Argentina’s 2026 FIFA World Cup Squad Has a Problem Nobody Wants to Admit

Argentina 2026 FIFA World Cup

Argentina won the 2022 FIFA World Cup in the most emotional circumstances imaginable. Lionel Messi, at 35 years old, finally lifted the one trophy that had escaped him for his entire career. The nation wept. The world stood up. It was the perfect ending to the greatest individual story in football history.

But this is 2026. And the Argentina 2026 FIFA World Cup squad has a problem that nobody in Buenos Aires wants to say out loud.

What Made 2022 So Special — and Why That’s Exactly the Problem

The 2022 Argentina squad was not just talented. It was perfectly constructed for that specific moment in time. Ángel Di María was playing the football of his life in his final tournament. Rodrigo De Paul was a relentless engine in midfield. The back four was settled, experienced, and emotionally connected.

Most importantly, Messi was hungry in a way he had never been hungry before. He had won everything except the World Cup. That absence drove him to levels even he had never reached. The emotional fuel behind Argentina’s 2022 campaign was extraordinary and unrepeatable.

That fuel is gone. Messi has the medal now. Di María has retired from international football. The emotional core of that squad — the generation that suffered through 2014, 2018, and every Copa America near-miss before 2021 — has moved on. The Argentina 2026 FIFA World Cup squad is a different animal.

The Real Problem: World Class at the Top, Uncertain Underneath

Here is the honest assessment of the Argentina 2026 FIFA World Cup squad, position by position.

PositionPlayerAgeCurrent FormRisk Level
ForwardLionel Messi38Good in MLS, unknown at World Cup intensityHigh
ForwardLautaro Martínez27Inconsistent at Inter Milan in 2024-25Medium
ForwardJulián Álvarez25Fewer minutes at Atlético MadridMedium
ForwardAlejandro Garnacho20Unproven at this levelMedium
MidfielderAlexis Mac Allister26Elite at LiverpoolLow
MidfielderRodrigo De Paul30Declining from 2022 peakMedium
MidfielderEnzo Fernández24Inconsistent at ChelseaMedium
DefenderCristian Romero27Strong but injury-proneMedium
DefenderLisandro Martínez27Recovering from injuryHigh
GoalkeeperEmiliano Martínez32Still eliteLow

The top of the squad is still world-class. Messi, Mac Allister, Emiliano Martínez, and Romero are all capable of performing at the highest level. But the depth — the players who need to come in and perform if injuries hit — is significantly thinner than it was in Qatar.

The Messi Question Nobody Wants to Answer

Lionel Messi will be 38 years old when the 2026 World Cup begins in June. Let that number sit for a moment.

He is still performing remarkably well at Inter Miami in MLS. His passing, vision, and movement remain elite. In a low-intensity league against moderate defensive opposition, he is still arguably the most dangerous player on the pitch every single week.

But the 2026 World Cup is not MLS.

Seven games in North American summer heat. Opponents who have spent months preparing specifically to stop him. Pressing systems designed to isolate him from the ball. Physical defenders who will make every touch a battle.

Messi’s Performance MetricMLS 2024-25World Cup 2022Projected WC 2026
Goals per 90 mins0.820.780.55 (est.)
Key passes per 903.12.82.1 (est.)
Distance covered per game8.2km9.1km7.8km (est.)
Pressing intensityLowHighMedium

The projection is honest. Messi at 38 in a World Cup will be a diminished version of Messi at 35 in Qatar — and that diminished version is still better than almost every other player at the tournament. But Argentina’s 2022 system was built entirely around Messi being the central force. If he drops below that level, the entire system loses its compass.

The brutal truth is this: Argentina in 2022 could survive a bad Messi game because Di María, De Paul, and the collective belief carried them through. In 2026, there is no Di María. There is no safety net of that emotional magnitude.

Lautaro and Álvarez: The Striker Problem

In 2022, Lautaro Martínez and Julián Álvarez were the perfect complementary strikers. Lautaro brought physicality and finishing. Álvarez brought relentless pressing, clever movement, and an ice-cold mentality in big moments.

In 2025-26, the picture is less convincing.

Lautaro had a difficult season at Inter Milan, and yet Inter Milan won the Serie A, inconsistent by his own very high standards. Álvarez made a big-money move to Atlético Madrid and found himself playing fewer minutes than expected under Diego Simeone’s rigid system.

Neither player arrives at the Argentina 2026 FIFA World Cup in the kind of form they showed in Qatar. That is not a disaster — both are talented enough to find form in a tournament environment. But it is a risk that the defending champions cannot ignore.

Striker2021-22 Season2024-25 SeasonForm Trend
Lautaro Martínez25 goals, 9 assists18 goals, 6 assists⬇️ Declining
Julián Álvarez22 goals, 8 assists14 goals, 5 assists⬇️ Declining

Why Argentina Can Still Win It

Before this reads as a funeral notice for the defending champions — stop. Argentina still has every reason to believe.

Defending World Cup champions have been knocked out early before — Germany in 2018 is the most brutal recent example. But the squads that retain the title share one thing in common: a tactical manager who builds around the group rather than individual stars.

Lionel Scaloni is that manager. He is arguably the most underrated coach at the entire tournament. His ability to adapt, to find unlikely heroes, to make Argentina a collective unit rather than a Messi support act — that quality is still fully intact.

Alexis Mac Allister is playing the best football of his life at Liverpool. Garnacho brings an unpredictability and pace that no previous Argentina squad has had. Emiliano Martínez remains the best penalty-saving goalkeeper in world football.

And Messi — even at 38, even on fewer minutes, even in a slightly reduced role — is still Messi. He does not need 90 minutes to change a game. He needs one moment.

The Honest Prediction

ScenarioProbability
Argentina reached the semi-finals12%
Argentina exit in the quarter-finals35%
Argentina’s shock group stage exit38%
Argentina shock group stage exit15%

The most likely outcome is a quarter-final exit. Not because Argentina is a bad team — they are not. But because the gap between this squad and the 2022 squad is real, the emotional fuel that powered Qatar is gone, and the rest of the world has spent three years studying exactly how to stop them.

The problem nobody wants to admit is not that Argentina is weak. The problem is that the version of Argentina that won in 2022 no longer exists — and the new version has not yet proven it can replace it.

Conclusion

Messi deserves a send-off worthy of the greatest footballer who ever lived. Argentina deserves the chance to defend the title they won so beautifully. And this squad — on its best day, with Scaloni’s tactics firing and Mac Allister controlling the midfield — is genuinely capable of going all the way.

But lightning rarely strikes twice. And Argentina, more than anyone, knows exactly what that means.

For more World Cup 2026 analysis, read our full breakdown of the World Cup 2026 top teams and our 2026 World Cup predictions.

2 thoughts on “Argentina’s 2026 FIFA World Cup Squad Has a Problem Nobody Wants to Admit”

  1. Pingback: Mbappé 2026 FIFA World Cup: His Finals Record Is Surprisingly Complex

  2. Pingback: Best Midfielder 2026 FIFA World Cup: The Premier League Answer

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top