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Find out more at N.Y. Times.com/family. From the New York Times, I'm Natalie Kitroleth. This is the Daily on Sunday. The World Cup, which captivated billions of people across the world, brightening our days and giving us a break from all of life's normal stressors, is coming to an end.
βWhat are you going to do to fill your time when the World Cup is over?β
I don't know. I really want to be sad. I don't know what to do. It has such a mom, a really good mom. We're going to be really sad when the World Cup ends.
We're spending a lot of time planning for the Women's World Cup next year in Brazil, just trying to keep the momentum going at how a wife and it's a full-time job as well. So, maybe I'll just spend more time with my wife or find a hobby. I don't know. Maybe I'll just be needing, I don't know, something.
After five weeks of competition, which were filled with surprise wins, heartbreak losses, and breakout stars, 48 teams are down to two. Spain will play the World Cup title. Spain. Argentina do it again!
In Argentina, who will play each other in the final this afternoon. Spanish fans are hoping that their smothering approach and young phenom can win them their
second trophy in history.
And Argentinian fans are praying that the man's scene is the greatest player of all time can take them back to glory in what may be his last World Cup. Today, my colleague Tark Pangev on the road to this historic matchup, and what to know before the game begins. It's Sunday, July 19th.
Tark, welcome back to the show.
βIt turns out the World Cup is all you need to be on the daily, like three times in theβ
span of five weeks or something like that. Yeah, it feels like a season ticket at this point. So it all comes down to this. In a few short hours, we are going to get a showdown for the ages between Spain and Argentina, and we are going to talk about these two teams, their identities, their stories as a way
of preparing people for what they're about to watch. Maybe we'll even tempt people who weren't planning to watch to turn on the game this afternoon.
But first, let's just do a recap of what we've seen so far in this tournament because it's
been pretty magical. Yeah, this tournament has delivered so many storylines, so many narratives, the glories, the highs, the lows, and of course, this is the biggest will cup we've ever seen, and it has felt that way. It's had a enormity to it that has clearly been a part of the story.
Three countries, thousands of miles of travel and thousands of different stories. Okay, I want to get into those highs and lows. Let's start with the highs. You had prepared us to look at these underdogs of this tournament. How did that turn out?
It turned out thrillingly in a way. We saw teams get through the group stages and into the knockouts in ways we didn't imagine.
We saw the likes of the Democratic Republic of Congo at the World Cup for the first time
βin decades, and with a new name since they were last there, that's how long it's been.β
But for me, we saw one of the great stories of all World Cups in the island of Cape Verde, getting through the group stage by holding the finalist Spain. And then taking on, and almost overcoming, the other finalists, Argentina, what moments they've produced for their nation, for the rest of us, and given us the gift of Vasinho, the 40-year-old goalkeeper, the journeyman soccer player in goal for a team that is expected
to be steamrolled. And here's this guy, repelling absolutely everything that's coming towards his goal. It's like there were three Vasinho's in the goal. He instantly becomes a folk hero. OK, and what about my personal favorite dark horse in all this Norway?
Norway, absolutely, came in and punched their way through the tournament.
They came with confidence, and it was born out of having this colossus upfront.
They're striker, Erling, Brout, Harlan. He was a star before coming to the United States for what he's done in the Premier League
and the Champions League, but he had never played in the World Cup and boy did he deliver.
He just starts with a bang, scoring goal after goal to get Norway through to the quarterfinals. And he'll be remembered for, of course, these goals, but a lot more. Absolutely. His kind of right personality, his jokes, and the fact that this is a guy who fully embraced
βAmerica and Americana, in a way that I think, indeed, him to many people in the United Statesβ
and beyond. I believe when he landed in Norway, he came off the plane carrying a stuffed raccoon in his arm. That was amazing. I saw it.
Like the perfect encapsulation of his experience in America. I mean, he really took a part of us home with him. And I feel like we here in America are never going to forget it. Yeah.
Again, this is what the World Cup does every four years.
