Argentina contemplates its future after another elimination

Lionel Messi

Argentina’s Lionel Messi stands in the field during a Copa America semifinal soccer match against Brazil at the Mineirao stadium in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, Tuesday, July 2, 2019. (AP Photo/Ricardo Mazalan)

PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil— Argentina remains optimistic about its future despite another year without a title.

There is some hope going forward after the team’s 2-0 loss to Brazil in the semifinals of the Copa América on Tuesday, a result that extended the team’s 26-year run without a trophy.

“There are some good and important players coming up who have shown that they love the national team and want to be here,” said veteran Lionel Messi, who turned 32 during the South American competition. “There’s a future, we have a lot of young players who need to be given time to succeed. We have to respect them.”

Messi, whose only title with Argentina was with the under-23 squad in the 2008 Olympics, said the national team can still count on him.

“If I have to help somehow, I’ll do it,” he said. “I felt comfortable with this group of players.”

It was a much different reaction than Messi had after the team’s loss in the 2016 Copa América final, when he said he was done with the national team. The Barcelona playmaker had already lost the 2015 Copa América final and the 2014 World Cup final with Argentina.

Messi, Sergio Agüero and Ángel Di María were the only players from this squad who played in the 1-0 loss to Germany in the 2014 World Cup final.

The current team was filled with younger players and was led by inexperienced coach Lionel Scaloni, who took over as an interim solution for a national team that arrived in Brazil carrying few expectations.

Among the younger players who did well in the Copa América were Juan Foyth, Rodrigo De Paul and Lautaro Martínez.

Although the team gradually improved under Scaloni, the coach was not expected to remain at the helm entering World Cup qualifying and next year’s Copa América, which Argentina will co-host with Colombia.

“I don’t think it’s time to talk about that, it’s not what I’m worried about right now,” said the 41-year-old Scaloni, a former player. “I’m concerned about my players after this defeat.”

Scaloni is the eighth Argentina coach since José Pekerman left after the team’s elimination in the quarterfinals of the 2006 World Cup, a sign of the instability engulfing the South American powerhouse in recent years.

The Argentine soccer federation, in constant turmoil, has had trouble persuading the nation’s renowned coaches to take over the squad, including Marcelo Gallardo of River Plate, Diego Simeone of Atlético Madrid and Mauricio Pochettino of Tottenham.

Other more likely candidates to become the next coach include Gabriel Heinze of Vélez Sarsfiel, Gabriel Milito of Estudiantes and Hernán Crespo of Banfield, former national team players who have achieved good results locally in their early coaching careers.

Before any decision about Argentina’s future is made, the team will play the third-place game on Saturday in São Paulo. It will face either two-time defending champion Chile or Peru, which meet in the other semifinal on Wednesday in Porto Alegre.

The next goal will be qualifying for the 2022 World Cup, with the first qualifier set for March next year.

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