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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 11:30 UTC
  • UTC11:30
  • EDT07:30
  • GMT12:30
  • CET13:30
  • JST20:30
  • HKT19:30
← The MonexusSports

Argentina's World Cup hopes hinge on Messi's fitness as Scaloni adopts cautious approach

Argentina head coach Lionel Scaloni says he will wait for further medical assessments before drawing conclusions about Lionel Messi's hamstring injury, as the defending champions prepare to begin their World Cup campaign with their captain's fitness uncertain.

Argentina head coach Lionel Scaloni says he will wait for further medical assessments before drawing conclusions about Lionel Messi's hamstring injury, as the defending champions prepare to begin their World Cup campaign with their captain'… CBS SPORTS HEADLINES · via Monexus Wire

Lionel Scaloni struck a cautiously optimistic tone on Tuesday, telling reporters he would "wait to see how it evolves" before making any determination on Lionel Messi's fitness after the Argentine captain suffered a hamstring injury during Inter Miami's match on Sunday. The Argentina head coach spoke after preliminary medical assessments, declining to confirm the severity of the issue or set a timeline for the star's potential return to full training.

Messi, who joined Inter Miami in 2023 and has continued to feature prominently for the national team, was withdrawn from Sunday's club match with what the club's medical staff described as a hamstring concern. The 37-year-old had been in strong form for the MLS side heading into the international break, raising concerns about whether he would be available when Argentina opens its World Cup defence in June.

The timing is awkward for Scaloni. Argentina enter the tournament as defending champions, having secured the trophy in Qatar in 2022 through a dramatic final against France. Messi's role in that triumph — culminating in his iconic celebration after winning the shootout — remains central to how the Albiceleste approach major tournaments. His absence, even for a portion of the group stage, would force tactical recalibrations that the coaching staff has so far avoided publicly addressing.

The issue comes at a moment when Argentina's squad composition is already drawing scrutiny. England manager Thomas Tuchel faced criticism this week over several high-profile omissions from his World Cup squad, illustrating how charged the selection debate can become in the lead-up to major tournaments. Scaloni has largely avoided such controversy during his tenure, but Messi's situation introduces an element of uncertainty the coaching staff had not anticipated.

Scaloni was careful not to dramatise the situation, describing the injury as "not that bad" while insisting further testing would determine the next steps. That framing is consistent with how Argentina's medical staff have historically managed their senior players — a conservative approach that prioritises player longevity over short-term availability, particularly for a squad competing across multiple frontals in the years ahead.

The broader context matters here. Messi has managed his physical workload carefully since moving to MLS, with Inter Miami and the Argentine federation operating a coordination protocol designed to protect the player during the club season. Sunday's injury, if it proves to be a minor hamstring strain, would fit within that management framework — a setback rather than a crisis. The federation's medical team will now conduct independent assessments before clearing him for the rigours of World Cup preparation.

For Argentina's rivals, the uncertainty creates its own pressures. A fully fit Messi changes the calculus of Group C — Argentina's opening fixtures against lesser-ranked nations become very different propositions depending on whether their captain takes the field. Teams adjusting their own preparations will be monitoring the situation closely, though few will publicly welcome a weakened Argentina side. The tournament gains much of its competitive tension from the presence of its defining generational talent.

Scaloni's patience reflects a broader philosophy within the Argentine setup: avoid speculation, wait for facts, act accordingly. Whether that approach yields a fully fit Messi for the opening match remains to be seen. The next round of medical assessments should clarify the picture before Argentina's pre-tournament training camp convenes later this month.

Monexus noted that wire coverage focused primarily on the injury itself; this article foregrounds the tactical and structural implications for the defending champions' campaign structure.

© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire