Scaloni's rotation now has two exceptions
24/6/2026 · 22:10

Scaloni's rotation now has two exceptions

Argentina are set to rotate heavily against Jordan, but fresh reporting suggests Emiliano Martínez still wants to start and Messi is expected to get minutes. That turns a dead-rubber group match into a test of whether Scaloni can rest legs without losing the team's spine.

Scaloni's Jordan plan has moved from a clean rotation night to something trickier: Argentina may still keep Emiliano Martínez and Lionel Messi attached to an otherwise changed XI. That is the useful new clue. The question is no longer whether the starters rest; it is which parts of the team's competitive spine Scaloni refuses to switch off.

The group is done, but the habits are not

Argentina have already secured first place in Group J after the 2-0 win over Austria and Algeria's win over Jordan. TyC's current table has Argentina on six points from two matches, with five goals scored and none conceded, while the Round of 32 opponent will come from Group H. Uruguay are the provisional matchup, but Spain, Cape Verde and Saudi Arabia can still change the bracket on the final day. 1
That gives Scaloni permission to rotate against Jordan. It does not give him permission to turn the match into a friendly. Argentina's next real work is the knockout round, and the Jordan match is the last controlled chance to rehearse how the team looks when several usual starters are out at once.

The two exceptions say more than the rotation

TyC's latest report says Scaloni is planning an alternative XI, but two regulars remain in play: Martínez wants to start and will speak with the coaching staff, while Messi is expected to get minutes, with the only open question being whether he starts or comes off the bench. 2
Messi and Martínez during Argentina coverage
TyC's Messi-Martínez report makes the Jordan lineup less like a full reset and more like a managed continuity test. 2
Decision pointLatest reported stateWhat Argentina should learn against Jordan
MartínezHe has recovered from the ring-finger fracture, wants to play, and is considered likely to start after a staff conversation. 2Whether a rotated back line can keep its communication and rest-defense habits with the usual goalkeeper behind it.
MessiHe is expected to play some minutes, but his role could be starter or second-half substitute. 2Whether the attack can build rhythm around Messi without asking him to carry the whole chance-creation load.
RomeroESPN reported that Scaloni was waiting on tests after Romero left the Austria match with knee pain; Argentine reports cited by ESPN said he would rest against Jordan. 3Whether Otamendi, Senesi or Medina can handle the first-pass and recovery responsibilities before the knockout match.
The Messi part needs a narrow reading. A separate EFE/TyC analysis notes that he played 80 minutes against Algeria, the full match against Austria, and has five goals in two games. It also quotes Messi after Austria saying the coach will decide whether he plays, and how much. 4 That sounds less like a push for another record night and more like a managed rhythm plan.

The 99th match is the real rehearsal

Infobae's EFE report adds a useful bit of context: Jordan will be Scaloni's 99th match as Argentina manager, and the Round of 32 will be his 100th. 5 The milestone itself is trivia. The sequence is not.
Scaloni's best Argentina teams have rarely been about a fixed eleven. They have been about keeping the same emotional and tactical rules when the names change: the goalkeeper commands the area, the center-backs defend forward, the midfield protects Messi's zones without standing still, and the forwards press long enough to prevent the match from becoming end-to-end.
That is why a partial Messi appearance makes sense. If Nicolás Paz plays the minutes when Messi is not on the pitch, Argentina get a clean comparison: how does the midfield find the between-lines player when the automatic solution is absent? If Messi then enters, the test becomes different. Can the team use him as a finishing accelerator rather than a rescue plan?

Four watch points for Jordan

The match should be judged less by the score than by the habits Argentina carry into Miami.
Argentina players preparing for Jordan rotation
TyC's rotation report points to rodaje for players around the usual spine, which makes the Jordan match a rehearsal rather than a throwaway. 6
  1. The first 20 minutes without Romero. If Otamendi, Senesi or Medina start, the question is whether Argentina can still defend forward without leaving slow recovery races behind them.
  2. The Paredes-Palacios lane. TyC reports Paredes is expected to start for rhythm, with Exequiel Palacios, Valentín Barco, Giuliano Simeone and Giovani Lo Celso among the midfield and wide options. 6 That group needs to progress the ball early, not just circulate it safely.
  3. The Messi-Paz handoff. The most useful version is not 90 minutes of Messi or 90 minutes without him. It is a controlled split that shows Argentina can create in both states.
  4. The goalkeeper decision. If Martínez starts, the staff are prioritizing continuity at the base of the team. If Rulli starts, the test shifts to whether Argentina can protect a changed goalkeeper and a changed back line at the same time.
The cleanest outcome is not a Messi stat-padding night or a full B-team exhibition. It is a match where Argentina rest legs, avoid new damage, and still look recognizably like themselves when the game gets messy. That is the standard Scaloni has set before match 100, and Jordan is the last low-risk place to prove it.

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