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Remembering that Martin PALERMO goal against Peru

As we do nearly every year, it’s time to look back at THAT goal by Martin PALERMO but this time with new quotes from the man himself.

Diego MARADONA’s Argentina were in trouble. Big trouble (much like Jorge SAMPAOLI’s team is at the moment). Missing out on the 2010 World Cup was a very strong possibility. The team was struggling to score goals, struggling to win, MARADONA himself kept calling up waives of new players for every match and the team needed a miracle to make it to South Africa.

After about a year of fans asking and demanding that Gonzalo HIGUAIN be included in the Argentina squad, MARADONA submitted to the demands and included the then Real Madrid striker not only in the match but in the starting eleven. That match also saw the return of Pablo AIMAR, who was doing well with his new club Benfica.

Here was the starting line-up for the match:

Argentina Eleven:

ROMERO; GUTIERREZ, SCHIAVI, HEINZE, Emiliano INSUA; Enzo PEREZ, MASCHERANO, DI MARIA; AIMAR; MESSI, HIGUAIN

Martin PALERMO and the substitutes:

ANDUJAR, DEMICHELIS, BOLATTI, Federico INSUA, TEVEZ, AGUERO, PALERMO

Of the eleven that started, five of them are expected to start the same fixture, 8 years on. Sergio ROMERO, Enzo PEREZ, Javier MASCHERANO, Angel DI MARIA and Lionel MESSI.

The first half ended 0-0 which meant Argentina had 45 minutes plus injury time (and they would need those extra few minutes) to score and defeat Peru. The entire second half could have been written by some Hollywood director. Martin PALERMO came on at half time for Enzo PEREZ. Just a couple of minutes into the second 45 saw Gonzalo HIGUAIN score on his Argentina debut as he and another River Plate alumni Pablo AIMAR connected for the goal. Everything that happened after the goal was out of a movie. The rain slowly started to come down onto the pitch and it wouldn’t be a Hollywood script if there wasn’t a twist in the tale.

The 90th minute came and it was popcorn time. A Peru goal, silencing El Monumental (in a similar way that Venezuela’s goal caused the entire fans last month in Buenos Aires to go mute) as they had equalized to make it 1-1 and Argentina had one foot and a half out of South Africa. At this point, the rain was coming down so hard, you would think the players would have to swim back to the locker rooms. But with Martin PALERMO on the pitch, there was going to be some sort of dramatic ending.

Martin Palermo Argentina Peru
Martin Palermo suffered a broken nose with this hit.

PALERMO had suffered a broken nose in the second half but that wasn’t going to take the veteran off. And it’s a good thing he didn’t. Minute 93 and Argentina get a corner kick. Federico INSUA takes it and it gets to Angel DI MARIA on the edge of the area. DI MARIA sends a ball back into fold and the ball lands again to INSUA. Federico swings a shot (although it could have been a pass) into the middle and it falls to a completely unmarked Martin PALERMO who side foots it into the back of the net. The man who was ridiculed for missing 3 penalty kicks in one match for Argentina had done it for his country. Running while taking his shirt off and a bloody, patched up nose, Martin PALERMO celebrated under the immense rain while being jumped by his team mates. Diego MARADONA played his last card and it came up trump as he belly flopped his way onto the pitch, celebrating and crying.

Martin Palermo Peru
Martin Palermo scores the goal of his Argentina career against Peru.

The headlines would only read one name the next morning. PALERMO. A man who had a knack of being at the right place at the right time just scored one of the (if not the) biggest goal of his career (certainly of his Argentina career). Nearly 8 years to the day after that memorable match, Martin PALERMO commented on his goal. Here’s what he had to say:

“It was an important match. It was an incredible night. Out of all the matches I played in my career, never had I played one with so much wind, so much rain and so much emotion. And to be the protagonist in it all makes me feel priviledged. At half time, Diego MARADONA made he train and told me that I was going in. During a play, I got a knock on the nose and the blood wouldn’t stop. The referee told me I couldn’t continue. And then came that play.

“All of us were in the area minus the goalkeeper. With the way I was, I believed that the ball would find its way to me but I couldn’t imagine what was going to happen. It was pure madness. I lived it with so much emotion. It was with great joy to be able to take it in with the Argentina fans.”

On behalf of all Argentina fans around the world, we will forever be greatful for that goal and for you, PALERMO. Thank you!

Four Argentina line-ups from training

Jorge SAMPAOLI has tested a three more Argentina line-ups in training on Tuesday.

