It is a birthday Lionel Messi might not like to celebrate. Since the world knows every detail of his life, it is difficult to ignore the day the legend completed 31 years of his life, far away from Rosario where he was born and got married.
Just outside the entrance of Argentina's base camp in Bronnitsy, posters announce that the city will celebrate Messi's birthday. A Moscow confectioner has even created a life-sized cake for the Argentinian star.
After the results against Iceland and Croatia in particular, the South American nation has been engulfed by dark clouds of despair. The flock of journalists who made the 13,500 km journey to Russia, are finding it hard to keep their smiles on. It is because Messi is not smiling.
In the two matches and the few training sessions open to the media, there was hardly a moment when Messi smiled. Nor could he make the world happy with his game.
Sinuous runs with the ball, every child's dream, have not been seen even once in the 180 minutes he has been on the field here. Messi seems lost in the forest of markers in the crowded midfield, struggling to recreate his magical powers of dribbling or to conjure the spectacular out of the ordinary.
News leaking out from the Argentina fortress is not joyful either. Staying behind the security and seclusion of their cocoon in Bronnitsy, Argentina will only appear in Saint Petersburg, the venue of their last group engagement against Nigeria, on Monday.
Jorge Sampaoli, the embattled coach, is trying to keep his flock together. But how can he stop Diego Maradona from firing his salvo? Critical as he generally is of the establishment, Maradona told the Spanish press, "Everyone believed that the technician was going to solve the problems of Argentina with computers, with drones, with 14 assistants. Argentina do not know what they play, they have no solution at all, that is, in the midfield, in defence or in attack. Argentina did not have the ball."
He added that Messi played "as he had to play" and it is difficult for him to solve the problems of his teammates. However unlike Messi and Maradona may be, apart from using their left-foot, the world loves the contrast and comparison.
Sampaoli has conceded after the 3-0 humiliation against Croatia that he is confounded by the implosion. "If I had set things up differently, things might have turned out much better," he later said.
Sergio Aguero, also having a woeful World Cup, admitted: "I feel anger and sadness. Although there is still a chance. Now we depend on others but there is still hope. We have to wait and try to beat Nigeria."
Hi! I am a robot. I just upvoted you! I found similar content that readers might be interested in:
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/football/fifa-world-cup/fifa-world-cup-2018-messi-fighting-demons-on-a-birthday/articleshow/64727402.cms