Messi scripts World Cup history with goals in 7 straight matches
Messi's 72nd career free-kick also marked his 123rd international goal, trailing only Cristiano Ronaldo's 145.
PTI
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Lionel Messi had been one of only three players to score in six consecutive World Cup games (Instagram/@leomessi)
Arlington, 28 June
Lionel Messi didn't have much time to try to become the first to score in seven consecutive World Cup games.
Argentina's
superstar did it anyway as a second-half substitute.
Messi made it seven straight while extending the all-time men's World Cup scoring record
with his 19th goal in Argentina's 3-1 victory over Jordan in a group stage
finale on Saturday night.
In his
first match since turning 39 three days earlier, Messi scored on a free kick
after being taken down just outside the penalty box in the 80th minute. The low
kick barely above the grass surface split two Jordan defenders into the left
corner of the net.
It was his
72nd career goal on a free kick, including his 12th for Argentina. Messi now
has 123 international goals — second all-time to Cristiano Ronaldo's 145 — in
202 appearances.
Messi had
been one of only three players to score in six consecutive World Cup games, along with France striker Just Fontaine and Brazil great Jairzinho.
Messi also
scored on a free kick against Nigeria in the 2014 World Cup and is among six
players since records are available dating to 1966 who scored two free kick
goals in the World Cup. He joined Pelé, Rivellino, Téofilo Cubillas, Bernard
Genghini and David Beckham.
“I am very
happy for him, for the moment he is having,” Giovani Lo Celso said in
translated remarks after becoming the first Argentine other than Messi to score
in this tournament, also on a free kick in the 19th minute. “The truth is that
seeing him every day excites, excites and infects a lot. So obviously seeing
him like that for us is very important.”
Messi
didn't start because Argentina had already clinched first place in Group J, and
the game was even more meaningless since Jordan was already eliminated from the
knockout stage.
Nevertheless,
the decidedly pro-Argentina crowd of 70,649 at the home of the NFL's Dallas
Cowboys was eager to see him.
Fans
started chanting Messi's name as soon as the second half began, and cheered loudly when he came off the bench, only to go through warm-ups.
The roar
was louder when he stepped onto the field in the 60th minute, replacing Lautaro
Martinez, who scored on a penalty kick in the first half.
For all
the accomplishments of the eight-time winner of the Ballon d'Or as the best
player in Europe, Messi has never won the Golden Boot as the top scorer in the World Cup. This is his sixth.
Messi now
has six goals in this tournament, two clear of Kylian Mbappé, Vinicius Júnior
and Erling Haaland.
Messi had
been dealing with a minor hamstring injury with Inter Miami that slowed him in
the lead-up to the World Cup.
The knockout round for Argentina begins Friday in South Florida, and in this expanded 48-team tournament, that would be the first of five matches in 17 days if La Albiceleste makes it to the final on 19 July.
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