Argentina have the aura of champions, but the Cape Verde scare reminded everyone that knockout football does not care much for reputation. Scaloni’s side still carry elite attacking timing, yet their defensive rhythm looked less smooth when dragged into a frantic, stretched contest.
Egypt are not here by accident. Hossam Hassan’s team have grown into the tournament with stubborn organisation, emotional resilience and a clear belief that one big moment can tilt the whole night. Is that enough against the holders? Maybe not, but it is enough to make this uncomfortable.
The match rhythm should be fascinating. Argentina will want possession, territory and early control, using Messi between lines to pull Egypt out of shape. Egypt may accept long spells without the ball, then look for Salah, second balls, corners and set-piece chaos when Argentina’s back line is forced to turn.
Discipline could quietly become important too. Letexier will not want the game to boil over, but knockout pressure has a way of making simple fouls feel heavier. If Egypt can slow Argentina’s combinations without conceding dangerous free kicks, they will give themselves a platform.
Still, Argentina have more routes to goal. That matters. Egypt’s best hope is to keep the scoreline alive long enough for Salah or a set-piece runner to bite. The safer read is an Argentina win, but not a clean, breezy one. The champions may need to sweat again.