Argentina-Spain is refreshing World Cup final defined by mutual admiration

The road to the 2026 FIFA World Cup final twisted through two very different semifinals.Spain clinically dismantled tournament favorite France with a commanding 2-0 victory.A day later, Argentina was on the brink of elimination against England before Lionel Messi once again orchestrated some stoppage-time magic in a dramatic 2-1 comeback that sent the defending champions back to the sport’s biggest stage.Now Sunday’s final in New Jersey feels refreshingly different.There is no century-old feud or political baggage.

No European neighbors separated by a fierce modern rivalry.Instead, Spain and Argentina share something increasingly rare in international football: mutual admiration.They also share a language, a footballing philosophy rooted in technical excellence and generations of players whose careers have intertwined across the same clubs, cities and stadiums.Sunday’s final is less a collision of fierce enemies than it is a reunion of family friends competing for the Jules Rimet Trophy.Head-to-head, they have met 14 times, with six victories apiece and two draws.

Over the past six decades, they are perfectly even at 3-3.Their only previous World Cup meeting came July 13, 1966, in Birmingham, England, of all places, where Argentina claimed a 2-1 group stage victory over Spain that helped send them through to the knockout rounds.Their most recent meeting came in March 2018, when Spain overwhelmed Argentina 6-1 without an injured Messi.

Current head coach Lionel Scaloni was then an Argentine assistant under Jorge Sampaoli.Spain was coached by Julen Lopetegui, whose dramatic departure before that World Cup became one of the tournament’s defining stories.Eight years later, Scaloni returns to face not just the country he resides in but the man he considers his mentor in Luis de la Fuente.“Spain is a great team,” Scaloni said.

“They deserved to win the semifinal.They beat a great team in France.

France is very difficult to beat and they beat them square...

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Publisher: New York Post

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