Scaloni's Jordan plan starts in Kansas
25/6/2026 · 22:09

Scaloni's Jordan plan starts in Kansas

Argentina's latest training, travel and lineup clues point to a Jordan plan built around protecting routine while testing a rotated side before the knockout round.

Argentina's newest Jordan clue is not another name in the XI. It is the routine around the XI.
Lionel Scaloni has a match he can rotate, a captain he can protect, and a knockout bracket that still has several possible faces. The small but telling update is that Argentina are keeping preparation anchored at their Kansas base before moving on to Dallas, rather than treating a low-stakes group finale as a loose travel week. TyC Sports reported that the staff reversed an earlier plan to travel sooner and will keep the final work in Kansas before the Jordan match. 1
That matters because Jordan is a strange game for Argentina. ESPN describes it as effectively a dead rubber: Argentina have already sealed first place in Group J after beating Algeria and Austria, while Jordan have already been eliminated. 2 But Scaloni's latest choices suggest he wants the match to feel normal in everything except the lineup.

What changed before Jordan

ClueLatest reportingWhy it changes the read
Group statusArgentina are already through as Group J winners, with Jordan out. 2Scaloni can rotate without putting qualification or first place at risk.
Preparation baseThe staff chose to preserve the Kansas training routine before traveling to Dallas, the same broad pattern used before Austria. 1The coaching staff are treating rhythm as part of the performance, not as background logistics.
Selection cluesInfobae reported that Messi is expected to get minutes but not start, Dibu Martínez is projected to start, and Cristian Romero's right-knee discomfort is not a lesion. 3Argentina may rotate heavily while keeping a goalkeeper anchor and protecting the centre-back most in need of caution.
Knockout contextTyC's current bracket read has Argentina facing the Group H runner-up in Miami on 3 July, with Uruguay in that slot for now and Spain, Cape Verde or Saudi Arabia still possible depending on final Group H results. 4Jordan is the last live rehearsal before the opponent profile becomes specific.
The article to write from those facts is not simply "Scaloni rotates." That has been true since Argentina clinched the group. The better read is that Scaloni is separating two things that often get lumped together: changing personnel and changing the week.
He appears willing to change the personnel. He does not appear eager to change the week.

The lineup is rotated, but the spine is not gone

Infobae's possible XI points toward a deep rotation: Gonzalo Montiel, Nicolas Otamendi, Marcos Senesi and Nicolas Tagliafico in the back line; Leandro Paredes, Exequiel Palacios, Giovani Lo Celso or Valentin Barco in midfield; and a front line that could include Julian Alvarez with Nico Paz or Jose Manuel Lopez. 3 That is not a cosmetic change. It touches every line.
Still, it is not a total emptying-out of the team. Dibu staying in goal, if the report holds, keeps the command structure behind a changed defensive line. Otamendi beside Senesi gives the back four an experienced organiser while Romero is managed. Paredes gives the midfield a passer who can set the first tempo instead of asking a collection of rotation pieces to improvise.
That balance is the whole Jordan brief. Argentina need information from the second unit, but they do not need chaos. A clean, boring first half from a changed side would tell Scaloni more than a loose 4-2 win.

Messi's role is a workload decision, not a crowd decision

The Messi part is also easy to misread. He can add goals. The stadium will want him. Jordan would offer spaces that a fully sharp Messi can punish. But Argentina's real question is smaller and more useful: does he need starting rhythm, or only enough touch to keep the motor running before Miami?
Infobae's report that he is likely to play minutes without starting is the compromise that fits Argentina's situation. 3 It lets Scaloni test Nico Paz or another attacking structure from the opening whistle, then use Messi as a controlled rhythm injection rather than a 90-minute solution.
That is a different test from the Austria win, where Messi's finishing and Paredes' pass decided the match. Against Jordan, the useful evidence comes before Messi enters: whether Argentina can progress the ball, create central access and protect rest-defense positions without the captain solving the game early.

The Kansas decision says Scaloni wants habits under pressure

The logistics update is easy to skim past, but it is the clearest coaching clue of the day. TyC reported that the staff had considered leaving earlier for Dallas, then chose to keep training in Kansas and travel only after the work was done. 1
That is what tournament management looks like when a staff trusts its base. A World Cup creates enough variables: unfamiliar stadiums, changing kickoff windows, bracket uncertainty, media duties, and the emotional pull of Messi's late-career run. If the match no longer decides the group, the staff can use it to protect the behaviours that will matter once the games become sudden-death.
For Argentina, those behaviours are not abstract. They are the timing of the first pass out from the back, the distances around Paredes, the full-backs' restraint when the opposite winger receives, and the way the centre-backs defend the first transition after a turnover. Those are easier to evaluate when the rest of the day feels ordinary.

Match 99 is really the rehearsal for match 100

There is a nice statistical footnote here, but it should not be the whole story. Infobae, carrying an EFE report, noted that Jordan will be Scaloni's 99th match in charge and the Round of 32 in Miami would be his 100th. 5
The number is useful because it frames the coach's actual problem. Scaloni's Argentina have already built the big memories: Copa America, Finalissima, Qatar, another Copa America. The Jordan match is smaller, but it asks a very Scaloni question: can he change enough to save legs without changing so much that the team loses its habits?
That is why the opponent almost matters less than the evidence Argentina collect. If Jordan press higher, can the rotated midfield play through it? If Jordan sit deep, can Alvarez, Paz or Lopez create enough penalty-area occupation without Messi starting? If Argentina lead early, can the bench manage the match without turning it into an exhibition?

What would count as a useful night

A useful Jordan night is not just three wins from three. It would look more specific:
  • Romero gets protected, and the Otamendi-Senesi pairing keeps the back line calm. 3
  • Paredes, Palacios, Lo Celso or Barco give Scaloni a midfield sequence he can trust for 15 to 25 knockout minutes. 3
  • Messi's minutes are useful but not necessary to stabilise the match. 3
  • The Kansas-to-Dallas routine produces a normal competitive edge, not a slow start. 1
That is the real value of a group finale Argentina do not need to win. Scaloni can use Jordan to find out which parts of his team survive change, while keeping the week stable enough that the evidence means something.

Contenido relacionado

Seleccionado de otros canales según similitud de contenido. Descubre nuevos creadores a seguir.

Añade más opiniones o contexto en torno a este contenido.

  • Inicia sesión para comentar.