Argentina Finds World Cup Salvation in Thriller Over Nigeria
So where did this Argentina originate from?
For about two years, one of the world's extraordinary soccer powers had been to a great extent lost without a trace. The group faltered through qualifying and seemed lost in its initial two matches in Russia, a frustrating draw with minor Iceland and an intensive beating from Croatia.
At that point Tuesday night happened. Here, for everything except a bunch of minutes, was the Argentina with the relentless striker, the smothering midfield, and the lightning speedy assaults, all of which joined to convey an exciting 2-1 prevail upon Nigeria on a night when there was no edge for blunder.
The minute that made everything conceivable came in the 86th moment, when Marcos Rojo's volley off a photo consummate focusing go from Gabriel Mercado, saved Argentina's World Cup when it looked just as all was lost.
"A colossal alleviation," Lionel Messi said when it was finished. "We knew it would have been a troublesome evening. We didn't think we would endure as much as we did."
Rojo's objective sent the a huge number of Argentina's dependable who had voyage so far north into a wild, stunning festival, a progression of cheers and melodies and move that kept going great into the light blue St. Petersburg night. Sitting in a case halfway up the stands, the amazing Diego Maradona jumped in festivity at that point flipped a twofold flying creature toward the field at who comprehends what.
"Presently the Cup begins for us," Rojo said.
The win, joined with Croatia's annihilation of Iceland, sent Messi and Argentina through to the knockout round, where they will confront France. When everything finished 10 minutes after the choosing objective, Argentina's seat raged the field just as they were making a beeline for the last, as opposed to only the round of 16.
Ángel Di María cried. Javier Mascherano, who played a great part of the second half with blood solidified all over, embraced each one of his partners. There was an upbeat smile over Messi's face apparently without precedent for two weeks.
"Our players play with their heart," the beset Argentina mentor Jorge Sampaoli said. "They are genuine revolutionaries."
The Nigerians fallen to the turf. A draw would have sent them through, and ref Cuneyt Cakir of Turkey practically gave them a second extra shot late in the second half. It would have given a brilliant chance to an objective that would have nearly promised them progression. Rather, they wound up remaining in stun on the sideline, gazing at Argentina celebrating.
"We did all that we could," said the Nigeria commander John Obi Mikel. "In the second half we pushed and pushed. We got the objective, we played well. It simply wasn't to be."
Messi, whose heroics in the last round of qualifying spared Argentina the previous fall, scored in the fourteenth moment. The objective seemed to wake Argentina from its Russian daze. The Barcelona star had been closed out in the initial two amusements, notwithstanding missing an extra shot against Iceland. Slicing through Nigeria's barrier, he gathered Éver Banega's ideal ball from the midfield line, giving it a chance to redirect off his thigh before he discharged his shot inside the far post.
It was a snapshot of alleviation as much as it was wooziness for the a huge number of blue-and-white striped fans who by one means or another figured out how to corral the greater part of the tickets here.
The Nigerians, who had looked so deft and athletic in their 2-0 prevail upon Iceland a week ago, had no answers through the main half. Nigeria had expected the squabbling, uninvolved and incapable rendition of Argentina to show up, the gathering that had defied their mentor and apparently quit against Croatia. Rather, it was the Argentina of old that took the field, and there was nothing Nigeria could do about it.
Until, that is, Argentina gave them a shot. Three minutes into the second half, Mascherano, Argentina's veteran protector, who has looked each day of his 34 years, brought down Leon Balogun with a rugby handle in the punishment zone on a corner kick.
A moment later Victor Moses effectively slid his extra shot past Franco Armani. Nigeria, which required just an attract to progress, was alive. The unsteady, flighty Argentina was back, missing on passes and whimpering to the arbitrator for punishments and yellow cards.
At that point as the minutes ticked toward end, Messi's group recuperated, and seized back control of the diversion, however Nigeria still about had its opportunity to put the amusement away when it showed up Rojo had conferred a hand ball. With 15 minutes to play, he headed the ball into his arm as he shielded a focusing pass.
Cakir blew his shriek and went to the sideline to check the replay. Infrequently has the site of a moderately aged man sitting in front of the TV caused so much pressure. Cakir ruled against a punishment.
Mikel said he didn't see how Cakir did not grant the punishment and never got a clarification. "It was clear," he said. "The ball hit his hand."
At the point when Gonzalo Higuaín missed an open shot from 8 yards with 10 minutes to play, it appeared as though it was not going to be Argentina's night. At that point came Mercado's pursue the correct side, a rocket to the front of the objective, and Rojo cutting in to meet it.
Sampaoli, whose group has apparently been in a condition of revolt as of late, attempted pretty much everything on this night. Clad in a jacket and high-design pants for the initial two matches, he appeared on the sidelines for the third diversion dressed like a center school exercise center educator in a track suit. He sat the Manchester City star Sergio Agüero, and he supplanted goalkeeper Wilfredo Caballero, who skilled Croatia an objective, with Armani.
Presently Argentina will go up against France, in a match that could have been deserving of a last. They will require the specific best form of Argentina to move beyond the French.
"I know their identity, and I recognize what we need to do," Messi said. "It will be an exceptionally extreme amusement."
too late
this is not too late its happed on yesterday