The Maui News - Weekender

Messi’s hometown in Argentina yearns for World Cup victory

- By DANIEL POLITI

ROSARIO, Argentina — Fernanda Quiroga still remembers how Lionel Messi played soccer in what were then dirt roads around their working class neighborho­od in Rosario, Argentina’s third-largest city.

“(Messi) was always kicking something, a ball, a bottle cap,” said Quiroga, who at 35 is the same age as the captain of Argentina’s national soccer team. “The memory I have of him because he lived right in front of my house, is going to buy sweet pastries at his grandmothe­r’s around the block and he was always kicking something.”

Excitement for Sunday’s World Cup final, when Argentina will face defending champion France in Qatar, is rising fast and anxiety is running particular­ly high in Messi’s hometown as many are hoping this will be the year when Messi finally wins the one major trophy that has been missing from his illustriou­s career.

“Even though it pains us all,

it’s been said this is Leo’s last World Cup, so we’re all hoping he wins it, I think more for him than for the national team itself,” Quiroga said. “I think what weighs more this time around is that we want him to get it because he has generated so much love and respect.”

After beating Croatia in the semifinals Tuesday, Messi said Sunday’s match would likely be his last in a World Cup.

The neighborho­od popularly known as La Bajada has turned into a sort of altar for Messi with murals and graffiti that praise the soccer star.

“From another galaxy and from my neighborho­od,” reads graffiti that is seemingly ubiquitous in the area.

A large mural of Messi looking up at the sky is painted on the side of his old house that still belongs to his family.

“The little guy was very spicy. If he got mad, he grabbed the ball and took it away,” said Marcelo Almada, a 37-year-old constructi­on worker who played soccer with Messi in the streets around the neighborho­od where he still

— lives. “He didn’t like to lose but he was a very good kid.”

With the World Cup, “there has been an explosion in the neighborho­od,” where “we’re all like brothers,” he added, noting that after every Argentina victory people celebrate in the streets until the early hours of the morning.

Messi, and the national team as a whole, have managed to raise the hope and optimism of Argentines in a country that has been stuck in economic doldrums for years with one of the world’s highest inflations rates, closing in on almost 100 percent per year, and where close to four of every 10 people live in poverty.

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