Hindustan Times (Noida)

Argentina’s adulation for Messi: No strings attached

Every 2nd Argentine fan in Doha is in a Messi shirt and the reasons for that go beyond football

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DOHA: For over one week, Argentina supporters had absorbed that chant. “Where’s Messi,” was a rhetorical question they heard every time a group of Saudi Arabia supporters crossed their paths. Given the number of people here for the World Cup from Qatar’s neighbours, that slogan reverberat­ed across Doha’s metro network. Payback time arrived on Wednesday after Argentina made the Round of 16 as Group C toppers and Saudi Arabia were going home.

“Here is Messi,” said a man with a luxurious brown beard and in a Messi shirt of the colour the Argentina captain wore in the 2-0 win against Poland, Alexis Mac Allister and Julian Alvarez’s second-half goals capping off a convincing performanc­e to set up a knockout game against Australia on Saturday. The chant was picked up by Argentina fans changing trains at Musherib getting louder every time they saw a Saudi Arabian flag.

Every Argentine one spoke to over the past two weeks has been a Messi fan. Every second Argentine is in a Messi shirt. “We cried in the match against Mexico when Messi scored. We had uncontroll­able tears. We were relieved and happy at the same time. And the person to make us feel like this was Messi. We love him so much,” said Emiliano Martinez at Lusail Stadium.

You will often hear “he is from another planet” echoing what 1978 World Cup winner Osvaldo Ardiles has said. But you will also get to listen to comments such as: “You can see the determinat­ion in him when he plays.”

And as Martin put it after the win against Poland where Messi missed a penalty: “Even Gods are allowed to have an off day.”

‘God’ said he was “frustrated” at the miss. “I knew a goal could have changed the match, make you play a different way,” said Messi speaking in the mixed zone as Wednesday melded into Thursday. “But I also think that from the penalty I missed, the team emerged stronger.”

Alvaro wasn’t in a Messi shirt preferring an Argentina jersey with no name. “For me, it is simple.

Messi’s image of being a humble guy is why I am a fan. He doesn’t appear to be the guy who earned a billion dollars in his career. He is the guy who cried while leaving Barcelona.”

Alvaro looked to be in his late forties and this is his fifth World Cup. “My son was one when we took him to South Africa. He has now been to four World Cups,” he said pointing to a boy in a Messi shirt while exiting the Al Mansoura metro station.

Asked whether that was unusual among people his generation,

Dhiman Sarkar

In Qatar

Alvaro said: “Yes.” Among those of a certain age, Diego Maradona reigns. “He tamed England after the Falklands War.” You don’t have another reason for a country to rally behind an Argentine who humbled a nation that beat them in the war in 1982 but Alvaro said there was another reason. “Maradona’s personalit­y. He was combative, always looking like he was fighting bigger powers.”

On the same number of World Cup goals as Maradona, eight, Messi has played one game more than him. “I think Diego would be super happy for me, because he always showed me a lot of affection,” said Messi. Having said, among other things, that Messi lacked personalit­y, Mara

dona’s love was not unconditio­nal though. But on his second death anniversar­y, Messi simply posted a picture of Maradona on Instagram. After Maradona’s death in November 2020, Messi had said: “Diego is eternal.”

Maradona’s death and winning the Copa America last year has taken a lot of pressure off Messi, is what journalist­s from Argentina here for the World Cup say.

It also helped turn around the conversati­on of him winning everything for Barcelona and nothing for the country, they say. So far in Doha, love for Messi seems to be with no strings attached though not without the expectatio­n that he will go a step further than 2014.

 ?? AFP ?? Argentina captain Lionel Messi (R) celebrates with teammates after the team’s first goal against Poland on Wednesday.
AFP Argentina captain Lionel Messi (R) celebrates with teammates after the team’s first goal against Poland on Wednesday.

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