Gulf News

Messi likely to quit for good now

Mascherano first of the many from this batch to hint at retirement

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Four France goals ended Lionel Messi’s fourth World Cup on Saturday and may have brought down the curtain on an internatio­nal career seemingly destined to end in disappoint­ment.

Tens of thousands of Argentines poured into Kazan hoping to see Messi carry an ageing side over one more hurdle after his solitary goal in Russia helped avoid an embarrassi­ng groupstage exit against Nigeria.

He played his part with two assists in a World Cup classic in the last-16 tie but it was not enough to save Argentina’s fragile defence from the firepower of France and, in particular, 19-year-old Kylian Mbappe in a 4-3 defeat. “It will depend how we do, how it ends,” Messi said before heading to Russia on whether he would continue on the internatio­nal stage after the World Cup.

The last 16 is the earliest he has exited the competitio­n.

Having turned 31 earlier in the tournament, it looks increasing­ly like defeat in the final four years ago is as close as he will come to matching Diego Maradona’s feat of leading Argentina to glory in 1986.

For all his heroics at club level with Barcelona, Messi is still looked upon unfavourab­ly when set against Maradona by many in Argentina, who compare their records at internatio­nal level.

After the 2014 defeat to Germany in Brazil, there was more heartbreak on penalties in the final of the 2015 Copa America and the 2016 Copa America Centenario, both times at the hands of Chile.

Messi missed his spot-kick in the 2016 final, prompting an uncharacte­ristic spur-of-themoment decision to retire from internatio­nal football. “The fact we’ve lost three finals led to some complicate­d moments with the Argentine press due to the difference­s in seeing what it means to reach a final,” Messi told Barcelona-based newspaper Sport.

“It is not easy and has to be appreciate­d. It’s true that winning them is important, but getting there is not easy.”

The fallout from the defeat to France has already begun, with Javier Mascherano the first of many players expected to retire from internatio­nal football.

“From now on, I am just another fan,” said the 34-year-old.

 ?? Reuters ?? Argentina’s Javier Mascherano looks dejected after the match against France in the Round of 16 on Saturday.
Reuters Argentina’s Javier Mascherano looks dejected after the match against France in the Round of 16 on Saturday.

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