It, you know, births, heroes, births, stories, and memories. I think Americans, whether they went to the stadiums or were watching on television or just walked out in their streets, won't forget the month the World Cup came to town. Okay, you mentioned Holland's goals, Tarrick. What about your favorite goal of this tournament?
What was it?
βI think the goal that will stand out for me and for many others is, in the crowd of all,β
Sydney Lopez Cabrals, absolute worldie against Argentina in the last 32. This is Cape Verde. This is Cape Verde. Yeah. It's remarkable.
It's unbelievable.
It's Cape Verde for a second time tonight, tying the game.
This is a team that was expected to be steamrolled by the World Champions. And what a goal. That's a goal that dreams are made of. The sea absolutely connected with that ball and sent the crowd into ecstasy. The Argentines having these heart attacks as that ball is sailing into the top corner.
I've got a personal story with this. I was in Houston watching this in a fan zone and there were not many Cape Verde fans. And I found this guy. I was interviewing him as this happened. And his immediate reaction was to launch me up into the air, bear of a man.
Yeah. Oh, wow. I was up in the air and it felt like the most natural thing of course that should happen. That's incredible. Wow.
So you were actually in the air when you were experiencing this goal. Literally. This moment. And you could sense what it means to the nation. I could certainly not moment to this guy and his family and watching those scenes.
This really, really wasn't supposed to happen. What an underdog story that would have been. They really took Argentina to the brink. This is Lionel Messi's Argentina. And he's Cape Verde to be honest, this team that no one had ever heard of three weeks ago.
And that goal encapsulated all of that so, so well. Okay. That was fun. But now we need to move on to your low points, Tarrick. What were they?
βI think this world cup will be remembered for all of this joy and all of the great soccerβ
of football that we've seen. But it will also be stained by the intervention of the US government in a disciplinary matter. And this is the overturning of the one match suspension that followed in Balagun, the US striker Gopper a red card.
I hope you're again. And we're in a little bit more for down. So here you have a video replay showing to the referee that Balagun had clashed with the Bosnian defender and his foot that had come down on his ankle. That, in the opinion of what's so tough and as well, is a potential red card and he's
calling the referee's referee over. It felt innocuous, but the referee went to look at the screen. After if you, the number of 20 United States committed the serious fall and he's given the red card. The title of the season is red card.
Wow. Look, these things happen. It's part of the game. It's a bad red card. Yes.
It's a bad red card. You can argue about it in the bars and the pubs and the home, but it's a red card. And what should happen is an automatic one game suspension. It would have ruled Balagun out of the next United States game.
The US president is watching this and he says, "Hey, this is an injustice.
And as we reported out, Donald Trump, in fact, rings his friend, the FIFA president,
βJanine Fantino, and then to the surprise, and to honestly to the horror of many, the rulesβ
appear to have suddenly changed, and following Balagun's one-game suspension is somehow suspended itself. He is then allowed to play. And what it does, it can't support over the tournament itself. And over the United States national team, there was a feel good factor over them.
There was momentum. There were well-liked, and suddenly, almost overnight, with a flick of a disciplinary committee chairman's pen, they become the villains. And it looks like FIFA is putting its thumb on the scale for the United States.
And now everything is suddenly being questioned.
OK. Setting aside the questions surrounding the Trump administration's involvement in all this, it also strikes me that this episode centers on this other aspect of the tournament that I think was a low for a lot of people, which is the contentiousness of the video reviews on the field, and the ubiquitousness of them, just walk me through that.
Video assistant referring has been around since the 2018 World Cup in Russia, and the point of it was to improve accuracy and to make sure there are no miscarriages of justice on the field. However, people are arguing more and more, people are angry and more than more, as more of this technology is being used.
