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#广场预测世界杯赢40000U Spain wants to suffocate the match; Argentina wants to strike in the end—who wins the trophy depends on who loses composure first
Beijing time at 3:00 a.m. on July 20, at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, New York: Spain and Argentina are battling for the trophy. With less than 72 hours to kickoff, both sets of fans have already poured into the U.S. East Coast, and on social media, discussion about the final broke through 80 million posts this morning.
The semifinals were played on July 16. In Argentina vs England, England scored in the 55th minute. After that, Tuchel made consecutive defensive substitutions, trying to protect a 1-0 lead. But in the 85th minute, Enzo’s long-range shot leveled it. In stoppage time, Lautaro’s header won it, completing a 2-1 comeback. There were 4 minutes of stoppage time in the whole match; the winning goal happened in the 92nd minute. In other words, with only the final two minutes left, Argentina rewrote the scoreline. After the match, England coach Tuchel said one thing: “I made substitutions to plug the loopholes, but the effect wasn’t ideal, and the head coach has to take responsibility.” That’s pretty frank.
Kane added after the game: “After taking the lead, the whole team just sat back and defended. In top-level competitions, that’s not enough. We emphasized again and again before the match that we couldn’t do it—but it’s easy to say and hard to truly do.”
In the other semifinal, Spain beat France 2-0. Spain’s defensive numbers this tournament are indeed eye-catching: in 7 matches, they conceded only 1 goal, with 6 clean sheets. Since the World Cup was founded in 1930, there has never been a team that managed 6 clean sheets in a single edition.
From my perspective, the “tone” of the final is already obvious when you look at the data behind the spear and the shield. Argentina scored 19 goals in 7 matches—nearly 3 per game—making them the highest-scoring team in this tournament. Spain conceded just 1 goal in 7 matches—an average of 0.14 goals conceded per game—making their defense the toughest. It’s like having the strongest spear to pierce the thickest shield.
The two teams have met 14 times in history: Spain 6 wins, 2 draws, 6 losses. No one has been able to pin the other down. Spain veteran Arbeloa once said something quite fair: “Argentina are the opponents we least want to face. They’re just too good at playing hard matches—able to adapt to any style.” Argentina’s manager Scaloni also gave Spain their due, saying Spain deserves respect, but then added that Argentina’s only goal is to win. On records, Messi has already scored 8 goals and provided 4 assists in this edition—21 total World Cup goals, plus 12 total assists—both are historical firsts.
At 39, still playing like this—no matter what era you look at, it’s impressive. After the match, Kane was also asked about the World Cup four years later. He said: “Four years is a long time, and anything can happen, but you look at Messi—he’s still at the very top level, so I won’t set limits for myself.” That kind of mutual recognition between opponents carries more weight than any praise. In my view, the most frightening thing about this Argentina team isn’t their technique—it’s the mentality and atmosphere of the last ten-odd minutes. In this World Cup, of their 19 goals, 12 were scored after halftime with added-time pressure coming on.
In the Round of 16, they pushed and prevailed in extra time against the Ivory Coast. In the Round of 8 against Egypt, in the final stretch of the match, they scored 3 goals to complete a remarkable comeback. In the semifinal, with the last 7 minutes, they scored twice to turn the match around against England. They consistently act in the late stages, which shows they really have their stamina distribution figured out—and it also shows they’ve never panicked in their hearts. Spain’s confidence is on the other side: in the semifinal against France, they had 63% possession and a passing success rate close to 90%. France’s total shots were limited to just 6, and only 1 was on target. That’s Spain’s way: the ball is on my feet, so you can’t beat me.
Their average age is only 24.5, the youngest among the four teams. Their running ability and the sustained intensity of high pressing are stronger than those of more established teams. I think what Pochettino said in his pre-match analysis was very grounded: he characterized the final as a “50-50,” with no absolute favorite. He said Spain’s possession and control will dominate the game’s rhythm, but Argentina’s control of the tempo is equally deadly. When asked how to stop Messi, he said a blunt truth: man-marking is an impossible task; the best approach is to press high and cut off the routes in midfield for Messi to receive passes. This young Spanish group plays with an old-school steadiness—when they lead, they don’t panic; when they trail, they don’t rush. They may not have as many last-second knockout moments as Argentina, because they rarely allow themselves to fall into absolute desperation.
Conceding only 1 goal in 7 matches means Spain have almost always controlled the initiative from the opening. From that perspective, if the final starts with them conceding, how these young players respond is a point worth watching. The numbers pressing on Argentina add up too. On their road journey, they also carry historical numbers: since 1962, 64 years have passed—no team has successfully defended the trophy. Since the FIFA ranking was established in 1992, the team that was ranked world No. 1 before the match has never won the title. Argentina just happens to be the No. 1 seed in this edition.
After Brazil in 2002, no team with a perfect record in the group stage went on to win the championship. Argentina won all three group matches. Layer these together, and on any team it would be pressure. But I think for a team that has already overturned in the knockout rounds three times in a row, pressure might already be something they’ve built immunity to. The song they sing in the locker room is “For Leo, the last dance.” That isn’t a chant meant for outsiders—it’s a shot they give themselves.
After the semifinal, Scaloni said something with real weight: “This team always brings surprises. In every match, we give everything. But only after experiencing so many World Cups like this can you truly understand the players’ spirit—unique.”
The suspense, three days from now: honestly, in a final like this, with both teams getting to this stage, any historical data can only be for reference. When the players finally stand on the pitch, the whistle blows, and the ball rolls—whoever can hold up through those 90-plus minutes without making mistakes is the winner.
Spain has more young players, and Argentina has seasoned veterans. One team leans on collective defense and possession control; the other relies on star brilliance and resilience in the last moments. In my view, what’s most worth watching isn’t who wins—it’s which of the two football mindsets can bring out its own strengths all the way to the end. Spain wants control; Argentina wants to explode. Whichever team first drags the other into its own rhythm takes the initiative. When 19-year-old Yamal and 39-year-old Messi stand on the same pitch, that in itself is a kind of marvelous passing of the torch—someone calls it the “intergenerational handover” made tangible.
I think that’s true. But don’t rush to turn the page on Messi yet—he hasn’t left the stage. Beijing time, 3:00 a.m. on July 20. Three days from now, the answer will be out.