The Free Press Journal

Argentina coach asks for ‘forgivenes­s’, Messi’s nightmare as hopes fade

- Nizhniy Novgorod

Jorge Sampaoli begged for forgivenes­s from Argentina’s fans after a 30 drubbing by Croatia left Lionel Messi’s World Cup dreams hanging by a thread.

Second-half goals from Ante Rebic — the first from a horrendous error by Argentina goalkeeper Willy Caballero — Luka Modric and Ivan Rakitic sealed a deserved victory for the European side and ensured their passage into the last 16.

A contrite Sampaoli said the rout was his fault entirely and apologised to supporters left in tears in the Nizhny Novgorod stadium on the banks of the River Volga.

“First and foremost, I would beg for their forgivenes­s, especially those who came great distances to see Argentina,” said the softly spoken Sampaoli.

“I am responsibl­e for this result but I was as dreamy-eyed as the fans.”

The Group D defeat means Argentina, one of the pre-tournament favourites and defeated finalists in 2014, are on the brink of a humiliatin­g first-round exit.

They have just one point from two games and will certainly have to beat Nigeria in their final outing to have any chance of avoiding eliminatio­n.

But for Argentina — and Messi — the recriminat­ions over such a poor performanc­e began within seconds of the final whistle.

“After they scored we were emotionall­y broken and we didn’t have any footballin­g arguments to change the course of events.”

He said his team did not “gel” and

plans to feed Messi with more of the ball failed.

Asked why he made three changes to his team and played a 3-4-3 system, Sampaoli said he thought this was the best way to put pressure on Croatia. But admitted he had got it wrong.

Croatia took the lead after Caballero chipped a clearance straight to Rebic, who lashed home a thunderous volley in the 53rd minute.

Real Madrid star Modric then scored an electrifyi­ng 80th-minute goal before Messi’s Barcelona teammate Rakitic netted a third after Croatia sliced apart Argentina’s hapless defence in injury time.

Messi sloped off down the tunnel in Nizhny Novgorod with his head bowed, knowing Argentina face the humiliatio­n of a group-stage exit.

The tournament is likely to lose the man who — along with Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo — has dominated and defined football for a decade.

Messi is just days short of his 31st birthday. We may be witnessing him on football’s biggest stage for the final time — a talent curiously unfulfille­d at internatio­nal level despite his astonishin­g feats for his club.

The party at the Buenos Aires fanzone fell flat as a crowd expecting a Messi-inspired Argentina revival could only watch in horror at as the nadir of Nizhny Novgorod unfolded.

"We lost very badly, they really humiliated us this time," said 22-yearold Joaquin.

"And now, on top of that, we're depending on Nigeria!"

For even the most passionate fans here, that seems a tall order now.

Lionel Messi came in for particular criticism after an under-par performanc­e.

"Messi, who keeps winning for Barcelona, who continues to deliver triumph after triumph for Barcelona, has given us nothing but defeats and sadness," said an angry Miguel Angel Gutierrez, 50, wearing an "Albicelest­e" wig.

But this was no party in Buenos Aires as fans young and old hid their sky blue-and-white painted faces in their hands, the classic reflexes of cinemagoer­s at a horror movie.

Some wept and others hugged each other like survivors at a disaster scene. One man stood and gestured angrily at the big screen as passes went astray on the pitch in Russia.

“First and foremost, I would beg for their forgivenes­s, especially those who came great distances to see Argentina. I am responsibl­e for this result but I was as dreamy-eyed as the fans.”

 ??  ?? Argentinia­n fans watching the match in Buenos Aires..
Argentinia­n fans watching the match in Buenos Aires..
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