China Daily

RAPTURE AND RELIEF AS ARGENTINA RISES TO OCCASION

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Luciana Medina was so nervous that she could barely sleep the night before Saturday’s match between Argentina and Mexico which could have all but knocked the soccer-mad South American country out of the World Cup.

After the game, she couldn’t stop smiling.

“I’m so proud. I truly loved the match,” Medina, a 23-year-old communicat­ions student, said while wearing an Argentina jersey. “I’m so happy.”

Argentines breathed a collective sigh of relief Saturday afternoon as the country obtained a decisive 2-0 victory over Mexico, dissipatin­g doubts that had emerged about Lionel Messi’s team after the shock loss against Saudi Arabia on Tuesday. That loss had sent the country almost into a state of national mourning.

“The whole week was very sad, everyone was very aggressive as well, as if they were lost, without knowing what to do,” Medina said. “We were all very nervous.”

Maria del Carmen Martinez, 60, said she was “very tense” when she arrived at a plaza in Buenos Aires to watch the match on giant screens.

“I’m happy now,” the retail worker said with a smile. “It’s as if the players finally woke up.”

Manuel Gauto, 21, agreed he saw a different team on the field than the one that fell to Saudi Arabia.

“They rose to the occasion and put their hearts into it,” Gauto said. “They have another attitude now.”

The mood was completely different in Mexico City, where thousands had gathered in bars and plazas to follow the match only to be left disappoint­ed by their team’s performanc­e.

The coach “gave away the game”, complained Daniel Martinez minutes after the match ended. “We’re completely destroyed, but this doesn’t end here.”

There were long periods of silence among the tense fans in Mexico City’s Revolution Square.

“I’m crying out of emotion but also sadness,” Lupita Diaz said. “I love soccer but Mexico is failing us now.”

In Buenos Aires, the tension was almost palpable as thousands gathered on a hot summer day to watch the decisive game, and an eerie silence fell over the crowd throughout the first half as neither side obtained a goal and doubts once again crept in about the team long thought to be one of the favorites to win the World Cup.

“I went through a lot of emotions, first I was very nervous and anxious for the game to start and in the first half I saw that something was missing,” Valeria Benitez, 24, said.

All that pent-up energy made the crowd explode in jubilation when Messi scored the first goal.

“The planets aligned in the second half, I thought they played well, there was a strategy that was well thought out,” Benitez said. “Let’s hope this is only the beginning.”

Karen Veliz, a 36-year-old accountant, went to watch the match with her family and friends, but found it hard to have fun at first.

“I was super, super nervous. It was only after they got the first goal that I could finally relax,” she said.

Argentines had been eagerly awaiting the World Cup, counting on it to shift the mood of a country that has been economical­ly stagnant for years, is suffering one of the world’s highest inflation rates and where close to four in 10 live in poverty.

Matias Stamm, a 26-year-old programmer, said he felt much lighter after what he described as “a very complicate­d week because we came from a very positive streak and then fell in the first game of the Cup”.

Many fans were particular­ly frustrated at Tuesday’s loss against Saudi Arabia, a match seemingly everyone expected Argentina to win, given the team’s 36-game unbeaten streak leading up to the tournament.

“Winning games is super important to recover confidence,” Stamm added. “We have to go with humility and calm because each game is a final.”

Ariel Rivera, a 37-year-old software developer, said that Saturday’s victory showed “there is still hope”.

“Argentina has everything that it needs to be able to win,” Rivera said. “I think we’re going to go far.”

 ?? *REUTERS ?? An Argentina fan shows off his Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi tattoos at Lusail Stadium in Qatar on Saturday.
*REUTERS An Argentina fan shows off his Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi tattoos at Lusail Stadium in Qatar on Saturday.
 ?? REUTERS ?? An Argentina fan in Buenos Aires can’t contain his joy as he watches his team beat Mexico at the World Cup on Saturday.
REUTERS An Argentina fan in Buenos Aires can’t contain his joy as he watches his team beat Mexico at the World Cup on Saturday.
 ?? AP ?? Jubilant fans in Buenos Aires celebrate Argentina’s 2-0 World Cup Group C victory over Mexico.
AP Jubilant fans in Buenos Aires celebrate Argentina’s 2-0 World Cup Group C victory over Mexico.

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