Argentina’s talisman may not have scored in the 6-1 victory over
Paraguay but there was no doubt who took centre stage in the Copa
América semi-final
• Argentina hit Paraguay for six to reach Copa América final
The problem with a genius like Lionel Messi
is that you’re always waiting for him to perform. You can’t watch a
game he plays in as you watch any other game because you’re always
hoping that this will be of those days when he turns it on, and if he
doesn’t you end up feeling a little cheated. Nobody felt cheated on
Tuesday night, just grateful to have been there, unless you had the
misfortune to be a Paraguayan defender. The Chile fans who made up most
of the crowd and who had begun the game by jeering the Argentinian
national anthem and chanting “Argentinos – hijos da puta” ended it in awed applause.
Argentina,
in truth, didn’t play that well. They were so defensively shaky that
even at 4-1 Gerardo Martino was hopping in the edge of his technical
area, waving his arms in frustration. Space kept appearing in midfield.
Paraguay troubled them with pace and aerial balls. There were some neat
passes (and some poor finishing) from Javier Pastore. But mainly, there
was Messi.
This was a stunning display, one leant an otherworldly air by the
gauze of mist and smoke that fell over the ground an hour or so before
kick-off, as though mortal eyes couldn’t be allowed to look directly on
such wonder. He didn’t score and so his run without a goal from open
play now stretches to 918 minutes for all, but that statistic now seems
farcically irrelevant. Here, of the six goals, he played the final pass
three times, the penultimate pass twice and the pre-penultimate pass
once. He was, simply, unstoppable.
With seven minutes remaining, Messi played a one-two on the edge of the
box and stumbled. His side were already 5-1 up, but he kept battling and
forced the ball through for Gonzalo Higuaín to lash in the sixth. As
Argentina cleared the box in celebration, there were three Paraguayans
left defeated and dejected grounded in the box.
This was the newer, more powerful Messi that has emerged this season,
and one who has emerged as a real leader of the side, rather than just
the man who wears the armband. Alejandro Sabella, Martino’s predecessor,
had given him the captaincy to make him the image of the side, an
honour he had accepted on condition that Javier Mascherano did all the
speeches. At this tournament, though, perhaps fired by the
disappointment of the World Cup, Messi has begun to take responsibility.
He had a sleepless night after the opening draw with Paraguay,
and joined Mascherano and Martino in a crisis meeting. Before the
penalties against Colombia, it was Messi who stood in the centre of the
huddle, encouraging his side.
And here, as Argentina paused in the tunnel on their way out for the
second half, it was Messi who gave the team-talk. “Everything was very
tight, but we knew once we scored one, many goals would come,” he
explained. “We scored an early goal, found more spaces, and then it got
better. We continued to play the same way, created many chances. We got
to the World Cup final, now the Copa América final, we want to win it.
It doesn’t matter if I score, as long as the team does.”
Even more resonant though, with 53 minutes played, a loose ball fell
between him and the Paraguay midfielder Víctor Cáceres. It seemed
impossible that Cáceres would not get there first, but Messi found an
extra burst of speed and not merely got to the ball first, but managed
to lift it over his challenge, hopping away in a manner that recalled
Maradona.
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