Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

Cape Verde push Argentina to extra time

2 min read
10:33UTC

Lionel Messi scored his 20th World Cup goal, but Cape Verde twice fought level before Argentina survived 3-2 in extra time on the debutants' biggest night.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Argentina survived a 3-2 extra-time scare from debutants Cape Verde as Messi scored his record-extending 20th World Cup goal.

Lionel Messi opened the scoring against Cape Verde with his 20th World Cup goal, extending the all-time record he had set only days earlier , but the tournament's smallest nation twice pegged Argentina back before losing 3-2 in extra time. Deroy Duarte levelled the first time and Sidny Lopes Cabral the second, either side of a Lisandro Martinez header, until Cristian Romero's extra-time header deflected in off Diney Borges to win it. 1

Cape Verde, an Atlantic nation of 550,000, arrived at the knockouts unbeaten, their debut having opened with a point against Uruguay . Against the holders they were minutes from forcing penalties, and the scare says more about the debutants' rise than about any decline in Argentina.

Argentina now meet Egypt in the last 16, a tie that pairs Messi with Mohamed Salah. The reigning champions reached the round of 16 rattled, having needed all of extra time and a deflected header to see off a squad drawn from a country smaller than a mid-sized European city.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Argentina, the defending champions, needed extra time (an additional 30 minutes played when a knockout match is level after 90) to beat Cape Verde, a nation of just 550,000 people playing in their first-ever World Cup. Lionel Messi, Argentina's captain and the tournament's all-time leading scorer, opened the scoring with his 20th World Cup goal, a new individual record. Cape Verde equalised twice, through Deroy Duarte and then Sidny Lopes Cabral, before Lisandro Martinez restored Argentina's lead and Cristian Romero's extra-time header, which deflected in off a Cape Verde defender, finally won it 3-2. The result shows how competitive debutant nations have become at a World Cup now expanded to 48 teams.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Cape Verde's competitiveness stems from a diaspora pipeline rather than its home league: most of the squad plays club football in Portugal and the Netherlands, a legacy of Portuguese colonial-era migration that gives a nation of 550,000 people access to European academy development most debutants of similar population lack.

Argentina's extra-time scare reflects a squad-management choice: Lionel Scaloni has kept largely the same starting core that won in 2022 intact through this cycle, and several outfield regulars are now past 33. The continuity that has won Argentina matches comes with a reduced ability to freshen legs once a tie goes to extra time.

First Reported In

Update #33 · Mexico City doubles police for Azteca tie

ESPN· 4 Jul 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
FIFA
FIFA
FIFA had not opened disciplinary proceedings over the Malvinas banner as of 16 July, continuing a pattern set by its fast reversal of Folarin Balogun's ban while South Africa's appeal over Themba Zwane's ban remained outstanding. The nearest tariff, a CHF 30,000 fine from 2014, remains only a precedent, not a decision.
France
France
France's tournament ended at the semi-final stage for the first time since 2010, beaten 2-0 by Spain in Arlington, and Kylian Mbappe's Golden Boot chances are reduced to Saturday's third-place game alone. The 2022 runners-up now play for bronze rather than a second straight final.
Spain
Spain
Spain reached their first World Cup final since winning the trophy in 2010, beating France 2-0 through goals from Mikel Oyarzabal and Pedro Porro. Sixteen years after their only title, this squad returns to the same stage without the sovereignty politics attached to the other semi-final.
Downing Street (UK Government)
Downing Street (UK Government)
Downing Street said on the record that the Falkland Islanders 'are British with the right to determine their own future,' answering Argentina's vice-president and foreign minister. London rests its case on the islanders' 2013 referendum, not on the fixture, and lodged no formal protest despite the semi-final framing.
Argentina
Argentina
Vice-President Victoria Villarruel called England 'the usurping pirates' before kickoff; midfielder Leandro Paredes said after the 2-1 win that the Falklands 'will always be Argentine'. Argentina's 1994 constitution commits every office-holder to press the Malvinas claim, so a World Cup semi-final was never going to pass without it.
Switzerland
Switzerland
Switzerland reached their first World Cup quarter-final since 1954 and led Argentina before Breel Embolo's second yellow card left them a man down for the last half-hour. They expect the run to raise expectations for the next cycle rather than close a chapter.