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SportTuesday, July 7, 2026

Argentina Stun Egypt with Three Late Goals to Reach Quarter-Finals

Lionel Messi’s missed penalty and a two-goal deficit were overturned in a frantic final 11 minutes as the defending champions survived a monumental scare in Atlanta.

Argentina produced one of the most dramatic turnarounds in World Cup knockout history, scoring three times in the closing stages to defeat Egypt 3-2 and advance to the quarter-finals. Trailing 2-0 with only 11 minutes of normal time remaining, the holders looked destined for a shock exit before Cristian Romero’s header, a Lionel Messi equaliser and an injury-time winner from Enzo Fernández completed a comeback that left the captain in tears and the Egyptian camp alleging injustice.

Egypt had executed a disciplined, counter-attacking game plan to near perfection. Yasser Ibrahim headed them in front from a 15th-minute corner, and when Messi saw a 21st-minute penalty saved by Mostafa Shobeir — his second spot-kick failure of the tournament — the sense of an upset grew. Shobeir produced a series of outstanding stops to preserve the lead, and after a Mostafa Ziko goal was disallowed by VAR for a foul on Lisandro Martínez in the build-up, the same forward swept in a second on 67 minutes to put Egypt on the brink of a first quarter-final appearance.

What followed was a collapse of Egyptian resistance and a surge of Argentine resilience. Romero’s 79th-minute header from a Messi cross halved the deficit, and four minutes later Messi lashed a half-volley into the net for his eighth goal of the tournament, reclaiming the outright lead in the Golden Boot race. With extra time looming, Lautaro Martínez crossed for Fernández to head the winner in the second minute of added time. Messi, who had earlier buried his face in his hands after the penalty miss, wept openly at the final whistle, while coach Lionel Scaloni was too emotional to complete a pitchside interview.

Post-match reactions split along predictable lines. Across Latin American and European media, the narrative centred on Argentina’s champion spirit and Messi’s redemptive arc; Spanish outlets called it a “faraonic comeback”, while Italian and French reports marvelled at the late drama. In Egypt and the wider Arab world, however, fury was directed at French referee François Letexier. Coach Hossam Hassan said his side had “suffered injustice”, questioned the disallowed goal and the failure to review a potential penalty before Argentina’s winner, and declared he would watch no more of the tournament. Forward Mostafa Ziko went further, claiming the competition was “rigged” for Argentina, a sentiment echoed in Egyptian state-aligned media.

Argentina’s reward is a quarter-final meeting with the winner of Switzerland versus Colombia, to be played in Kansas City on Saturday. The victory extends their unbeaten run in World Cup matches to eleven, but the back-to-back scares against Cape Verde and now Egypt have exposed defensive frailties and a heavy reliance on their 39-year-old talisman. For Egypt, the defeat ends a historic campaign in which they reached the knockout stage for the first time, a feat that, despite the acrimonious exit, was acknowledged by President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in a social media post praising the team’s “honourable performance”.

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Upd. 09:54 PM8 languages · 68 outlets
68 outlets|8 languages|3 min read
Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Argentina Stun Egypt with Three Late Goals to Reach Quarter-Finals

Lionel Messi’s missed penalty and a two-goal deficit were overturned in a frantic final 11 minutes as the defending champions survived a monumental scare in Atlanta.

Argentina produced one of the most dramatic turnarounds in World Cup knockout history, scoring three times in the closing stages to defeat Egypt 3-2 and advance to the quarter-finals. Trailing 2-0 with only 11 minutes of normal time remaining, the holders looked destined for a shock exit before Cristian Romero’s header, a Lionel Messi equaliser and an injury-time winner from Enzo Fernández completed a comeback that left the captain in tears and the Egyptian camp alleging injustice.

Egypt had executed a disciplined, counter-attacking game plan to near perfection. Yasser Ibrahim headed them in front from a 15th-minute corner, and when Messi saw a 21st-minute penalty saved by Mostafa Shobeir — his second spot-kick failure of the tournament — the sense of an upset grew. Shobeir produced a series of outstanding stops to preserve the lead, and after a Mostafa Ziko goal was disallowed by VAR for a foul on Lisandro Martínez in the build-up, the same forward swept in a second on 67 minutes to put Egypt on the brink of a first quarter-final appearance.

What followed was a collapse of Egyptian resistance and a surge of Argentine resilience. Romero’s 79th-minute header from a Messi cross halved the deficit, and four minutes later Messi lashed a half-volley into the net for his eighth goal of the tournament, reclaiming the outright lead in the Golden Boot race. With extra time looming, Lautaro Martínez crossed for Fernández to head the winner in the second minute of added time. Messi, who had earlier buried his face in his hands after the penalty miss, wept openly at the final whistle, while coach Lionel Scaloni was too emotional to complete a pitchside interview.

Post-match reactions split along predictable lines. Across Latin American and European media, the narrative centred on Argentina’s champion spirit and Messi’s redemptive arc; Spanish outlets called it a “faraonic comeback”, while Italian and French reports marvelled at the late drama. In Egypt and the wider Arab world, however, fury was directed at French referee François Letexier. Coach Hossam Hassan said his side had “suffered injustice”, questioned the disallowed goal and the failure to review a potential penalty before Argentina’s winner, and declared he would watch no more of the tournament. Forward Mostafa Ziko went further, claiming the competition was “rigged” for Argentina, a sentiment echoed in Egyptian state-aligned media.

Argentina’s reward is a quarter-final meeting with the winner of Switzerland versus Colombia, to be played in Kansas City on Saturday. The victory extends their unbeaten run in World Cup matches to eleven, but the back-to-back scares against Cape Verde and now Egypt have exposed defensive frailties and a heavy reliance on their 39-year-old talisman. For Egypt, the defeat ends a historic campaign in which they reached the knockout stage for the first time, a feat that, despite the acrimonious exit, was acknowledged by President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in a social media post praising the team’s “honourable performance”.

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