Group H just took over Argentina's Jordan week
24/6/2026 · 17:13

Group H just took over Argentina's Jordan week

Argentina have already won Group J, so the Jordan match is now a controlled rehearsal for a Round of 32 draw that currently points to Uruguay but can still swing to Spain, Cape Verde or Saudi Arabia.

Argentina already did the hard part in Group J. The 2-0 win over Austria, plus Algeria beating Jordan, locked Scaloni's side into first place before the final group match. That changes the week. Jordan is still a World Cup fixture, but the more useful scouting assignment now sits in Group H, where Uruguay, Spain, Cape Verde and Saudi Arabia can still decide Argentina's Round of 32 opponent. 1
That is why the Jordan lineup should be judged less by the score and more by what it tells Scaloni before July 3. Can the second-choice defenders survive without Romero? Can Paredes get useful rhythm without adding risk? Can Argentina keep enough Messi connection while preparing for a knockout opponent that may look nothing like Jordan?
Argentina's path after winning Group J
TyC framed Argentina's post-group path after the Austria result confirmed first place in Group J. 1

The bracket is now the real opponent

Argentina's first knockout match is fixed for July 3, with TyC listing the Round of 32 slot at 19:00 in Argentina, which is 22:00 UTC. The opponent is not fixed. As Group J winner, Argentina plays the second-place team from Group H; after two matches, TyC's table had Spain on four points, Uruguay and Cape Verde on two, and Saudi Arabia on one, with Uruguay currently occupying the second-place line. 2
Group H routeWhat it means for ArgentinaMatch-planning implication
Uruguay stay secondArgentina get a South American knockout tie immediately. 2The Jordan minutes must protect legs without letting Argentina lose duel sharpness.
Uruguay beat Spain while Cape Verde do not overtake the relevant tie-breaker pictureSpain can fall into Argentina's path. 1Ball security becomes the rehearsal point, especially for the midfielders who may start against Jordan.
Cape Verde or Saudi Arabia jump into secondThe opponent changes style completely, and the scouting staff get a shorter runway. 1Scaloni needs reliable habits, not just a pretty rotated XI.
Multiple teams finish levelTyC lists goal difference, goals scored, fair play and FIFA ranking as the relevant tie-breakers. 2Argentina may not know the true tactical brief until the final Group H games settle.
This is a different problem from the one Scaloni had before Austria. Then, the question was whether Argentina could clinch early. Now, the question is whether the squad can use the spare match without creating a new problem before the knockout round.

Jordan gives Scaloni a test lab, not a night off

TyC's latest training report says Scaloni is preparing several changes from the first two starting XIs, with Argentina already first in Group J and waiting for the Group H runner-up. 3 The same report says Cristian Romero will be preserved after the knee blow against Austria, while Nicolás Otamendi is expected to come in. It also frames Dibu Martínez as fit after his finger fracture, but still a possible rest decision if Scaloni and the goalkeeper agree. 3
Argentina squad rotation candidates
TyC's rotation report put Jordan in the context of giving minutes to players who need rhythm before the knockouts. 3
The likely rotation spine is not random. TyC's alternative-team piece listed a possible back four of Gonzalo Montiel, Otamendi, Marcos Senesi and Nicolás Tagliafico, with Paredes joined by Exequiel Palacios and Valentín Barco in midfield, and either Messi or Nicolás Paz in the front line with Julián Álvarez and Nicolás González. 4
That shape answers three bracket questions at once:
  • Centre-back cover: if Romero is managed carefully, Otamendi and Senesi need match tempo before the games become elimination matches.
  • Midfield rhythm: Paredes needs minutes after arriving at the tournament with a muscle issue, but the staff also need to see whether Palacios or Barco can keep Argentina connected if the opponent presses higher.
  • Forward balance: Álvarez and González can give Argentina running power around Messi or Paz, which matters if the Round of 32 becomes a faster, more transitional game than Austria.
Argentina training before Jordan
The post-Austria training split gave Argentina's lower-minute players the field work before Jordan. 4

The Austria tape still carries the warning

The clean sheet against Austria can make Argentina's week look simple. It was not. ESPN's match centre had Argentina winning 2-0, Messi scoring in the 38th and 90+5th minutes, and the xG at 2.36 for Argentina to 0.53 for Austria. 5 Those numbers support the result, but they do not erase Scaloni's concern after the match.
Infobae quoted Scaloni saying Argentina had to know how to suffer without the ball, and that when they had it they needed to join passes because that is how this team plays. He also said the plan for the final group game was to give minutes to most players if the match allowed it. 6
That quote is the bridge between Jordan and Group H. If Argentina are forced to suffer against Uruguay, Spain or another Group H survivor, the answer cannot be only Messi dropping deeper to solve the next attack. It has to come from the midfield line, from full-backs choosing the right moments, and from replacement defenders keeping the pitch short.

Romero is the player Argentina cannot bluff about

Romero's case gives the Jordan match a hard boundary. ESPN reported that Scaloni was waiting for medical tests after Romero left the Austria match in the 57th minute with an apparent knee issue, and that reports in Argentina expected him to rest against Jordan. 7 TyC's newer report went further in practical terms: Romero will be preserved for the next round, with Otamendi the direct replacement. 3
That should settle one selection argument. The useful Jordan question is not whether Romero can be rushed back for a match Argentina do not need to win. It is whether Otamendi, Senesi, Tagliafico and Montiel can give Scaloni enough evidence to choose a safe knockout back line if Romero is not fully ready.

What would count as a good Jordan performance?

A 3-0 win with loose spacing would not tell much. A controlled match with the right habits would tell more. Argentina should come out of Jordan with four answers:
  1. Can Paredes play at knockout speed for an hour without the midfield stretching behind him?
  2. Can the rotated back line defend forward without Romero's recovery speed?
  3. Can Álvarez, González and either Messi or Paz create shots without the entire attack collapsing into the captain's feet?
  4. Can the starters who do play leave the match healthy, card-safe and fresh enough for July 3?
That is the real value of the final group game. Group H has turned Argentina's week into a waiting game, but waiting does not mean drifting. It means using Jordan to rehearse the parts of the team that may have to decide the first knockout tie before anyone knows whether that tie is Uruguay, Spain, Cape Verde or Saudi Arabia.

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