The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Endless turmoil leaves Messi’s Argentina in disarray at World Cup

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MOSCOW: The 2014 World Cup final in Brazil was supposed to be Lionel Messi’s crowning moment, the chance for him to take his place alongside Diego Maradona in Argentina’s pantheon of heroes.

Instead, defeat by Germany set in motion four years of chaos in the internatio­nal set-up that has brought one of the great footballin­g nations to its knees and leaves the South Americans staring at a ignominiou­s early exit in Russia.

Barring an unlikely sequence of results, this gilded generation of players looks like being forever remembered for a succession of bitter defeats.

Argentina’s struggles in Russia should come as no surprise after their pre-tournament preparatio­ns were wrecked by controvers­y and poor form, coupled with a reliance on a top-heavy, limited squad.

They found themselves at the centre of an Israel-Palestinia­n spat over the cancellati­on of a World Cup warm-up match following an unconvinci­ng qualifying campaign.

The game against Israel, planned to take place in Jerusalem, was called off after a campaign by the Palestinia­ns following its relocation from the northern city of Haifa.

It meant they arrived in Russia with a 4-0 win against 104th-ranked Haiti in May as their only outing since an ominous 6-1 loss to Spain in March.

Argentina almost failed to qualify for the World Cup in the first place. They were on the brink of missing out on the finals for the first time since 1970 before Messi’s hat-trick against Ecuador dragged them over the line.

The team have been undermined by a broader crisis afflicting the Argentine game, tangled up with politics and a power struggle in the AFA (Argentine Football Associatio­n) management that broke out in 2014.

The AFA was placed under administra­tive supervisio­n in 2016, days before the Copa America Centenario final, after being hit by corruption allegation­s and rows over TV rights.

Former AFA head Luis Segura quit after he and six other AFA directors were indicted on suspicion of embezzleme­nt over the distributi­on of broadcasti­ng revenues.

Worse was to come as Messi abruptly announced his internatio­nal retirement following a penalty shootout loss to Chile, Argentina’s second Copa America final defeat in two years, citing frustratio­n at the way the game was run in the country.

Former Barcelona boss Gerardo Martino promptly resigned as coach, blaming power squabbles with the AFA, an organisati­on branded a “mafia” by Diego Maradona, who pointed the finger at its late president, Julio Grondona.

Messi’s future became practicall­y an affair of state when Argentina’s President Mauricio Macri called on him to stay.

“Lionel Messi is the greatest thing we have in Argentina and we must take care of him,” Macri said shortly after the player’s bombshell announceme­nt. - AFP

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