Aimar shifts the Austria preview from records to control

Aimar shifts the Austria preview from records to control

Pablo Aimar's new comments frame Austria as a physical and emotional-control test for Argentina. This article explains how that changes the read on Scaloni's full-back choices, Paredes' possible minutes, the referee appointment and the Group J stakes.

Argentina Focus
20/6/2026 · 1:04
1 suscripciones · 19 contenidos

Nota del editor

The most useful Argentina update of the afternoon did not come from another probable XI. It came from Pablo Aimar, who framed Austria as a different kind of opponent: more physical than Algeria, hard enough to make Argentina's emotional control part of the match plan. TyC Sports quoted Aimar calling Austria "a very tough team" with "more physical" players, while Infobae carried the same line from his FIFA interview. 1 2
That is the new layer for Scaloni. Messi's record chase will dominate the broadcast. Argentina's staff, judging by Aimar's words, are trying to keep the match from becoming a rush toward the next Messi moment.
Pablo Aimar in Argentina's World Cup build-up
Pablo Aimar's pre-Austria interview shifted the focus toward physicality, calm and group management. 2

Why Aimar's warning matters

Aimar did two things at once. He respected Austria's physical edge, and he described Scaloni's main strength as the ability to transmit "security and tranquility" to a squad operating under maximum pressure. 1
That matters because Argentina are coming off the kind of opener that can distort a second match. The 3-0 win over Algeria, finished by Messi's hat trick, created a clean table position and a loud record storyline. Aimar still described the camp as happy but not fully relaxed, adding that the mood is calmer than the start of Qatar 2022, when Argentina opened with a loss to Saudi Arabia. 2
So the Austria match becomes a test of restraint. Can Argentina keep the ball long enough to make Austria chase? Can they accept slower spells if the game is being managed well? Can they avoid treating every attack as a service mission for Messi's next record?

The selection signals now point in the same direction

The personnel news fits Aimar's theme. TyC reported that Gonzalo Montiel trained separately because the staff lowered his workload to avoid an injury, while Nicolás Tagliafico and Leandro Paredes are both in position to add minutes against Austria. 3
SignalWhat was reportedWhat it changes for Austria
Austria's profileAimar called Austria physically tougher and different from Algeria. 1Argentina may need cleaner rest-defense and fewer rushed attacks.
Right-back managementMontiel trained apart with a minor muscular issue, and Molina could replace him. 3The right side may be chosen for recovery risk as much as form.
Returning optionsTagliafico has moved past a soleus problem, and Paredes is recovered. 3Scaloni can add control without treating the XI as fixed after Algeria.
Possible changesTyC listed Montiel, Thiago Almada and Lautaro Martínez as possible starters to come out, with Molina, Nicolás González and Julián Álvarez as candidates to enter. 3The question is balance: legs, pressing and possession, not rotation for its own sake.
There is a tactical trap here for fans. The natural debate is Lautaro versus Julián, or Molina versus Montiel. Aimar's comments suggest a broader question: which version of Argentina prevents Austria from turning the match into a long series of duels?
If Austria press harder and run more directly than Algeria, Paredes minutes would make sense only if Argentina can protect him with spacing around the ball. If Molina starts, the choice may be less about punishing Montiel and more about avoiding a soft-tissue gamble before the third group game. If Julián enters for Lautaro, it changes the first defender as much as the striker.

The referee appointment adds one more control variable

Infobae reported that FIFA assigned Egypt's Amin Mohamed Omar to Argentina-Austria, with Mahmoud Abouelregal and Ahmed Hossam Taha as assistants. Alejandro Hernández and Diego Sánchez, both from Spain, were listed as fourth and fifth officials. 4
Amin Mohamed Omar during a World Cup match
Amin Mohamed Omar's appointment gives Argentina one more reason to keep Austria from becoming a stop-start, emotional match. 4
Infobae also noted that Amin Mohamed Omar had already refereed South Korea versus Czechia at this World Cup and that his debut passed without major controversy. 4 That does not predict how Monday will be called, but it gives Argentina another reason to keep the match orderly. A game with fewer stoppages usually rewards the side that can control where the running happens.

The table gives Argentina a reason to be patient

ESPN's qualification scenarios put the stakes plainly: if Argentina beat Austria on Monday, they are through to the round of 32; if Algeria also take at least a point from Jordan, Argentina win Group J. ESPN also lists Argentina-Austria for Monday in Arlington, Texas, at 1 p.m. ET. 5
That makes the staff's tone important. Argentina do not need to chase margin first. They need the kind of game that makes Austria run without letting Austria's physicality set the terms.
The read from Aimar is simple enough for Monday: the record storyline belongs to Messi, but the match belongs to Scaloni's control mechanisms. The full-backs, the first line of pressure, Paredes' timing and the group's emotional temperature will tell us whether Argentina are playing the game they want, or merely surviving the one Austria prefers.

Añade más opiniones o contexto en torno a este contenido.

  • Inicia sesión para comentar.