
Dibu in, Tagliafico out: Argentina's final checks before Algeria
Argentina's opener is now defined by defensive choices: Messi, Emiliano Martinez and Julian Alvarez are available, Tagliafico is out, and Scaloni must settle left- and right-back calls against Algeria's transition threat.

The late Argentina-Algeria update is no longer about whether Lionel Messi can play. It is about the last two defensive choices around him.
By Tuesday morning, the picture had sharpened: Messi, Emiliano Martinez and Julian Alvarez are all available, Nicolas Tagliafico is the only confirmed Argentina absence, and Lionel Scaloni still has two selection calls that change the shape of the back line. 1 2
The late board
| Question | Latest read | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Messi's status | Scaloni said Messi is available; ESPN quoted him saying, "I see him well." 1 | Argentina can keep the planned Messi-Lautaro-Thiago Almada front line rather than turning the opener into a minutes-management exercise. |
| Goalkeeper | TyC says Emiliano Martinez is expected to start despite the right ring-finger fracture that disrupted his preparation. 2 | The build-up and set-piece command stay with Argentina's No. 1. |
| Left back | Tagliafico is ruled out with a left soleus tear; TyC has Facundo Medina leading the replacement race, with Lisandro Martinez another option. 2 | This decides whether Lisandro stays at center back or shifts wide, which also decides whether Nicolas Otamendi starts. |
| Right back | TyC says Gonzalo Montiel is ahead of Nahuel Molina, while both could get minutes. 2 | Against Algeria's transition threat, this is the safer-versus-rhythm call. |
| Algeria injury | Ramy Bensebaini is out with a left ankle injury. 3 | Algeria lose a senior defender before facing Messi's side of the pitch. |

What Scaloni is really choosing
The left-back problem is the hinge. If Medina starts there, Lisandro Martinez can remain next to Cristian Romero. That keeps the center-back pairing mobile and gives Argentina a naturally left-footed defender inside. If Lisandro moves to left back, Otamendi likely comes in and Argentina gain aerial presence but lose some recovery speed.
TyC's probable XI has Emiliano Martinez; Molina or Montiel, Romero, Lisandro Martinez or Otamendi, Medina or Lisandro Martinez; De Paul, Mac Allister, Enzo Fernandez, Almada; Messi and Lautaro Martinez. 2 Infobae's live guide, updated Tuesday morning, listed a more settled version with Montiel, Romero, Lisandro and Medina across the back. 4
That difference is the story. Argentina's front six looks familiar. The real uncertainty sits behind the ball, where one injured left back can alter two positions.

Algeria are not arriving as extras
The scouting note is simple: Algeria can run. TyC points to Riyad Mahrez as the headline name and says Vladimir Petkovic's side has shown fast transitions and technical quality in attack, with 1-0 and 4-0 friendly wins over the Netherlands and Bolivia. 3 Infobae adds that Mohamed Amoura led Algeria's African qualifying scoring with 10 goals and that the team averaged 2.4 goals per match in qualifying while conceding 0.8. 4

This is where Tagliafico's absence bites. Argentina usually want control through the ball, but the first bad pass into midfield will test the temporary left side. If Medina starts, his first job is not to look adventurous. It is to keep the game from becoming a Mahrez-Amoura running contest.
Argentina should still expect to have more of the ball. The warning is about field position. Lose it with both fullbacks high and Algeria's best route into the match opens.
Match logistics for fans
Kickoff is 22:00 in Argentina, 20:00 in Colombia, Ecuador and Peru, 19:00 in Mexico, and 03:00 Wednesday in Spain. Infobae lists the U.S. broadcast options as FOX Network, FS1, Telemundo, fuboTV and Tubi. 4 TyC lists Szymon Marciniak as the referee and Kansas City Stadium as the venue. 3
The fan mood has also moved beyond Kansas City. Infobae reported scuffles between Argentina and Algeria supporters in Times Square before the match, while noting there was no official version yet on the cause, injuries or arrests. 5 That should stay in its lane: a reminder of the heat around the opener, not a reason to lose sight of the football.
What to watch in the first 15 minutes
First, where does Lisandro stand when Argentina have the ball? If he is inside, Scaloni has chosen continuity. If he is wide, Otamendi's role becomes one of the match's early tells.
Second, watch Montiel or Molina's starting height. Too deep and Argentina may struggle to stretch Algeria. Too high and the transition channel behind them becomes the match's obvious risk.
Third, watch Lautaro's first two runs. If he pins the center backs early, Messi and Almada get room between the lines. If Algeria's midfield can screen that pocket, Argentina will need De Paul and Mac Allister to create the first overload from deeper areas.
Scaloni's public tone was calm for a reason: Argentina have their captain, their goalkeeper and their midfield spine. The opener now comes down to how cleanly they solve the one area that did not make it to Kansas City intact.
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