When Lionel Messi singlehandedly dragged Argentina to the 2018 World Cup with a hat trick on the final day of qualification, his manager, Jorge Sampaoli, turned philosophical: “Soccer, the World Cup, could not be left without Messi,” Sampaoli said after a 3-1 victory over Ecuador.

Little did he know that his words would apply again eight months later.

The World Cup could not be left without Messi, and it isn’t. Not yet, anyway. Argentina advanced to the Round of 16 Tuesday in dramatic fashion, with a 2-1 victory over Nigeria, and thanks in part to Croatia’s 2-1 win over Iceland.

But whereas Messi qualified for Russia despite his teammates, this time he needed a little bit of help. And he got it.

With the game knotted at 1-1, via an early Messi goal and a second-half Nigeria penalty, Argentina was crashing toward elimination. A dysfunctional few weeks were fizzling out into disgrace. Then Marcos Rojo – of all people, Marcos Rojo! – booked a Round of 16 date with France with an 86th-minute volley:

MARCOS ROJO PUTS ARGENTINA AHEAD! pic.twitter.com/3yrzeq7hSu — FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) June 26, 2018





Messi jumped on Rojo’s back. His teammates followed. The tens of thousands of Argentineans in St. Petersburg bounced and screamed, delirious. Millions more emulated them back home. All of their World Cup dreams will live to see a few more days.

Messi’s magic

Tuesday’s first half had been Messi’s. It was the performance the soccer world had been waiting for.

Through two games in Russia, Messi had covered less ground per 90 minutes than any other outfield player at the World Cup. And he had been poor. He had missed a penalty against Iceland. He had been invisible against Croatia.

But his apparent lackadaisicalness is part of his brilliance. Because it makes the explosions all the more difficult to defend.

Messi was stationary, then he was lightning quick, darting in behind the Nigeria defense for Argentina’s opener. Ever Banega put a pass right on his thigh. Messi somehow took it in stride, took a second lovely touch, and buried the third across Nigerian keeper Francis Uzoho:

LIONEL MESSI GETS THE OPENER! What a ball by Banega, what a touch and finish by Messi. Argentina lead Nigeria 1-0. pic.twitter.com/ONbGOjKVkg — FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) June 26, 2018





Messi wasn’t dominant in the first half, but he was nonetheless special. He would later have a free kick tipped onto the post. He slipped in a glorious through-ball for Gonzalo Higuain, who couldn’t find a way past Uzoho.

He did an excellent job of finding himself in dangerous positions high up the field, and had Argentina in the lead at halftime.

Ever Banega was pivotal for Argentina

Of the many farcical aspects of Argentina’s disastrous start to the World Cup, Banega’s exclusion from the starting lineup against Iceland was one of the more inexplicable. Sampaoli started two defensive-minded holding midfielders against a team that didn’t intend on doing much attacking. They were redundant. Lucas Biglia, the second beside Javier Mascherano, was useless. Banega’s playmaking ability was sorely missed.

On Tuesday, it was immeasurably valuable. And you could argue it was the difference between the two games – at least in the first half. It, along with Messi, was certainly the difference between 0-0 and 1-0 at halftime.

Banega sprung Messi for the goal with a pinpoint 50-yard pass. He also played Angel Di Maria through. Di Maria was taken down by a borderline red-card foul that was punished with yellow. From the resulting free kick, Messi hit the woodwork.

Messi NEARLY gets his second! pic.twitter.com/G0weLbph7p — FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) June 26, 2018





Banega was pivotal for Argentina in midfield. He was the reason La Albiceleste had both control and chances.

But Argentina’s defense always looked like it had a mistake in it. And sure enough …

Nigeria’s penalty

On a Nigeria corner early in the second half, Mascherano had his arms wrapped around Leon Balogun at the near post. It was the type of penalty box grappling that often gets ignored. But that doesn’t mean it wasn’t a foul. The referee pointed to the spot, and Victor Moses converted: