The whole world held its breath. Two weeks of muscle fatigue, hamstring scares, and whispers of “what if Messi misses the World Cup?” — and then, in the 70th minute at Jordan-Hare Stadium in Alabama, Lionel Scaloni finally gave the nod.
Leo Messi was coming on.

The roar inside the stadium said everything. Argentina’s pre-World Cup friendly against Iceland had already been comfortable — Valentín Barco’s stunning strike in the 8th minute had them cruising — but none of that really mattered until No. 10 stepped off that bench. Because this wasn’t just about Iceland. This was a message to the entire planet: the king is fit, the king is ready, and the World Cup starts tomorrow.
Barco Sets the Stage

Before Messi even laced his boots, Barco was busy writing the opening chapter. The young wingback unleashed an absolute thunderbolt from outside the box that flew into the net in the 8th minute, announcing Argentina’s arrival at Jordan-Hare with all the subtlety of a firework. Iceland, to their credit, tried to push back — Ellertsson had an early chance, and Mac Allister somehow rattled the post when the goal was gaping — but Argentina were comfortable, fluid, and dangerous all afternoon.

Still, something was missing. Everyone knew it. The cameras kept cutting to the bench, where a man in a training bib sat watching, waiting, managing his hamstring like the precious cargo it is.
Enter the GOAT — Literally Within Seconds
When Messi replaced Giuliano Simeone in the 70th minute, the clock had barely moved before chaos broke out in the Iceland box. Almost immediately, Lautaro Martínez burst through and was hauled down by the goalkeeper. Penalty.
And who steps up? Who else.

One composed run-up. One nerveless side-foot. Top corner. Argentina 2-0 Iceland.
It was literally Messi’s first touch.

The stadium erupted. His teammates mobbed him. Somewhere, Scaloni breathed the deepest sigh of relief of his coaching career.
But here’s the record that made X absolutely lose its mind: that goal — Messi’s 117th for Argentina and his 911th career goal — made him the oldest player ever to score for the Argentine national team, breaking a record set by River Plate legend Angel Labruna back in 1957. A 69-year-old record. Gone. Just like that. On a Tuesday evening in Alabama.
The Maestro Strings It Together

Messi wasn’t done conducting. With Argentina firmly in control, the captain dropped deep, picked up the ball, and threaded a perfectly weighted pass into the box to Rodrigo De Paul. De Paul squared it. Thiago Almada — tap in. 3-0. Game, set, and World Cup warm-up complete.
The full-time whistle came, and it felt less like the end of a friendly and more like the opening act of something massive.
What This Means for the World Cup

Argentina face Algeria tomorrow in Group J — their first real test in the defence of the 2022 crown. After the hamstring scare that saw Messi limp off for Inter Miami and miss the Honduras friendly entirely, the question wasn’t whether Argentina were good enough. It was whether he would be ready.

Tuesday night answered that in the most Messi way possible. Sub appearance. Immediate impact. Record broken. Goal scored. Assist laid on a plate.
The defending champions didn’t just beat Iceland. They sent a warning to Algeria, Austria, Jordan, and frankly every single team in this tournament.
Messi is here. The World Cup can start now.