While we posted a first rumored line-up earlier today, SAMPAOLI has gone ahead and tested a second, third and even a fourth starting eleven on Tuesday afternoon. These three are slightly different, with the big changes coming in attack. If the first one had ICARDI up front, the other three had Boca man BENEDETTO as the number 9 in attack. Here were the line-ups SAMPAOLI tried in the afternoon:

First Argentina line-up:

ROMERO; FAZIO/MASCHERANO/PEZZELLA, OTAMENDI, MERCADO; BIGLIA, GAGO/BANEGA, Enzo PEREZ; DI MARIA, MESSI, SALVIO; ICARDI

Second Argentina line-up:

ROMERO; ACUÑA, OTAMENDI, MASCHERANO, MERCADO; DI MARIA, BANEGA, BIGLIA; Papu GOMEZ, BENEDETTO, MESSI

Third Argentina line-up:

ROMERO; ACUÑA, MASCHERANO, OTAMENDI, MERCADO; GAGO, RIGONI, Enzo PEREZ; MESSI, DI MARIA; BENEDETTO

Fourth Argentina line-up:

ROMERO; ACUÑA, OTAMENDI, MASCHERANO, MERCADO; DI MARIA, BANEGA, BIGLIA, GAGO; BENEDETTO, MESSI

We’ve added a poll below asking you which eleven you would prefer to see start against Peru. Make sure to vote below!

[poll id=”7″]

Diego SIMEONE: “I hope Argentina works hard”

Diego SIMEONE has come out and commented on the Argentina National Team.

Ever since El Cholo won La Liga back in 2014, many Argentina fans have been asking for Diego to take over as coach of the Albiceleste. Of course on paper, he has certain merits. Two league titles in Argentina, a La Liga title in Spain, a Copa del Rey and even two UEFA trophies to his name. Not bad for someone with a fairly young managerial career.

Diego Simeone Diego Maradona Argentina
Diego Simeone and Diego Maradona were team mates for Argentina at the 1994 World Cup.

However, when asked about whether he would like to coach his country one day, SIMEONE has always stated that he would like to but in the future. SIMEONE was on “El Larguero” where once more he gave his thoughts on one day coaching Argentina and he also gave his opinion on the comparisons between Diego MARADONA and Lionel MESSI. Here’s what he had to say:

Diego SIMEONE on Argentina:

“I hope Argentina works hard for these two matches and that they arrive to the matches well.”

“I live football day in and day out. The National Teams are for a later time. I need to have the feeling of it all every day, the adrenaline. I don’t see myself preparing for a match for four months while at home.”

“At the same time, I feel like I can be better as a coach, there are things I could be better at before being coach of the Argentina National Team. I’m 47 years old, I’m still a kid.

Diego SIMEONE on MARADONA/MESSI:

“It’s different times. One is more emotional than the other, one has better numbers than the other.”

A very diplomatic answer by the Atletico coach when asked about Diego MARADONA and Lionel MESSI. Could his answer about how he hopes Argentina are preparing well be an indication on how he feels about his country? That perhaps they have lacked preparation in the past?

Argentina’s possible lineup for the match against Peru

Hey everyone!

Are we all getting excited for the match this Thursday? I know I am! I’m also getting nervous! What do you all think of the rumored starting lineup below:

ROMERO; FAZIO/MASCHERANO/PEZZELLA, OTAMENDI, MERCADO; BIGLIA, GAGO/BANEGA, Enzo PEREZ; DI MARIA, MESSI, SALVIO; ICARDI

This would mean that Paulo DYBALA, who started Argentina’s last two World Cup Qualifying matches against Uruguay and Venezuela, would be relegated to the bench. Boca Juniors attacker Dario BENEDETTO would also start the match against Peru on the bench.

Would this lineup work? What would you like to see? Our boys need to stay focused under pressure.  They need to play the match of their lives no matter who plays!

VAMOS ARGENTINA!

Argentina’s 2018 World Cup Qualifiers

Taking a look at Argentina’s 2018 World Cup Qualifiers.

Argentina’s bumpy road in the 2018 World Cup Qualifiers

Argentina’s encountered many problems throughout their 2018 World Cup Qualifying campaign. Losing the opening match against Ecuador at El Monumental (the team’s first loss in an official match at the stadium since the infamous 0-5 against Colombia back in 1993). Having three different coaches (Gerardo MARTINO, Edgardo BAUZA and now Jorge SAMPAOLI) in charge of the team. Losing to Paraguay for the first time in World Cup Qualifying at home and a humiliating 3-0 loss to Brazil are just some of the topics of discussion. It’s been a long road and it’s time to look back at the roller coaster ride.

[wpcm_matches title=”Argentina’s World Cup Qualifying Fixtures & Results” comp=”286″ team=”304″ venue=”all” show_team=”” show_comp=”1″ linktext=”View all results” thumb=”1″ link_club=”1″]

Opening loss to Ecuador

Gerardo MARTINO’s men were just coming off another devastating final loss, this time losing the 2015 Copa America final. The team morale was very low and the Albiceleste were without their captain Lionel MESSI who had sustained an injury and was out for the opening match. There were some new faces in the squad with the likes of Facundo RONCAGLIA, Angel CORREA and Emmanuel MAS starting for MARTINO with some familiar faces (the attack consisted of Javier PASTORE, Angel CORREA, Angel DI MARIA and Sergio AGUERO, with Carlos TEVEZ replacing the injured AGUERO in the match).

Javier Mascherano Ecuador
Javier Mascherano walks off as Argentina lose 2-0 to Ecuador.

Despite not playing particularly well, Argentina had not lost at El Monumental in a World Cup Qualifier in over 20 years. In a weird way, it had brought some sort of false security. However, records are meant to be broken and Ecuador did just that to Argentina at El Monumental. A 2-0 win for the Ecuadorians meant that Tata’s past few months went from bad to worse.

