Oroville Mercury-Register

Messi toting heavy burden into finale

- By James Robson

DOHA, QATAR >> As Lionel Messi approaches his second and likely last World Cup final, the stakes could hardly be higher.

The same goes for Argentina after more than 30 years of disappoint­ment since it last won soccer’s ultimate prize.

For Messi, victory against France at Lusail Stadium on Sunday is a chance to finally get his hands on the one major trophy that has eluded him in his storied career.

In doing so, he would push ahead of Cristiano Ronaldo, who has also never won a World Cup, in the long-running rivalry between the two greatest players of their generation.

While 37-year-old Ronaldo exited the tournament at the quarterfin­als stage, benched by Portugal and in tears in the likely recognitio­n that his last chance had passed, Messi is summoning some of his finest moments in an Argentina shirt to inspire his country’s run to the final.

“Each time we see him play, he makes us and the players feel something special,” Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni said. “There’s something about him that people like, not only Argentines.

“We feel lucky and privileged to have him wear our shirt.”

Messi’s place alongside Diego Maradona as one of Argentina’s two most iconic soccer stars has been secure for some time now. But he is yet to emulate Maradona’s greatest achievemen­t by leading his national team to a World Cup title.

Maradona did that in

Mexico in 1986 and Messi has lived with the expectatio­n of repeating the feat since he emerged as a prodigy at Barcelona nearly 20 years ago.

There have been numerous false hopes during that time.

There was the potential “dream team” of Maradona as coach and Messi as star player in South Africa in 2010. But Argentina went out in the quarterfin­als after being beaten 4-0 by Germany.

In 2014, with Messi approachin­g his peak years, Argentina reached the final in Brazil.

Again it faced Germany. Again Messi was on the losing side, beaten 1-0 through extra time.

At the age of 35, he knew this was probably his last shot at the World Cup and he has risen to the occasion as the tournament’s co-leading scorer with France forward Kylian Mbappé with five goals.

Perhaps more notable have been his assists, such as the disguised pass for Nahuel Molina’s goal against the Netherland­s in the quarterfin­als.

Then there was his mesmerizin­g run, turning Croatia defender Joško Gvardiol inside out, before setting up Julián Álvarez for Argentina’s third in the semis.

“It’s at least something I can talk (about) with my kids one day that I guarded this great, great player,” Gvardiol said Thursday.

Those assists have been indicative that Messi can no longer do it on his own.

 ?? PAVEL GOLOVKIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Argentina’s Lionel Messi celebrates at the end of a World Cup semifinal match against Croatia at the Lusail Stadium in Lusail, Qatar, on Tuesday.
PAVEL GOLOVKIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Argentina’s Lionel Messi celebrates at the end of a World Cup semifinal match against Croatia at the Lusail Stadium in Lusail, Qatar, on Tuesday.

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