βSo I guess you have to be careful what you ask for, and then the use of this technologyβ
led to some heartbreaking reversals. I think most notably, you have this moment in a game between Egypt and Argentina, where Egypt, if the gold had stood a sweeping move across the field, would have been one of the goals of the tournament. And cue massive celebrations, the emotional uplift in the stadium suddenly, all of that
is cut short, because we are using technology to such an extent that we are at risk, many people would say, of killing the naturalness of the game, the joy, the pure moments that it can create. And that was one of them. Overall, Tark, despite those dramas, it seems fair to say that this tournament has been
a massive success, right? I mean, it's the most watched in history, in the US, which is not a big soccer country, the US Belgium game was one of the most watched sporting events of the year thus far. Yeah, I hit all the key metrics of audience, of drama, of excellence on the field. And this is despite those exorbitant ticket prices, pricing out millions of fans from around
the world. And we're going to break more records in the final. Argentina, against Spain, in a World Cup final, this is going to be a game for the ages. All right, we're going to take a quick break, and when we get back, we are going to talk about those two teams.
We'll start with Spain, how they got here, and how they could win it all. We'll be right back. I'm Paul Centaurio, I cover soccer for the athletic. And I'm Amy Lawrence, I cover football for the athletic. Whatever you call it, the biggest competition in the sport is happening right now.
βAnd the athletics World Cup coverage has everything you need to follow the tournament.β
This 48 country-staking part from the tiny island of Kira Sout, to the five-time Champions Brazil. Even if you don't know your off-site from your on-site, if you eager to know more about the teams, the matches, all the stories on and off the pitch, we've got you sorted. Maybe you're the kind of person who's already up early every weekend, waking the neighbors
when your favorite club scores. We'll make sure you get equipped with more information more insight than anyone you know. We've got more than 70 obsessive reporters on the ground, covering the ins and outs from every game. I almost forgot to mention the best part, Amy.
Free access to the athletics World Cup coverage in our app. Download the athletic app and see that. Eric, this may seem counterintuitive, but I think that any conversation about the identity of the Spanish team has to begin with France. At the beginning of this World Cup, France looked like a juggernaut, an almost untouchable
behemoth of a squad that basically included two full rosters of all stars, as you told
us. They coasted to the semi-final on the backs of these mega-goal scores in BapΓ©, D'Ambele,
Lise, and then they ran into the brick wall of Spain, which shut them out in ...
and surprised a lot of people I think with this two nothing victory.
So how did that happen? It happened because it was a victory about team and not star, about process and not brilliance in a way. This is a style that has been put in place in the feet and in the minds of these young Spanish players from as early as they could probably kick a ball or as early as they could walk for some of these guys and you see that.
They were able to dominate possession in such a way that they almost keep it away from
βthe other team long enough for them to almost have their brains fried and I think that'sβ
what happened to France. So this style of play had been put into the minds of these players from a very young age. Explain that to me. How does that work? What are we talking about?
This is a process from the Spanish soccer federation that runs through schools, that runs through academies for a very young age that everyone plays this way of playing, which
is ball possession first, this kind of hypnotic passing system.
You just kind of boom, boom, boom, the ball being passed from player to player, keeping the opposition away and getting your objective that way.
βThere was a famous soccer manager, Sir Alex Ferguson.β
His team managed to play in the Champions League final against Barcelona, the birthplace of this modern style of play, the Spanish are showing and he said after his team lost, once you get on that carousel, it's hard to get off. They, his team, were being led a merry dance. The philosophy behind this approach, of course, is if you keep the ball, the other team
doesn't have the ball and they can't score, but that patience on display, I mean, some people think it's quite boring, right, Tarak? Yeah, and sometimes I would subscribe to that school of thought, but it's not particularly thrilling to watch and for Spain, it's interesting. They've had two periods that had this early period where this was on the ascendancy where
βthey wowed the world with this, what I'm talking about is when they won the European Championshipβ
in 2008, then their first World Cup in 2010, and then the European Championship again in 2012,
they were the Supreme Team, the dominant team of World Football about a generation ago. Using their style. Yeah, and then they hit a low, because it ended up with them just passing the ball around, the other team's defending deep and kind of nothing happening because they couldn't actually find a way to make all those passes, those metronomic passes, turn into capital into
goals. A little too much patience. Yeah, so they had to develop, because the thing with soccer is, once you show yourself, you show a new style, all the other coaches are going to be working to repel the style, and eventually defending deep, letting them have possession in areas which aren't dangerous,
was seen as the way to do it, and it would, but they got figured out. Yeah, they got figured out. And here now we have this coach, Luis Delafuente, who's no big coach, no big name, no famous Champions League winner, no big club pedigree, he's come through the Spanish system, teaching these boys when they were adolescents under 18 under 19, 21, and now here he is leading
them with the national team, but what he's also done, they changed Spain, yes, we're going to do all of this passing, but we're also going to add pace and power down the sides, and where that comes from primarily is this superstar, the teenager. -What's a goal of us? Let me give up. -Let me give up. -Let me give up. -Let me give up.
