If you sat down tonight expecting a routine Argentina cruise into the semi-finals, you got a front-row seat to pure tournament chaos instead. Switzerland did not show up to Kansas City Stadium just to participate; they took the reigning World Champions into the deep ocean and nearly held their heads under.
Let’s break down exactly how this absolute cinematic thriller unfolded.
1. The Early Punch and the Swiss Resurrection
- The Messi Connection: It started exactly how Argentina drew it up. In the 10th minute, Lionel Messi delivered a precise cross off a corner kick, finding Alexis Mac Allister who buried a beautiful header to make it 1-0.
- The Equalizer: Instead of folding, the Swiss locked down defensively and waited for their moment. It came in the 67th minute when Dan Ndoye silenced the stadium, blasting home a magnificent right-footed strike into the center of the net to tie it up 1-1.
2. The Red Card Heard ‘Round the World
Then came the 72nd minute—the exact moment sports radio and group chats are going to debate for the next month.
Swiss striker Breel Embolo went down in midfield near Leandro Paredes. The referee initially booked Paredes for the challenge, but the Video Assistant Referee (VAR) stepped in. Under the tournament’s “mistaken identity” protocol, the replay showed that Embolo was already falling before Paredes even made physical contact.
Because the review deemed it a clear simulation, and Embolo was already on a yellow card from the first half, the referee completely flipped the script. He rescinded the foul, gave Embolo his second yellow, and flashed the red card. Soft? Maybe. Brutal? Completely. Switzerland was down to 10 men with plenty of match left.
3. Extra Time Heartbreak
Playing down a man, the Swiss defense transformed into a literal brick wall. Gregor Kobel made insane stops in goal, and Granit Xhaka anchored a midfield that refused to quit. They dragged a frustrated Argentina all the way into extra time.
But in extra time, depth kills.
In the 112th minute, with everyone’s legs entirely gone, Julián Álvarez found space inside the box and fired home the tie-breaker. Then, in the absolute final second of the match (120’+1′), substitute Lautaro Martínez put the final nail in the coffin, making it 3-1.
What’s Next?
The Swiss exit with their heads held high after putting up an iconic fight. Meanwhile, Argentina marches onto Atlanta where a massive semi-final showdown against England awaits on Wednesday.















