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EAST RUTHERFORD, New Jersey (AP):Lionel Messi rarely loses. Spain never loses.Thatâs been how things have worked in recent years, anyway. Footballâs best player and its most dominant team are set to collide today in a World Cup final worthy of the sportâs grandest stage. Messi and Argentina will face a Spain squad that is unbeaten in 37 consecutive matches going back to early 2024.For Spain, itâs a chance at a second World Cup title to go along with the one from 2010 and to cement themselves as the unquestioned dominant force in the game right now. For Argentina, itâs a chance to become the first back-to-back menâs World Cup champion since Pele and Brazil did it in 1958 and 1962. And for Messi, itâs a chance to write the perfect ending to what he has indicated will be his final run with his national team.âOn Sunday, we will watch a great show,â said Spain coach Luis de la Fuente, who has guided his side to a 28-0-9 record during this unbeaten run. âTwo great national teams â two superteams, in my opinion â very similar in some aspects in terms of attitude, footballersâ talent. I think that itâs going to be an amazing final.âIn simplest terms, the matchup looks like best player versus best team.In actuality, itâs so much more than that.THE MESSI-SPAIN HISTORYThere is history there, given that Messi was born in Argentina but spent part of his youth and most of his club career in Spain, and would have been eligible â if he wanted â to play for that national team instead. Spain tried to convince Messi many times. He never wavered.Sunday will be the first time he plays against Spain since a friendly in 2010, when Argentina routed the then-reigning World Cup champions. He obviously understands the enormous stakes around this match and insists the approach will be simple regardless â spending a Sunday afternoon with some friends, kicking the ball around, albeit with 80,000 people watching in the stadium and probably somewhere around two billion watching worldwide.And thereâs also the incredible storyline of how Messi and Spain star Lamine Yamal, who were photographed together nearly two decades ago when Yamal was a baby, will be sharing the pitch in a World Cup final.âWe grew up playing football with passion, eager to play,â Messi said in his native Spanish. âWe played everywhere. We played on the street. We played at school. We played with teams. We didnât think about the pressure. It was just natural play.âBut there will be pressure today, and tons of it. Win or lose, Argentina knows this is likely the end of the Messi era in blue and white.âThe best footballer that the world has seen,â Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni said.MESSIâS SHORT-LIVED RETIREMENTIt wasnât always that way. Go back a decade, and this run â Copa AmĂ©rica champions in 2021, World Cup champions in 2022, Copa AmĂ©rica champions again in 2024 â almost never happened for Argentina.Messi retired from the national team in 2016, after he and Argentina lost that yearâs Copa AmĂ©rica final to Chile in penalty kicks â one of which he missed. Fortunately for all parties involved, the retirement only lasted a few weeks. But he had grown tired of always coming up short in big matches for his national team, and was ready to step away from that squad at 29.âIâm done,â Messi said that night â at MetLife Stadium, which just happens to be the site of this World Cup final.He wasnât done, of course. He continued starring for Barcelona, then Paris Saint Germain, then Inter Miami. Heâs the two-time defending Most Valuable Player in Major League Soccer, the star of that leagueâs reigning champions, someone who can still create goals in the biggest moments with virtual ease.âHe is pure history,â Scaloni said. âHistory. A legend.âSPAIN CHASING DEFENSIVE HISTORYSpain are chasing history as well. La Roja â âThe Redâ â are the favourites today, deservedly so after giving up just one goal in the teamâs first seven matches of this tournament. Spain have not spent a single second trailing at this World Cup; Argentina have trailed for more than 100 minutes, including stoppage time.Defensive performances like this simply do not happen, even in the World Cup. There are three teams â Spain in 2010, Italy in 2006, and France in 1998 â who won the title and gave up a total of two goals in the tournament. This Spain team is in line to do even better than that.âArgentina is far more than Messi,â Spain captain Rodri said. âTheyâve proven that theyâre a very complete team with top players. ... We are the best two teams playing in a collective manner as a group. Of course, we need to be mindful of Leo, but many other players.âSo, itâs down to two. The 104th and final match of the biggest World Cup in history â 48 teams, spread out over the US, Canada and Mexico â comes down to the defending champions against the heirs apparent, the biggest star in the game against those who have idolised him and now can end his reign.It was not a World Cup without challenges. The tournament had geopolitical discomfort and controversy, like an Iranian team facing what it said were onerous travel restrictions as its country was at war with the US, criticism of FIFA for lifting US star Folarin Balogunâs red-card suspension following urging from President Donald Trump â who will be at todayâs match to present the trophy â and the British government wanting an investigation of Argentinaâs team after players posed with a banner claiming sovereignty over the Falkland Islands after their semifinal win against England.But in the end, the World Cup will close as it always does, with one side celebrating and one side devastated.âTheyâve got their strengths. So do we,â Argentina goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez said. âI wish it will be a final that goes down in history.â
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