Seven debut paths now shape Scaloni's Jordan call
25/6/2026 · 12:09

Seven debut paths now shape Scaloni's Jordan call

Argentina's Jordan match is now less about rest and more about which seven squad members can turn a rotation night into real World Cup evidence.

Argentina have already earned the luxury everyone wanted: a third group match that does not decide survival. The useful question now is narrower. If Lionel Scaloni turns Argentina-Jordan into a rotation night, which players are getting more than courtesy minutes?
TyC Sports reported on June 25 that seven Argentina squad members could still make their World Cup debuts against Jordan: Gerónimo Rulli, Juan Musso, Marcos Senesi, Giovani Lo Celso, Valentín Barco, Giuliano Simeone and José Manuel López.1 That makes this more than a rest-management exercise. It is a controlled test of how much of Argentina's bench can be trusted once the tournament stops offering soft landings.

The group table gave Scaloni room, not a free pass

Argentina are already through as Group J winners after beating Algeria 3-0 and Austria 2-0, with Jordan left on the group schedule at Dallas Stadium at 02:00 UTC on June 28.2 That cushion changes the incentives, but it does not erase the football problem.
A dead rubber can still damage a knockout run if it produces a suspension, a needless injury or a false read on a player who has barely touched the tournament. It can also solve a problem. Argentina will need trustworthy substitutes in the Round of 32, and the Jordan match is the cleanest remaining chance to give some of them real tournament context before the stakes harden.
The latest training reports point to the same balance. Infobae reported that 25 players trained in Kansas City, with Cristian Romero the only absentee as he worked separately after the right-knee issue from the Austria match.3 TyC Sports also reported that Scaloni did not set an XI in that session and that the first clearer clues may arrive only at the next full tactical step.4
Argentina training before Jordan
Argentina returned to training with Romero the lone absentee; photo via Infobae.

The seven debut cases are not the same decision

The list matters because it cuts across every line of the team. Scaloni is not choosing one prospect to reward. He is deciding which parts of the squad still need World Cup evidence.
PlayerWhy his minutes would matter against Jordan
Gerónimo RulliIf Emiliano Martínez is rested, Rulli would get his first World Cup minutes despite being part of the Qatar 2022 squad without playing.1
Juan MussoMusso is at his first World Cup; a start would test whether Argentina's third goalkeeper can handle a tournament match rhythm, not just training rhythm.1
Marcos SenesiWith Romero being preserved, Senesi is the most direct defensive debut question. TyC places him as the left-sided center-back option in a rotated back line.1
Giovani Lo CelsoLo Celso's case is different: he has been central to Scaloni's cycle, missed Qatar through injury and went unused at Russia 2018. Jordan could finally give him World Cup minutes.1
Valentín BarcoBarco is the cleanest upside test. TyC notes his late push into the squad, strong club season and pre-tournament goal against Iceland; a start would show whether he can carry that into tournament tempo.1
Giuliano SimeoneSimeone is part of the generational refresh and has a clearer route to minutes than López, especially if Scaloni wants energy wide or between lines late in the match.1
José Manuel LópezLópez appears the least likely to start because Julián Álvarez is projected to begin up front, but even substitute minutes would tell Scaloni whether he has a late-game profile beyond Lautaro and Álvarez.1
The names split into two groups. Rulli, Musso and Senesi are insurance decisions: can Argentina survive a goalkeeper or center-back disruption without changing their personality? Lo Celso, Barco, Simeone and López are usage decisions: can Scaloni add different attacking and midfield shapes without simply waiting for Messi to fix the final action?
Argentina squad depth
The Jordan match could move several bench options from squad depth to tournament evidence; image via TyC Sports.

Romero makes the center-back test harder to ignore

Romero's status gives the article's list its sharpest edge. TyC reported that the defender will not undergo further tests but will miss the Jordan match after the right-knee blow against Austria; the outlet added that the issue is not expected to be serious and that he is being preserved.5 ESPN's earlier match report said Romero left in the 57th minute against Austria and that Scaloni was waiting for medical clarity after the match.6
Cristian Romero injury watch
Romero's right-knee issue turns Senesi's potential minutes into a real center-back test; image via TyC Sports.
That is why Senesi is not just another rotation name. If Romero is unavailable or managed carefully in a knockout match, Argentina need to know how the back line behaves with a different center-back pairing. Otamendi brings experience, but the second center-back spot decides the line height, the first pass out and how much cover the full-backs need.
The probable XI circulating around TyC has either Emiliano Martínez or Rulli in goal, Montiel, Otamendi, Senesi and Tagliafico across the back, Palacios, Paredes and Barco in midfield, then Messi or Nicolás Paz with Julián Álvarez and Nicolás González ahead.7 That lineup would test two things at once: whether the defensive cover holds without Romero, and whether the midfield can progress the ball without leaning on the usual starters for every clean exit.

The Messi and Dibu exceptions still shape the experiment

The Jordan decision is not purely about the players who have not debuted. TyC reported that Messi and Emiliano Martínez both want to start, while the final call remains with Scaloni.4 Infobae described the same open question around Messi and Martínez, with Otamendi, Montiel, Palacios, Simeone and Nicolás González among the rotation options.3
That matters because a debutant's minutes mean different things depending on the spine around him. Barco playing with Messi is a different test from Barco having to create progression without him. Rulli behind Otamendi and Senesi is a different test from Rulli behind a back line with more first-choice pieces. Scaloni can use the match as a lab, but the variables need to be chosen carefully.
The best version of this rotation would not be a full sentimental sweep of the bench. It would give Argentina answers in the areas most likely to matter next week: a non-Romero center-back structure, a midfield with Lo Celso or Barco carrying more responsibility, and at least one attacking change that reduces the automatic dependence on Messi's final ball.
If seven possible debuts become the headline, the real takeaway should be smaller and more useful: Jordan is Argentina's last low-cost chance to turn squad depth from a list of names into match evidence.

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