LUSAIL, Qatar — If Lionel Messi is to finally lift the World Cup, he is doing it the hard way. Genius can take you only so far, especially if your team is as flawed as Messi’s Argentina, but the fairy-tale story can still have the perfect ending.
It might even happen with the ultimate pay-off line of Cristiano Ronaldo being on the other side with Portugal (should they emerge from the side of the bracket that includes France, England, and Morocco) when it does. But let’s put the brakes on the fantasy, for now.
After 80 minutes of the quarterfinal against the Netherlands at the Lusail Stadium, everyone watching could have been forgiven for getting carried away with the Messi narrative — that Qatar 2022 would end with the 35-year-old getting his hands on the one major trophy he has yet to win.
Messi had produced his best performance of this World Cup — and it was magical — to put Lionel Scaloni’s team 2-0 ahead and seemingly cruising into a semifinal against Croatia on Tuesday. The Paris Saint-Germain forward had created Nahuel Molina‘s first-half opening goal with a pass of sublime quality before doubling Argentina’s lead from the penalty spot on 73 minutes.
The closing stages should have been on cruise control, but Wout Weghorst scored twice — an 83rd minute header and then by finishing off one of the best and cleverest free-kicks you are likely to see, 11 minutes into stoppage time, to draw the Dutch level. And that wasn’t in the script. Messi’s story really shouldn’t have been turned into a nightmare by a giant centre-forward who was signed by Burnley to keep them in the Premier League last season. A task he failed to manage, scoring just twice in 20 games.