Los Angeles Times

Messi has just one goal in mind

Argentine star wants nothing more than to bring home the Copa America title.

- kevin.baxter@latimes.com

It took Lionel Messi 28 years to get around to playing a competitiv­e game in the U.S. It was worth waiting for.

After sitting out Argentina’s first game in the Copa America Centenario, Messi entered the second match, against Panama, as a second-half substitute, then scored three goals and assisted on a fourth in just 29 minutes.

In less than half an hour, Messi was tied for the tournament lead in scoring and had taken his team through to the quarterfin­als. Entering Monday’s games, seven

of the 16 teams in the tournament hadn’t scored as much.

“Messi,” Panama Coach Hernan Dario Gomez said with equal parts awe and respect, “is a monster.”

All of which raises one big question heading into the final day of group play Tuesday: What will Messi do for an encore when Argentina, the world’s top-ranked team, plays winless Bolivia, at No. 82 the lowest-rated team in the tournament, in Seattle?

If you believe Messi, there’s a lot of room to improve after he sat out two weeks because of a bruised back.

“It was difficult,” Messi told the Argentine sports daily Ole of the injury. “It felt like an eternity because I was unable to move for many days, practicall­y not doing anything.

“The first 30 minutes of football after being out … it’s not easy to get back into the rhythm of matches.”

But Messi has a lot more to accomplish than simply getting his groove back. It’s been 23 years since Argentina has raised a trophy in a major senior competitio­n, a drought that has come to define Messi as one of the greatest players never to win an internatio­nal soccer championsh­ip.

In the last World Cup he carried Argentina through group play, scoring four of his team’s six goals. He arrived for the final exhausted and was rarely dangerous, so Germany took home the Cup and Messi got the Golden Ball as the tournament’s best player.

Last summer he got Argentina to the Copa America final unbeaten, only to lose to Chile on penalty kicks. Messi was again named the tournament’s best player, but this time he declined the consolatio­n award.

He’s made it clear there’s only one prize he’s interested in this summer.

“I hope it is our Copa, it is what we want, but we must be calm,” he told Ole. “First we have to think of Bolivia and after [that game] the quarterfin­al. Every game will be difficult.”

Especially if Argentina midfield threat Angel di Maria is unavailabl­e. Two years ago in the World Cup, Argentina scored seven goals in its first four games but none in its final three after losing Di Maria to a torn muscle in his right thigh. Di Maria limped off the field again Friday in Chicago with an abductor problem and was originally thought to be done for the tournament.

The team later upgraded his condition, saying Di Maria had “minimal swelling” in his right leg and could be available by the quarterfin­als.

But if Messi won’t look ahead to the knockout round until after Tuesday’s group-play final, others have already begun considerin­g the possibilit­y of a U.S.-Argentina matchup in the semifinals.

The U.S. will first have to win Thursday’s quarterfin­al against Ecuador, a team it beat in a warmup less than three weeks ago. And Argentina still has to win its group — Chile and Panama each have a mathematic­al possibilit­y at the group title if Argentina falls to Bolivia — and its quarterfin­al.

Should all that happen, it would bring the world’s best player face to face with the home team. It would match a legend seeking his first internatio­nal title against a U.S. national team seeking respect.

“This is a wonderful opportunit­y to see how our team is compared to those top nations,” U.S. Coach Juergen Klinsmann said. “That’s why you want to put a stamp on the tournament. You want to send out a strong signal to everybody that we are growing, that we’re getting better.”

Panama, too, came here eager to get a look at Messi — until they did.

When the Argentine star finished warming up and walked to the sideline to check into the game, Gomez, the Panama coach, turned to the fourth official and asked, “How much time [is] left?”

“Thirty minutes,” came the reply.

For Panama, it was 30 minutes too many. For Messi, on the other hand, it may prove to have been just the start of something.

 ?? Jonathan Daniel Getty Images By Kevin Baxter ?? LIONEL MESSI is lifted up by Ever Banega after scoring against Panama.
Jonathan Daniel Getty Images By Kevin Baxter LIONEL MESSI is lifted up by Ever Banega after scoring against Panama.
 ?? Jonathan Daniel Getty Images ?? LIONEL MESSI, left, moves against Felipe Baloy of Panama on his way to scoring his third goal in Argentina’s 5-0 victory over Panama. He also had an assist.
Jonathan Daniel Getty Images LIONEL MESSI, left, moves against Felipe Baloy of Panama on his way to scoring his third goal in Argentina’s 5-0 victory over Panama. He also had an assist.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States