-You're looking at the youngest ever score at the heroes. -The 19-year-old just reminded us why he's so special. -That begins to let me in your mouth who picks his pocket. -Oh, wonderful from your mouth. -This guy is playing soccer at the highest level as if he was having a kick around with his friends in the park.
He's playing against some of the world's best players and making it look easy.
He's thrilling to watch, you just don't know what he's going to do next as well.
He's unpredictable and he seems to be able to deliver under pressure.
-You're more, you're more. -You're more. -Really? -You're still alive. That was beautiful for him. And now he gets the stage to do that at a World Cup final where the pressure is going to be at its highest.
βAnd am I right that he hasn't had a terrific World Cup up until this point?β
-He hasn't. He hasn't to his standards, but again, that also speaks to what Spain is.
Spain is not a national team that you have a star and you play for him.
Spain is process. Spain is process and repetition, repetition and process and in there is Lamin Yamal. He has to do the work as well and Spain have largely managed to ease their way through this competition, go through the gears, find a level they needed to against the opposition they faced and they did that against France. I do think if the moment arises and the ball is at this young man's feet, we might be in for something magical.
Okay, so Spain has its system of suffocating keep away, a potential X factor in this young,
βunpredictable phenom. The only thing sitting in their way is... -Leonel Messi.β
Okay, we're going to take another break and when we come back we will talk about the legend of Lianel Messi. We'll be right back. Tark, the time has come to discuss this man, Messi. The man, many considered to be the greatest soccer player of all time. Before we get into who he is, let's just establish why we're going to talk about him. If Spain is a system with a young star attached to it, Argentina is kind of a star with
a system designed entirely around him. Do you agree? -Yeah, this guy, Lianel Messi, he's almost 40 and yet he is the full crum of this team. He has been one of the standout players of this tournament and certainly the engine of this team. They play for him. Everything is designed in this Argentine model to get Lianel Messi on the ball and for him to deliver. He has done that throughout this tournament. Let's not forget he started this tournament with question marks about, "Oh is this guy
βtoo old? Is it one tournament too many, including from myself?" -Yes, I remember that.β
-And what does he do? -First career world come at trick, ties the old time goals going record. He scores three goals in the first game of the world come and this your answer and Argentina
have had a perilous, perilous journey through this competition. But Lianel Messi has always been there.
Okay, let's run it back, Tark, just give me the basics of who Messi is a little bio here. -Yeah, Lianel Messi is from Rosario in Argentina and he shows this great soccer talent, but he has this growth problem and he needs this medication that his family can't afford and he ends up moving to Spain. Not just moving to Spain, he ends up moving to Barcelona. This finishing school, the best there is for global soccer and the chapters Lianel Messi
has written in the history of global football. I don't think could ever be written again. What he has done is just phenomenal, not just the numbers, but the artistry, the way he plays, it is honestly a absolute privilege to have been around at the time of Lianel Messi and for those millions of Argentinians, he brings them so much joy. The devotion to this guy is everywhere,
Including on his team.
