Austria turn Messi's record chase into a tactical test

Austria turn Messi's record chase into a tactical test

Messi's Algeria hat trick has turned Argentina-Austria into a Golden Boot and record-watch match. This article explains why Austria's own comments, Scaloni's full-back choices and the Lautaro-Julian decision matter more than forcing the next Messi moment.

Argentina Focus
June 19, 2026 · 3:06 PM
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Messi already gave Austria the problem every opponent wanted to avoid: Argentina's second Group J match now carries a record chase, a Golden Boot race and a tactical scouting report at the same time.
After his hat trick against Algeria, Messi is tied with Jonathan David on three goals at the top of the tournament scoring table, according to TyC Sports; the same update says Argentina next face Austria on June 22 before closing the group against Jordan on June 27. 1 That would be enough noise on its own. Austria have added a second layer by openly talking through how Messi changes the feel of the match.
TyC quoted Austria goalkeeper Alexander Schlager saying he is initially more of a Cristiano Ronaldo admirer, but that Messi has "an incredible presence" and that Austria will try to counteract what he brings on the pitch. 2 That is the real preview point. Austria are not pretending this is a normal group game. Argentina should not either.

The Messi stakes are now bigger than one more goal

The danger for Argentina is not that Messi will chase records selfishly. The danger is that every possession around him now looks like a potential history clip, which can distort how fans read a match that still needs to be managed.
ThreadWhat is actually at stake against AustriaWhy it matters for Argentina
Golden BootMessi and Jonathan David are level on three goals after Argentina's opener and Canada's 6-0 win over Qatar. 1The race is already live, but Argentina cannot turn every attack into a forced Messi finish.
World Cup goals recordInfobae reports that Messi reached 16 World Cup goals with the Algeria hat trick, level with Miroslav Klose; one more would put him alone on 17. 3Austria will know the first clean shooting lane for Messi may become the match's defining moment.
Wins recordThe same Infobae record preview says an Argentina win would also give Messi his 17th World Cup victory, moving him alone in that category. 3The cleaner route to history is still team control, not a personal shooting volume spike.
Group J controlFox Sports lists Argentina's 3-0 win over Algeria and Austria's 3-1 win over Jordan as the teams' previous Group J results before their June 22 meeting in Dallas. 4A second win would put Argentina in position to treat Jordan differently; a messy match keeps the group tense.
Messi scoring against Algeria
Messi's opener has become the statistical frame for Argentina-Austria, but the match will still be decided by control around him. 1

Austria's comments point to the tactical problem

The funniest line from Austria was Schlager's "team Cristiano Ronaldo" answer. The useful line came after it. He said Messi's presence is visible in the team, in what he does on the field and in the vibe he transmits, according to TyC. 2 That is a goalkeeper telling you the match starts before the shot.
Infobae's version of the Austria press-room reaction went deeper. Ralf Rangnick described Messi as a player who now likes to come from the No. 10 zone, does not chase every ball, and becomes dangerous because he appears in those spaces when a counterattack arrives. 5 That is the tactical map Austria will try to use: control the pocket, kill the first pass after a turnover, and avoid turning Messi's walking tempo into sudden separation.
Austria players after facing Jordan
Austria's own players have framed the Argentina game around Messi's aura and Argentina's possession habits. 5
There is a useful warning in Fox's early match data too. Its Argentina-Austria page lists both teams at 9.0 shots per game after one group match, while Austria are shown with a higher early possession average than Argentina. 4 One-game averages are thin evidence, but they fit Rangnick's public posture: Austria will not want to spend the whole night hiding in their box.

Scaloni still has a team sheet to protect

Argentina's latest training news keeps the Messi story from becoming the whole story. Infobae reported that Nicolas Tagliafico trained with the group from the start for the first time since his soleus issue, but also reported that the medical staff still lean toward Jordan rather than Austria as the more concrete return target. 6 If that holds, Facundo Medina remains the safer Austria solution on the left.
The right side is less settled. The same Infobae training report said Gonzalo Montiel was the only player absent from the open-field portion, doing gym work as a precaution to lower his load. 6 That matters against Austria because a match framed around Messi can still be lost in the full-back lanes, especially if Austria believe they can hold possession and attack the first pass out.
The forward choice is the more visible decision. Infobae says Scaloni's attacking question remains Lautaro Martinez or Julian Alvarez beside Messi, with Lautaro having started against Algeria and Alvarez entering actively after 55 minutes. 6 Against Austria, that choice should be read less as a popularity contest and more as a plan for how Argentina want Messi to receive the ball: with a penalty-box finisher occupying the center-backs, or with a runner who can stretch the first line earlier.

What to watch before kickoff

The cleanest Argentina win would make the record chase feel almost secondary: control the pocket around Messi, keep the full-backs fit enough to handle Austria's wide pressure, then let the captain's chances arrive naturally.
Before Monday's match, four signals matter most:
  1. Tagliafico's status: group training is progress; being trusted for competitive minutes is a different threshold.
  2. Montiel or Molina: a managed-load session for Montiel keeps the right-back call open.
  3. Lautaro or Julian: this tells us whether Scaloni wants a fixed penalty-area reference or more movement around Messi.
  4. Austria's first 15 minutes: if they try to keep the ball, Argentina's counterpress around Messi's No. 10 zone becomes the match's first real test.
Messi can break records against Austria. Argentina's better target is simpler: make the game stable enough that the records come as a consequence, not as the plan.

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