Key events
Argentina’s route to the semi-final
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Group J Algeria 3-0, Austria 2-0, Jordan 3-1
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Last 32 Cape Verde 3-2 (AET)
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Last 16 Egypt 3-2
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Quarter-final Switzerland 3-1 (AET)
Life moves pretty fast, and we forget the games that never were. So let’s take a beat and recallthat England were a hair’s breadth from playing the holders Argentina in the final of Italia 90.
Imagine the hype before that game, given it was only four years after football’s most infamous injustice: Terry Fenwick playing the full 90 minutes against Argentina when he should have been sent off at least four times the Hand of God.
This interview with Bobby Robson ahead of the semi-final against West Germany is one for lovers of nostalgic poignancy.
England’s route to the semi-final
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Group L Croatia 4-2, Ghana 0-0, Panama 2-0
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Last 32 DR Congo 2-1
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Last 16 Mexico 3-2
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Quarter-final Norway 2-1 (AET)

David Hytner
Thomas Tuchel believes England will face an Argentina team “fuelled by history” in their World Cup semi-final in Atlanta on Wednesday. It will be the sixth time that the nations have met at the tournament with the previous three coming after the Falklands war of 1982.
The most controversial game was in the 1986 quarter-finals when Diego Maradona scored his “Hand of God” goal and Argentina won 2-1 en route to the title. Argentina triumphed on penalties in the last 16 in 1998 when David Beckham was sent off. Beckham gained a measure of revenge four years later when he scored from the penalty spot for a 1-0 group-stage victory. England won 3-1 at the group phase in 1962 and 1-0 in the quarter-finals in 1966, when they went on to become champions.
“I saw somewhere on the internet the incredibly valid point that this England team aren’t actually scarred with memories of bad days against Argentina,” writes Eddy Nason. “Even old man Jordan Henderson was -4 years old for the Hand of God. Us oldie fans however…”
Yeah, I don’t think that particular scarring – lived or historical – is a problem in the way it is for, say, England cricketers when they go to Australia. The more relevant scarring comes from the semi-final and final defeats in the last eight years and the historical reality that England usually go out to the first really big team they face. I’m 99.94% sure that the only time England have beaten a higher-ranked team in a knockout game was the quarter-final against Spain at Euro 96, and they should have lost that game.

Barney Ronay
Wednesday night, Atlanta Stadium, 101 games down, three left to play, and finally it makes sense. Bring on The Countdown, that moment just before kick-off in every one of those quietly fascinating World Cup matches where suddenly the world’s most excited man is bellowing over the PA system in a state of outraged, crowing transport, like the last voice you’ll ever hear before the American century explodes in a ball of inanity, fried chicken and porn.
“NAYYYN!! EEEIGHYYT!! SEEEVEERRN!! …” the world’s most excited man shouts, prelude to some cautious rolling possession, maybe an early back-pass, and an agreeable reminder that the game itself will not be stage managed. You want quiet bathos? This World Cup will deliver the greatest goddam quiet bathos the galaxy has ever seen.
Except, not this time. Send for the excited man. Fire up The Countdown. A World Cup that has been undeniably gripping on the field of play finally has an occasion so layered and so luminous that, frankly, countdown guy feels about right, even a little understated.
England versus Argentina for a place in the World Cup final. Is this the biggest game international football can throw up? Argentina-Brazil has more majesty. Germany and the Netherlands is always good. Spain-France is the state of the art when is comes to talent and quality, if not quite depth of feeling in the football sphere.
But for energy, ghosts, weight, the iconography of colours and shapes, this is right up there, an event that feels less like a football match and more like a weather front about to break, a cultural throb, a gravity pulse.
Squint a little and it feels as though the whole World Cup has been a countdown to this point for England and Argentina, a sense of dramatic inevitability even before you get on to the online conspiracy theories (which are also having a moment right now).
Preamble
There’s been so much hype about this match that it’s important we put it in perspective. It is, after all, only the biggest game ever played in football’s greatest cross-continent rivalry.
The history of England v Argentina could already fill a Netflix three-parter, albeit without the chill. It includes the Hand of God in 1986, the Hand of Plod in 1966 and the Hand of Hod a multi-faceted epic in 1998 – but this is the first time they’ve met in the semi-final or the final of a World Cup. For both countries, defeat is so unthinkable that it hurts trying not to think about it.
In movie-poster terms, this is mentality monsters v mentality monsters. England and Argentina have wheezed into the semi-finals, relying on collective defiance, individual brilliance and a team spirit that even Steve Archibald might grudgingly acknowledge. Given the stakes and the in-built intensity of this fixture, it’s hard to see that changing today. Great performances can wait until 2030.
The unspoken fear for both teams is that this is effectively a second-place playoff. Spain will be strong favourites in the final after taking care of France with an authority and synergy that gave some of us a sheen of smugness. But disbelief is easily suspended when you are this close to glory, and right now millions of England and Argentina supporters just want the chance to worry about potential death by tiki-taka.
In a few hours’ time, one of these statements will be true.
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England are in their first men’s World Cup final since 1966.
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Argentina are one game away from becoming the first team to retain the men’s World Cup since Brazil in 1962.
The other one? It happens only in dreams.
Kick off 8pm BST/3pm EST/5am AEST
Source: https://www.theguardian.com/football/live/2026/jul/15/england-v-argentina-world-cup-2026-semi-final-live