1. The Accidental Coach
After the chaotic 2018 World Cup, Argentinian football was in shambles. The national team, a collection of superstars led by the mercurial Jorge Sampaoli, had imploded. In the vacuum, the federation made
a move that was seen as either uninspired or just temporary: they promoted interim manager Lionel Scaloni. A former national team player with minimal coaching experience, Scaloni was supposed to be a placeholder. No one expected him to last, let alone build a dynasty. But his lack of a celebrity profile became his greatest asset. He wasn't there to impose a rigid, complex philosophy; he was there to clean up a mess and build something new from the ground up, with humility and common sense as his primary tools.
2. Forging 'La Scaloneta'
Scaloni’s first and most important task was a cultural reset. He gradually moved away from some of the big names of the past and built a new core of players whose defining characteristic was their willingness to bleed for the jersey—and for their captain. Players like Rodrigo De Paul became Messi’s on-field bodyguard, while Cristian Romero and Lisandro Martínez provided grit in defense. A new midfield engine featuring Leandro Paredes and Giovani Lo Celso gave the team balance. Crucially, this wasn't Messi and ten other guys; it was a cohesive unit, a brotherhood. They earned the affectionate nickname 'La Scaloneta' (The Scaloni bus), a testament to the fact that, for the first time in years, everyone was on board and heading in the same direction.
3. Breaking the 28-Year Curse
You can’t understand the glory of 2022 without the relief of 2021. For 28 long years, Argentina had failed to win a major senior trophy. They had lost three consecutive finals between 2014 and 2016—one World Cup, two Copa Américas—traumas that had scarred a generation of players, especially Messi. Then came the 2021 Copa América final, played against arch-rival Brazil in their iconic Maracanã stadium. A single goal from Ángel Di María was enough. The final whistle brought an outpouring of emotion, with Messi collapsing to his knees in tears of pure relief. Winning that trophy lifted an immense psychological weight off the entire nation and proved to the players that they were capable of getting over the finish line.
4. The Shock Therapy of Saudi Arabia
Argentina arrived at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar on a 36-game unbeaten streak, looking invincible. Then, in their very first match, they suffered one of the biggest upsets in tournament history, losing 2-1 to Saudi Arabia. It was a stunning, humiliating blow. Lesser teams would have crumbled. For 'La Scaloneta,' however, it became a moment of clarification. The loss shattered any complacency and stripped them of their favorites tag. As Messi himself said, it forced them to treat every subsequent match as a final. The shock acted as a forge, hardening their resolve and reminding them that nothing would be handed to them. From that point on, they played with a desperate, ferocious edge that their opponents couldn't match.
5. Learning to Suffer—and Win
The knockout stages were a testament to Argentina's newfound character. This wasn't a team that coasted to victory; they embraced the struggle. They outlasted a furious comeback from the Netherlands in a chaotic, ill-tempered quarterfinal decided by a penalty shootout. Goalkeeper Emiliano “Dibu” Martínez became a national hero with his mind games and crucial saves. And then came the final against France, arguably the greatest World Cup final ever played. Argentina dominated for 80 minutes, went up 2-0, and then suddenly collapsed, conceding two goals in 97 seconds to Kylian Mbappé. Yet, unlike past teams, they didn't break. They endured, fought back in extra time, and ultimately won on penalties. They had learned how to suffer, and in doing so, they had finally learned how to win.






