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2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

Lautaro header sends Argentina to final

2 min read
10:33UTC

Lautaro Martinez headed a stoppage-time winner from a Messi cross as Argentina beat England 2-1 in Atlanta to reach the final.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

A stoppage-time Lautaro Martinez header beat England and put Argentina into the World Cup final.

Argentina reached the 2026 World Cup final on Wednesday 15 July, beating England 2-1 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, with Lautaro Martinez heading a stoppage-time winner from a Lionel Messi cross. Anthony Gordon had put England ahead in the 55th minute, turning in a Morgan Rogers cross, before Enzo Fernandez levelled with a long-range strike on 85 minutes. 1

It was the first World Cup meeting between the two nations since 2002, and the first time Messi has faced England at any World Cup. The two sides arrived by the same hard road. Argentina had needed extra time to see off Switzerland in the quarter-final ; England had gone the distance against Norway . The bookings told their own story, with three Argentina players, Lisandro Martinez, Cristian Romero and Rodrigo De Paul, entering the referee's book.

The result sends the 2022 champions to a final against Spain on Sunday 19 July at MetLife Stadium. England drop into the third-place playoff. The win also set off a political row over the Falkland Islands, which Argentina calls the Malvinas, that climbed from the terraces to the top of the Argentine state within hours of the final whistle.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Argentina beat England 2-1 in the World Cup semi-final, meaning Argentina go through to the 19 July final and England drop into the third-place match instead. England led through Anthony Gordon before Argentina equalised through Enzo Fernandez and then won it in stoppage time, the few added minutes tacked onto the end of the match, when Lautaro Martinez headed in a cross from Lionel Messi. For Argentina, it is a first World Cup final since their 2022 title; for England, it means a longer route home via Miami rather than the final in New Jersey.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Argentina's stoppage-time concession traces to a scheduling asymmetry built into the 48-team format: three days separated their 12 July extra-time win over Switzerland from this semi-final, against four for England after their own extra-time win over Norway.

FIFA sets the knockout calendar centrally and does not currently vary recovery days by how the previous round was won, so a side that needed 120 minutes to advance carries that cost straight into its next fixture regardless of opponent.

First Reported In

Update #41 · Argentina reach final amid Falklands row

The Football Association· 16 Jul 2026
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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.