Soccer-Argentina are best with their backs to the wall, says coach Scaloni


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Semi Final - England v Argentina - Atlanta Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. - July 15, 2026 Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni celebrates after Lautaro Martinez scores their second goal REUTERS/Paul Childs

ATLANTA, July 15 (Reuters) - Argentina ⁠have proved they put their best foot forward in adversity, said coach Lionel Scaloni ⁠as his side staged another dramatic comeback to book a place in Sunday’s World ‌Cup final.

The holders came from 1-0 down to equalise with five minutes left and then snatched a stoppage-time winner to beat England 2-1 and secure a meeting with Spain in New York at the weekend.

It was another remarkable recovery ​for an Argentina side who groundout another victory as they ⁠had throughout the knockout rounds, beating ⁠Cape Verde and Switzerland in extra time and coming from 2-0 down to defeat Egypt 3-2.

“I honestly ⁠think ‌this team plays its best football when it's under pressure,” Scaloni told a post-match press conference.

“When we're struggling, and the opponent hesitates just a little, we smell blood and ⁠we go for it with everything we've got. That's the ​feeling this team gives me.

“I'm ‌happy because the team fought until the very end, and that's fundamental for me. ⁠Even if we'd ​gone home eliminated, we would have done so knowing we'd left everything on the field.”

Scaloni said Argentina showed their best side after Anthony Gordon had put England 1-0 up 10 minutes into the second half.

“After their ⁠goal, we showed everything we want football to represent. Football ​isn't just tactics or strategy or playing attractive football. Everything we believe in was reflected during those final 40 minutes."

Scaloni also called his players stubborn but "I mean that in the best possible sense ⁠of the word.

"They're warriors. They grew up in environments where they feared nothing. They were always competing, always expected to be the best. Responsibility doesn't weigh them down.

“When the match reaches those final 15, 20 or 25 minutes, they still want the ball. Nobody was thinking, ‘What if I make ​a mistake and we lose a World Cup semi-final?'

“They were simply ⁠thinking about playing football, just as they've done all their lives. They're like a family. They never ​give up on a single ball. They fight until the ‌very end.

"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?” Scaloni asked.

(Writing by Mark Gleeson in Atlanta; Editing by Ken Ferris)

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