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Atlanta chaos fallout: Egypt cries foul over refereeing, pro-Messi bias | FIFA World Cup 2026

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Atlanta did not merely stage a World Cup knockout match. It staged a trial by noise, heat, suspicion and late Argentine theatre.

 


Argentina’s 3-2 comeback win over Egypt had everything a classic needs: a two-goal deficit, a desperate champion, Lionel Messi refusing to let the story end, and Enzo Fernandez arriving in stoppage time to complete the escape. But this Round of 16 tie will be remembered as much for Egypt’s rage as for Argentina’s rescue.

 

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By full-time, Egypt were not just beaten. They felt wronged. The technical area had turned into a second battlefield, the referee was surrounded by questions, and Egyptian players and staff left convinced that the world champions had been helped through.

 
 


Mostafa Ziko, one of Egypt’s goalscorers, put that anger in its most explosive form.

 

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“It was the referee. The cup is directed towards Argentina,” he said.

 


That sentence turned a breathless comeback into something larger: a debate about VAR, fairness, Messi’s global pull and whether football’s biggest stars are allowed to survive nights that might have buried others.

 

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A classic comeback drowned by controversy

 


On paper, Argentina’s win looked like the sort of result champions produce. They trailed 2-0, absorbed the shock, found a way back, and struck the decisive blow in stoppage time. Cristian Romero began the recovery, Messi equalised, and Fernandez finished it.

 

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But this was not clean champion theatre. It was messy, disputed and furious.

 


Egypt head coach Hossam Hassan said his team had been denied justice. He claimed Egypt should have had a second goal when leading 1-0, only for Ziko’s 67th-minute effort to be disallowed after a VAR review. He also argued Egypt should have been awarded a stoppage-time penalty for an incident involving Mohamed Salah shortly before Argentina broke away and scored the winner.

 

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The sequence made the defeat feel unbearable for Egypt. A goal ruled out. A late penalty appeal ignored. A winner conceded almost immediately after. Then cards shown to the Egyptian bench as protests boiled over.

 


This was the chaos of Atlanta: Egypt crying foul, Argentina escaping, and Messi’s World Cup still alive.

 

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Egypt’s anger: ‘There’s no justice in this competition’

 


Hassan’s post-match reaction was not a routine complaint about marginal calls. It was a full denunciation of the match’s direction.

 

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“We haven’t seen respect or fair play,” he said, pointing towards referee Francois Letexier and Argentina’s players.

 


Hassan accused Argentina of pressuring the referee and suggested that pressure influenced the outcome. To him, the disputed decisions did not feel isolated. The disallowed goal, the late penalty appeal, the stoppage-time winner and the cards to his bench became part of one larger grievance.

 

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“Life is unfair. The world is unfair. OK, but why isn’t there any fairness in sports?” Hassan said.

 


Later, he went further. “Perhaps they wanted to keep the world champions in the competition? Perhaps they wanted Messi to stay in the running?” he said.

 

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It was an explosive suggestion. It questioned not only one referee’s judgement but the neutrality of the tournament itself. 

 


Refereeing expert backs Egypt on disallowed goal

 

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Egypt’s anger over Ziko’s disallowed goal was supported by former Premier League referee Graham Scott, who told The Athletic that the VAR intervention should not have happened.

 


Scott said the decision to rule out Egypt’s goal was incorrect because Attia’s challenge on Lisandro Martinez in the build-up was “normal contact” rather than a foul. The incident had also taken place nearly 100 yards from Argentina’s goal, giving the world champions enough time and bodies to regroup defensively.

 

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In Scott’s view, VAR had gone too far by returning to a marginal incident so early in the move. He described the intervention as a “massive overreach” of a system meant to correct only “clear and obvious errors”.

 


The former referee noted that although there was slight foot-on-foot contact and a brief shirt pull, neither action was serious enough to cancel a goal after such a long attacking sequence.

 

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“For a goal to be chalked off, there needs to be a clear foul,” Scott said, adding that the longer the distance and time between a challenge and a goal, the more serious the alleged offence must be.   

 

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That distinction made Egypt’s grievance more layered: the disallowed goal appeared to be a major VAR mistake, but the stoppage-time penalty claim was far less convincing. 


 


Why the VAR call hurt Egypt so deeply

 

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  Some decisions wound teams more than others. A tight offside is painful, but objective. A handball in the box can be disputed, but at least it is close to the scoring action. Egypt’s frustration came from the feeling that VAR had reached too far back into the move.

 


The disallowed goal was not caused by an obvious foul in the penalty area. It did not come after a clear push before the finish. It came after a challenge far away from the eventual shot, in a phase from which Argentina still had time to defend.

 

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For Egypt, this was the moment the match changed shape.

 


Salah penalty appeal: Egypt’s weaker case

 

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  If Egypt had a strong argument over the disallowed goal, their late penalty appeal was less convincing.

 


Hassan insisted Salah should have been awarded a penalty shortly before Fernandez’s winner. Egypt saw contact and demanded intervention. In the heat of the moment, the non-call felt like another injustice in a match they believed had already turned against them.

 

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But not every appeal carries the same weight. The contact on Salah appeared minor, and the claim did not look strong enough to demand a VAR overturn.  However, former referee Scott did not support this Egypt’s complaints. He said the late penalty appeal involving Mohamed Salah, shortly before Enzo Fernandez’s winner, was rightly dismissed. There was contact on Salah’s boot, but not enough, in his assessment, to award a penalty.

