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England’s hopes of reaching their first men’s World Cup final since 1966 were dashed in painful fashion as Argentina rallied from behind to win a tense semi-final in Atlanta, scoring twice in the closing stages to complete the turnaround.
Thomas Tuchel’s team appeared to be in control after Anthony Gordon put them ahead just after the hour mark, but Argentina responded with a stunning finish from Enzo Fernandez five minutes from the end, followed by a stoppage-time header from Lautaro Martinez off a Lionel Messi assist. The result sends Argentina through to defend their title against Spain, while England must now settle for a third-place playoff against France.
A Bruising, Chaotic Opening
The occasion lived up to its billing from the first whistle, with a combative and error-strewn opening half that produced nearly twenty fouls as American official Ismail Elfath repeatedly struggled to manage the tempers on show. Fernandez tested England early with a shot from distance that drifted narrowly wide, but it was England who broke the deadlock — Morgan Rogers delivering a precise ball from the right flank for Gordon to finish clinically at the far post.
Argentina responded with intent. Goalkeeper Jordan Pickford produced a stunning reaction save to deny a header from Nico Gonzalez, keeping England’s lead intact through mounting pressure. Alexis Mac Allister then rattled the crossbar-post area, striking the frame of the goal, before Argentina finally found their equalizer with roughly five minutes remaining — a driven effort from distance that beat a well-positioned Pickford. Tuchel had reorganized his backline with four central defenders to shore things up, but Argentina’s momentum proved impossible to contain. Mac Allister struck the woodwork a second time, and in the 92nd minute, Martinez headed home the winner to complete the comeback.

Why England Fell Short
Much of the post-match scrutiny has centered on Tuchel’s tactical approach in the closing stages. As has happened before for England sides in similarly pressurized moments, the team appeared to retreat into a defensive posture rather than press their advantage. Substituting off goal-scorer Gordon for the more defensively-minded Ezri Konsa with under twenty minutes remaining, and shifting to a five-man backline, invited sustained Argentine pressure rather than relieving it. England ultimately couldn’t hold out, and the manner of the collapse — so close to a historic final berth — will sting all the more given the context.
Messi’s Late Influence Proves Decisive
For Argentina, it was once again Messi who provided the spark when it mattered most. Though relatively quiet for long stretches, the 39-year-old set up Fernandez’s leveler and then supplied the cross — struck with his right foot — that Martinez converted for the winner. Argentina’s improved second-half showing came as they abandoned some of the gamesmanship that marked their first-half approach, instead overwhelming an England side that had retreated into a defensive shape late on.
Messi will now have a chance to add a second World Cup title to his collection, with Argentina facing a Spain side built around emerging star Lamine Yamal — the reigning European champions, who impressed in eliminating France in the tournament’s other semi-final.
What’s Next
- Saturday, 22:00 BST: England vs. France — third-place playoff
- Sunday, 20:00 BST: Spain vs. Argentina — World Cup final
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