Argentina very much alive at World Cup after Nigeria's crucial win over Iceland
Nigeria’s Ahmed Musa celebrates one of his two goals against Iceland at the 2018 World Cup. (AP)
The final few minutes of Argentina’s calamitous loss to Croatia felt like a funeral. They felt like the end of an era. They felt like an end for Lionel Messi. The disaster reportedly provoked an attempted mutiny. It left an entire nation depressed.
And yet heading into its final game in Group D, Argentina’s 2018 World Cup remains almost entirely in its own hands.
The
Argentines got the pivotal result they needed in Group D’s other
Matchday 2 game roughly 21 hours after their own debacle. Nigeria beat
Iceland 2-0 on two wonderful second-half goals from Ahmed Musa.
Those goals, coupled with Gylfi Sigurdsson’s late penalty miss
for Iceland, leave Nigeria in the driver’s seat for the Group D
runner-up spot behind Croatia. But Argentina, most importantly, now
knows a win over Nigeria on Tuesday will very likely take it through to
the knockout rounds, even after Thursday’s heartbreak.
Argentina scenarios
Argentina’s
loss to Croatia put it in a hole. But plenty of teams have advanced
after taking one point from their opening two games. The Argentines are
still within touching distance heading into their final group game.
They’ll
play Nigeria while Iceland and Croatia clash in simultaneous games on
Tuesday at 2 p.m. ET. Here’s what the Group D table looks like heading
into those games:
Group D table
1. Croatia — 6 (+5)
2. Nigeria — 3 (0)
3. Iceland — 1 (-2)
4. Argentina — 1 (-3)
2. Nigeria — 3 (0)
3. Iceland — 1 (-2)
4. Argentina — 1 (-3)
So
the scenarios for Argentina are relatively simple. It must beat
Nigeria. If it does, a loss or draw for Iceland against Croatia will
send the Argentines through.
If Iceland beats Croatia, Group D’s runner-up spot would be decided by tiebreakers.
The first is goal differential. So Argentina’s margin of victory on
Tuesday would have to be at least one goal greater than Iceland’s. If
goal differential is level, the second tiebreaker is goals scored.
The third tiebreak would be discipline – yellow and red card counts. A more in-depth tiebreaker explanation can be found here.
Why Friday’s result was good for Argentina
Tuesday’s
game was going to be a must-win for Argentina no matter what. Had
Iceland beaten Nigeria, though, even an Argentina win over the Nigerians
might not have been enough. Iceland could have clinched progression
with a result against Croatia on the final day. If Iceland had gotten a
point Friday, a win over Croatia would have taken it out of reach of
Argentina.
Now
Argentina controls its own destiny. Nigeria’s second goal and
Sigurdsson’s penalty miss could prove to be massive moments. Thanks to
the wayward penalty, even if Iceland beats Croatia, Argentina is one
goal closer to winning those tiebreakers and advancing.
Other Group D scenarios
If
Nigeria beats Argentina, it is through – likely in second place, unless
Croatia loses to Iceland and the two games feature a five-goal swing.
If
Nigeria ties Argentina, it is likely through – unless Iceland beats
Croatia by two or more goals, in which case the aforementioned
tiebreakers would come into play.
From
Iceland’s perspective, a win is imperative. But it needs help. It needs
an Argentina win or draw in the other Matchday 3 game. In the case of a
draw, Iceland would have to score at least three goals and win by at
least two. In the case of an Argentina win, it would have to hang on to
its one-goal advantage over the Argentines.
Can Argentina beat Nigeria?
Argentina
will fancy its chances against a Nigeria team that looked completely
impotent in the first half against Iceland. It didn’t even get off a
single shot. It didn’t look like scoring at all. And the Nigerians had
been poor on Matchday 1 against Croatia.
It
wasn’t until Musa’s first goal Friday that the game opened up. That
forced Iceland to come out of its shell. And Musa again won an
individual battle, beating an Icelandic defender one-on-one, dancing
past the goalkeeper, and finishing:
The goals will be emblematic of Argentina’s concern. La Albiceleste
was ripped apart by Nigeria on the counter in a 4-2 friendly loss back
in November. The Nigerians can play for a draw. Argentina will have to
take the initiative. It will be vulnerable on the counter.

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