What followed were two consecutive draws, a 0-0 draw away to Paraguay and a 1-1 draw at home against a poor Brazil.

Four wins out of four

Argentina entered the 2016 Copa America in fantastic form. Just like back in 2011, a fantastic team display (except that this time without Lionel MESSI) away to Colombia seemed to have turned the team’s fortunes around. A lone Lucas BIGLIA goal was enough to see off Jose PEKERMAN’s men in a 0-1 win in the blistering heat of Barranquilla. In March, it was a repeat of the 2015 Copa America final but this time it was Tata MARTINO’s men who picked up the victory in Santiago, Chile. The win against Chile was followed by a win at home against Bolivia. It was three straight victories and off to the Copa America.

Bye bye Tata MARTINO, hello (not for long) Edgardo BAUZA

Gerardo MARTINO’s time as coach of the Argentina National Team came to an end in the summer of 2016. After problems with the AFA, MARTINO’s exit meant that Edgardo BAUZA would come in as coach. Certainly not Argentina’s first choice (possibly not even in the top 5), BAUZA was brought in to take care of a team which was in a hot mess.

Edgardo Bauza Lionel Messi
Edgardo Bauza coached Argentina for eight matches (3 wins, 2 draws, 3 losses).

Psychologically, the team were dealt a massive blow after losing a third final in two years. Fatigue, Lionel MESSI announcing his retirement from the National Team mixed with the AFA reaching a new low on a daily basis meant that  BAUZA’s work was cut out for him. A different playing style from what the team was accustomed to playing since August 2014, BAUZA was brought in to take over during the middle of the World Cup Qualifiers, despite all the problems plaguing the team (both on and off the pitch).

The fourth straight win with two draws, two defeats in 2016

The year 2016 went from worse to downright terrible. While MESSI’s retirement was short (missed zero matches for his country) and they managed to get a massive three points against Uruguay (thanks to a Lionel MESSI goal), the Albiceleste suffered back to back draws. The first was a 2-2 draw away to Venezuela (without Lionel MESSI as he was out due to injury) and the second was another 2-2 draw, this time away to Peru (also without MESSI).

Argentina’s results were about to take a turn for the worst. After two away matches, they were back at home and this time against Paraguay. A team they have never lost to at home. The result? A shocking 1-0 defeat. Sergio AGUERO missed a penalty kick for his country and the standings were beginning to be a serious cause for concern. The second defeat came at the hands of a newly rejuvenated Brazil team. A resounding 3-0 win for the Brazilian meant that the match at home against Colombia was a must win (Argentina managed a 3-0 victory through a Lionel MESSI inspired performance).

Lionel Messi Colombia goal
Lionel Messi celebrates his free kick goal against Colombia.

The year 2017 started off the same way 2016 ended, with a victory. Argentina managed a 1-0 win against Chile at El Monumental through a Lionel MESSI penalty kick. Following the match, MESSI received a four match ban which would see him miss the 2-0 loss to Bolivia in La Paz. MESSI’s ban was ultimately overturned.

A third manager as Jorge SAMPAOLI takes over

Less than a year after being appointed as coach of Argentina, Edgardo BAUZA was shown the door and in came the man of the hour. The coach that many had been clamoring for was now coach. Jorge SAMPAOLI was now in charge of Argentina. On the surface, it meant great things. In reality, it meant that the players had to adapt to a third different style in a year, with only two friendly matches to prepare for and with four World Cup Qualifying matches remaining meant that there were (are) no margins for error.

Jorge Sampaoli Argentina
Jorge Sampaoli becomes the third coach to manage Argentina in the 2018 World Cup Qualifiers.

Two points out of a possible six

All eyes were in Montevideo on August 31 as it was the battle of the River Plate between Uruguay and Argentina. Talisman for their countries but team mates in Spain, it was Lionel MESSI up against Luis SUAREZ. In truth, it wasn’t the prettiest of matches and the scoreline of 0-0 suggested just that. The point definitely helped the Uruguayans more than it helped Argentina. The second match of the round for Jorge SAMPAOLI was his first home match playing against Venezuela at El Monumental. Despite Mauro ICARDI leading the front line instead of the veteran Gonzalo HIGUAIN and the team being more fluid and attacking, Argentina were held to a 1-1 draw (with the Albiceleste’s goal being an own goal) against a Venezuelan side which grew in confidence as the match went on.

Judgement day awaits

Two matches remain and the South American 2018 World Cup Qualifying table is as tight as ever. Four points separate sixth place from second place in the table with only Brazil having secured a spot in Russia. Jorge SAMPAOLI has played all his cards now with his full squad being announced.

Mauro Icardi Argentina
Mauro Icardi has been selected ahead of Gonzalo Higuain for Argentina.

The first match will be played on Thursday, October 5 at the mystical La Bombonera stadium, home of the legendary Boca Juniors. Anything but a victory will cause shock waves not only around Argentina and South America but the entire footballing world. The team’s final South American World Cup Qualifying match will be played on Tuesday, October 10 against Ecuador with a place in the 2018 World Cup up for grabs.