people not to write about Messi or even try to describe him because the only way to understand him
βwas to watch him, but can you Tark just try to describe what makes him so special?β
He just plays like no one else we've ever seen. It is like someone has him at the end of a video controller and he's just sort of slamming through the opponents and then if he needs to ping one into the top corner he'll do that and if he needs to just sort of chip one into the path of his teammate he gets exactly the right flight and the right control as if the ball is controlled by some sort of mechanism. It's like he has another sense that the rest of his opponents can't see
and he magically appears in the right places and to just see him this tiny ordinary looking fellow has magic in his feet. It is such a sight to see and the thing is when you when you see him
βin the arena itself, there is an intake of bread. You feel it, you feel it around the stadium andβ
energy electricity from when the ball is at his feet something is going to happen because Leonardo Messi is on the ball and also you've seen Argentina come through this tournament and it's clearly not just being him but because they have him in the team it does give them hope that whatever the circumstance the team finds itself in they're going to be okay because they've got Messi in the team. Have to this star? They are so devoted to this guy. It's almost like they have
figure from another world and alien he's been called in their ranks and they do everything they can
to protect him and there was a moment in this semi-final victory over England it was the first half.
Leno Messi is taken out by an England midfielder and suddenly from all corners of the field this like posse of bodyguards if you want a ride to protect him to defend his honour. You can't do that
βto Leno Messi and in that moment you get the sense of how important he is to them and just how muchβ
they revere him. Tark before the tournament started you told me that this team would probably not be in the final at all I hate to do this to you but why were you wrong? What happened? What I was even more in fact it didn't that what I said was the lowcy and so amigos Argentina will lose against the first good team they play and there is a massive amount of egg on my face right now and my Argentinian friends are letting me know about that that said Argentina have had a fairly troubled run and they
really labored to these victories but there is something about this team beyond Leno Messi as well there is a suffering that they are able to endure to get through the other side now I was looking at this and thinking Spain in a way is this friction free process almost boring team that gets into the final without the beat of sweat on their forehead. A well-oiled machine. Argentina there is so much friction it almost feels like the stadium is on fire every time they've played
the fans are crying the players are crying the emotional outpouring required to get through each of these games it's just wild and yet they've been able to do it and again against England they were minutes from elimination and then stepped up again against Switzerland Egypt should be eliminated Cape Verdi being taken to the wire you see again again right they are the combat kings of this
tournament indisputably led by Messi who never looks like he thinks he's going to lose
and it sort of seems as though nothing can stop him well we're going to find that out because in Spain the kind of diametrically opposed to Argentina for all the passion all the suffering all the reliance on this genius to bail them out Spain is a team that never seems to be panicked believes in its process is mechanical almost in its play and just sort of steam rolls through its opponents it's system over passion this is derivalry this is the final we're going to see
what's going to win here is it going to be that studious years of development of Spanish football
That's taken them to another final or is it going to be this Argentine passio...
the will to go through the fire and with this guy with this genius the belief that whatever
βthey face on the field it's okay lino Messi will get us out of the holeβ
Tark will you be there are you going to be at the final will be and I'm very very excited and
interested to see how this turns out what a month has been yeah what are you going to do when this
βis all over what am I going to do what I'm going to do is do some laundry a month on the roadβ
is not kind to your clothes all right well for now we are looking forward to this game
I'll be watching from my couch but I feel like in a way we will all be watching with you
βthank you so much for being our guide to such a special world cupβ
thanks for having me today's episode was produced by Caitlyn O'Keef Carlos Prietto and Claire Tennis Ketter it was edited by Brendan Clink and Bird contains music by Marion Lazzano, Dan Powell, Alicia Betitube and Diane Wong this episode was engineered by Daniel Ramirez that's it for the daily I'm Natalie Kitrof see you tomorrow
i'm Gilbert Cruz and this week on the book review podcast we get shipwrecked with the author of a marriage and see Sophie ohmhurst this couple who set sail in a tiny boat there they are halfway around the world and they hit by a whale I knew it wasn't just the story of the catastrophe that I wanted to write what pulled me into it was the idea of this happening to a marriage as much as to two individuals listen to the book review review get your podcast

