cost Argentina more for giving up territory. With history on their shoulders, as it is the first time they have won it more than 60 years ago, will both the team and their coach be under pressure going into the biggest game of the tournament?
Their way of dealing with adversity, which has been the hallmark of their World Cup journey so far, is their ability to be resilient and bouncy, to be flexible with their tactics, and most importantly, to continue to make Lionel Messi brilliant. Yet, despite this heartbreak, England have real cause for hope for their coming generations of talent as they leave the tournament, with questions of ‘game management' once again coming into focus.
Now all that remains is the largest of the lot. The World Cup final is Sunday and it's a fascinating game that will be played at MetLife Stadium between Argentina vs Spain where a new generation of footballers are set to take the place of the old. The expectation is at a high level.
Argentina got a late Anthony Gordon goal in the 55th minute, but responded after the break with a change of pace, with the midfielders creating overloads and the defensive line moving up as they increased width. They levelled in the 85th minute with a goal from Enzo Fernández and closed it in ST with a Lautaro Martínez goal, both from Lionel Messi.
Enzo Fernández brought the game back into the contest in the 85th minute and Lautaro Martínez went out of the park for the goal in the second minute of added time. Lionel Messi assisted both of the goals.
England dominated much of the contest and led for almost 35 minutes but lacked game management once they were ahead. Passive play, midfield tiredness and poor substitutions compounded by Argentina's failure to play proactively enabled them to build pressure which eventually found two breaks in the final moments.
Lionel Messi saw his name in the Man of the Match as he helped both Argentina's goals in the comeback victory.
Lionel Messi is leading the Golden Boot race, having netted eight goals and scored four assists, while Kylian Mbappé is at 8 goals, three assists, on the race for the Golden Glove.
The other semi-final will be between Spain vs France, who were outplayed by Spain 2-0, with Argentina meeting Spain in the final on Sunday at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
Argentina are reigning champions in the end and are in great form, with Messi in career-best form, but Spain has shown that it can be a much harder team to break in the end than Argentina is used to. If they win it will be Argentina's first double title since Brazil in 1962.
The main changes for Argentina involved the width of play, a higher defensive line, the overload in the midfield around Enzo Fernández, fullbacks pushing up, and the pressing which aimed to disrupt England's build-up.The changes Argentina made in the second half included attacking width, a higher defensive line, midfield overloads around Enzo Fernández, full-backs pushing up and the pressing which wanted to disrupt England's build-up.
Before Sunday, the zealots who want to follow the World Cup can take to outlets like OKBet Sports for , betting odds analysis, and football predictions.





