Jordan showed more personality than many expected in their first World Cup appearance. The score hurt, yes, but the performance had movement, courage and a little bit of chaos in the good sense. They carried the ball with purpose and did not look scared by the stage.
Algeria had the tougher opening assignment, and that matters. Facing Argentina first can bend any tactical plan out of shape, especially when Messi is in that sort of mood. Even so, Vladimir Petković will know his side need sharper decisions in possession and a cleaner defensive response.
The match rhythm should be fascinating. Jordan are likely to sit in their compact back three shape, then spring forward through wide runners and direct carries. Algeria, meanwhile, should try to control the central lanes, drag Jordan's wing-backs deep and release their creative players between the lines.
There is also a psychological edge here. Jordan can treat this like a free swing in some ways, but Algeria cannot. The Fennecs came to the tournament expecting to compete for progression, not just applaud the scenery. That pressure may actually help them play with more bite.
Historically, these meetings have been rare, which gives the fixture a slightly strange feel. No deep rivalry, no modern tactical blueprint, just a World Cup survival game with nerves attached. And honestly, those are often the matches where experience decides the final half-hour.