 

That distinction matters. Egypt’s fury bundled the two incidents together, but the football case separates them. The disallowed goal looked like the night’s major controversy. The Salah penalty appeal was softer. 
 

 

 

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That does not erase Egypt’s anger. It does, however, show why this match will be debated in layers rather than reduced to one call.

 


Why Egypt’s bench was shown cards

 

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The late drama also raised another question for many watching: can support staff receive yellow and red cards?

 


Yes, they can.

 

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Football’s Laws of the Game allow referees to caution or dismiss team officials for misconduct. This includes not only the head coach but also assistant coaches, goalkeeping coaches, fitness trainers, analysts, doctors, physiotherapists and other accredited members of the technical area.

 


The rule exists because the modern bench is no longer passive. Coaches and staff constantly instruct players, challenge decisions, speak to substitutes and place pressure on the fourth official. When that behaviour crosses the line, referees can use cards to discipline them.

 

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A yellow card can be shown for dissent, repeatedly leaving the technical area, delaying restarts, sarcastic gestures, provoking opponents or ignoring instructions from officials. A red card can be shown for offensive or abusive language, threatening behaviour, confronting match officials, entering the field to interfere with play, throwing objects or violent conduct.

 


Egypt coach Hossam Hassan is shown a yellow card by referee Francois Letexier as he makes anti-racism gesture. Photo: Reuters

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  Once dismissed, a staff member must leave the technical area and move somewhere they can no longer influence the match. Unlike a player’s red card, the team does not lose a player on the pitch.

 


In Atlanta, the rule became part of the spectacle because Egypt’s anger was no longer limited to the players. The bench itself had become a participant in the storm.

 

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Touchline fury becomes part of the match

 


As Egypt protested Fernandez’s stoppage-time winner and the earlier non-call on Salah, Letexier showed a red card to a member of Egypt’s coaching staff. Hassan was cautioned. Goalkeeper Mostafa Shobeir was also shown a yellow card.

 

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For Egypt, those cards felt like punishment for outrage. For the referee, they were a response to a technical area that had boiled over.

 


The truth is that both things can coexist. Egypt’s anger had context, especially after the disallowed Ziko goal. But referees are also expected to control the bench once protests become persistent, aggressive or disruptive.

 

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Hassan’s scheduling complaint adds another layer

 


Hassan’s frustration did not stop with VAR or refereeing. He also criticised the timing of the match.

 

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“Whoever schedules these matches is someone who has never played football. You never schedule a football match at 12 noon,” he said.

 


That complaint widened Egypt’s grievance. Hassan was not only arguing that decisions went against his team. He was arguing that the conditions of the match were wrong too.

 

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To him, the scheduling, the VAR call, the late penalty appeal and the touchline punishments became part of a broader unfairness. Whether everyone accepts that framing is another matter, but it explains why Egypt’s reaction after the match was so fierce.

 


Hassan did not see one bad decision. He saw a night tilted away from his team.

 

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Messi’s shadow over every decision

 


No Argentina World Cup match exists outside Lionel Messi’s orbit.

 

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That is what made Hassan’s comments so pointed. When he asked whether there was a desire to keep Messi in the tournament, he touched a nerve that often follows global icons. The bigger the player, the louder the suspicion when close calls appear to benefit his team.

 

Argentina supporters will call that bitterness. They will say champions find a way, that Messi inspires belief, and that Egypt lost because they could not protect a two-goal lead. 
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Lionel Messi is thrown in the air in celebration by teammates after Argenitna vs Egypt pre-QF match as La Albiceleste qualify for the quarter finals of the World Cup. Photo: Reuters

 


Egypt will see it differently. For them, Messi’s presence made the night feel more loaded. When football’s most marketable figure survives a scare through a disputed comeback, suspicion comes easily to the defeated side.

 

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That does not prove Egypt’s strongest claims. But it explains why the defeat felt larger than a football match.

 


Messi’s magic, in this case, arrived wrapped in controversy.

 

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Argentina’s escape: Character or fortune?

 


Argentina will not apologise for surviving.

 

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World Cup knockout football rarely rewards purity. It rewards nerve, endurance and decisive moments. Argentina were in danger, but they did not collapse. They dragged themselves back into the contest and struck late.

 


That is the version they will carry forward: the world champions passed through fire and lived.

 

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But Atlanta also exposed them. A side that falls 2-0 behind in a Round of 16 match has been vulnerable.  


Argentina’s aura remains, but it is no longer spotless.

 


Their quarter-final opponents will have seen both sides: the fragility that let Egypt dream, and the champion instinct that crushed that dream in the final minutes.

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Egypt’s exit will not fade quickly

 


Ziko’s immediate reaction captured the emotional wreckage.

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“We are so sorry,” he said to the people of Egypt. “We wanted to make you all happy.”

 


Then came the accusation that will follow this match.

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“The cup is directed towards Argentina.”

 


Those words will be debated, dismissed, amplified and replayed. For Egypt, they will become shorthand for a night when a historic opportunity seemed within reach and then disappeared in a blur of VAR, protests and late Argentine punishment.

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Hassan’s declaration that he would “never watch the World Cup again” may have come from the rawness of defeat, but it revealed how deeply the match had cut.

 


Egypt did not leave Atlanta feeling they had lost only to Argentina. They left feeling beaten by the event itself.

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