One decision left: Argentina's final pre-kickoff brief vs Algeria

One decision left: Argentina's final pre-kickoff brief vs Algeria

A final pre-kickoff briefing for Argentina vs Algeria: TyC's live guide now leaves only the Molina-or-Montiel right-back call open, while Messi, Dibu and Lautaro shape the last tactical read before Group J begins.

Argentina Focus
June 17, 2026 · 6:04 AM
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The headline three hours before kickoff is not a scoreline. It is a restraint test for Lionel Scaloni: Argentina's live pre-match guide now points to ten clear starters and one open fullback call, with Nahuel Molina or Gonzalo Montiel still listed as the right-back decision against Algeria. 1
That matters because this is no longer a broad preview. ESPN's match centre still has Argentina-Algeria scheduled for 01:00 UTC on Wednesday in Kansas City, with every Group J team on zero points before the opener. 2 The useful question now is narrower: how does Scaloni balance control, transition defense and the emotion around Messi's last World Cup campaign before the official team sheet lands?

The pre-kickoff board

ItemVerified pre-kickoff stateWhat Argentina fans should watch
Kickoff and settingArgentina vs Algeria is the Group J opener at Kansas City Stadium, scheduled for 01:00 UTC Wednesday. 2No result is in yet; treat every XI report as provisional until the official lineups drop.
Argentina XITyC's latest probable XI: Emiliano Martinez; Molina or Montiel, Cristian Romero, Lisandro Martinez, Facundo Medina; Rodrigo De Paul, Alexis Mac Allister, Enzo Fernandez, Thiago Almada; Lionel Messi, Lautaro Martinez. 1The right-back choice tells us whether Scaloni wants Molina's running or Montiel's defensive edge from the start.
AvailabilityAl Jazeera reports Messi has overcome hamstring issues, Dibu Martinez has recovered from a broken finger, and Nicolas Tagliafico misses out with a calf injury. 3The left side is already adjusted; the right side is the final lever.
Algeria threatAlgeria arrive with Riyad Mahrez, Rayan Ait-Nouri, Mohamed Amoura and a counterattacking route that Carlos Lampe explicitly warned could hurt Argentina. 4Argentina's counter-press after lost passes may be as important as possession volume.

Why the Molina-Montiel call is the late tactical hinge

TyC's update is subtle but useful. Earlier in the day, the debate around Argentina's XI was scattered across centre-back, left-back and striker decisions. By the early evening live guide, the structure had tightened: Dibu behind Romero-Lisandro-Medina, Almada in the attacking-midfield lane, and Messi-Lautaro as the front pair, with only Molina-or-Montiel left open. 1
That last slot changes the game texture. Molina gives Argentina more repeat running on the outside, which can stretch Algeria if Messi drifts inside and De Paul supports the right half-space. Montiel is the more conservative read: fewer fireworks, more duel security, and a natural choice if Scaloni thinks Algeria's quickest exits will target the channel behind Argentina's right side.
The opponent gives that decision real weight. Lampe, who faced Algeria with Bolivia days before the World Cup, told Infobae that Algeria's counterattack is exactly the way they can damage Argentina, and he singled out Ait-Nouri, Bentaleb, Amoura, Gouiri and Mahrez as players to respect. 4 This is the familiar champion's dilemma: take the initiative, but do not turn your first group match into a track meet.
Argentina vs Algeria probability graphic
Opta's simulation view, published by Al Jazeera, put Argentina at 68.2 percent to win, Algeria at 13.2 percent and the draw at 18.6 percent. 3

Messi's milestone is huge, but the team sheet is more practical

Al Jazeera framed the night as another Messi threshold: his sixth World Cup, his 200th Argentina appearance, and a record 27th World Cup match if he plays as expected. 3 That is the emotional frame, and it is impossible to separate it from this campaign.
Messi and Argentina teammates at training
Argentina's final training images kept the spotlight on Messi, but the tactical shape around him is the real pre-kickoff question. 3
But the practical frame is Lautaro. If the TyC XI holds, Julian Alvarez begins as the managed option and Lautaro gets the central reference role next to Messi. 1 The task for Lautaro is not only finishing chances. It is to pin centre-backs, give Messi a wall pass when Algeria compress space, and make enough near-post runs that Argentina's possession does not flatten into sterile circulation.
Dibu's return also keeps the team's psychological baseline intact. Al Jazeera says the goalkeeper has recovered from the broken finger that had shadowed the build-up, while Tagliafico's calf injury removes one experienced defensive option. 3 That combination explains Scaloni's likely caution: with one flank already improvised, he may not want the other to become too open.

The dressing-room noise is actually calm

The late emotional signals around Argentina have been supportive rather than distracting. Angel Di Maria, now retired from the national team, posted that he now knows what it feels like to be 「only a fan」 and told the squad: 「we are with you until the end of the world.」 5 Leonardo Balerdi, ruled out of the World Cup by a right soleus tear, thanked the squad after players posed with a banner reading 「Leo, we are all with you」. 6
Those are small details, but they fit this group's identity. Argentina's 2022 title run was not built on serenity from the first minute; it was built on emotional recovery after pressure. This opener asks for a more mature version of the same thing: start with control, absorb the occasion, and avoid giving Algeria the first transitional crack.
Kansas City is already playing its part. Infobae reported Argentine fans filling the city with asado culture, including gatherings at Mill Creek Park and long lines at Joe's Kansas City Bar-B-Que, a local landmark in a city with more than 100 barbecue restaurants. 7
Argentina fans in Kansas City
The build-up in Kansas City mixed Argentine asado culture with the local barbecue scene before the Group J opener. 7
On the field, the message is less festive: the defending champions need a clean first 20 minutes.

My read before the official XI

If Molina starts, expect Argentina to try to push Algeria back early and make the match feel like a territory game. If Montiel starts, expect a more conservative first phase, with Argentina betting that Messi, Lautaro and Almada can create enough without leaving the back line exposed.
Either way, this does not look like a night for impatience. Algeria have enough pace and enough recent confidence to punish a loose opening. Argentina have the better team, the better midfield control and the larger emotional occasion. The smart first step is not to win the World Cup again tonight. It is to make sure the first match never becomes as chaotic as the 2022 opener.

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