By Phil Dawkes
Thursday June 2, 2022
Lionel Messi and Angel di Maria shone as Argentina beat
Italy at Wembley in the Finalissima - a renewal of the contest between the
champions of Europe and South America.
Messi's run and cross set up the opener for Lautaro
Martinez, who then turned provider for Di Maria to chip a second.
Substitute Paulo Dybala rounded off a handsome win in injury
time.
Italian defender Giorgio Chiellini played the first half of
what was his 118th and final international match.
The contest is the first between the two continental
champions in 29 years.
It is a revival of the Artemio Franchi Cup, competed for
twice before - in 1985, when France beat Uruguay and in 1993, when Argentina
beat Denmark on penalties.
Argentina further
underline huge potential
Argentina's victory in front of 87,112 continues their
remarkable run of results since June 2019 - they are unbeaten in 32 matches,
winning their first Copa America since 1993 and cruising through qualification
for the World Cup in Qatar in the process.
Their side at Wembley showcased a host of elite global
talent, including a stellar front three of Di Maria, Martinez and Messi, who
were a menace throughout with their movement and neat interplay.
It was Di Maria and Messi who truly stood out, however,
staging their own mini contest with Paris St-Germain club-mate and Italian
goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma in what became an increasingly one-sided
affair.
Inside two minutes, Di Maria was attempting to lob
Donnarumma from close to halfway. By the end of the first half, he had scored a
magnificent chip to follow up Martinez's opener, created by a typically
untouchable Messi run and cross.
Italy were simply grateful to their keeper for the string of
impressive saves he made to keep the scoreline respectable, before Dybala fired
in low with the last kick of the game.
Behind Argentina's front three, Giovani lo Celso and Rodrigo
de Paul were a constant source of energy and positivity while Nicolas Otamendi
and Cristian Romero provided grit and guile when needed at the back.
It is 36 years since Argentina won the World Cup. With this
side, marrying its undoubted talent with a supreme work-rate, they would appear
to have an excellent chance of ending their wait for a third global crown.
Disappointing Wembley
return for Italy
For Italy, Wednesday's game could have been a celebration -
a return to the scene of their Euro 2020 triumph and a chance to say goodbye to
one of the modern game's great defenders.
Instead, what started out as a bitter-sweet occasion ended
as a chastening one.
The Azzurri know it will be at least four years before they
have the chance to face elite non-European opposition such as Argentina in a
competitive fixture again. They also now know just how wide the gulf is between
themselves and such sides.
Their failure to qualify for this year's World Cup - the
second in a row they will have missed - is undoubtedly a huge blow to a nation
that had come so far under the management of Roberto Mancini and would have
fancied their chances in Qatar.
It was only nine months ago that they recorded the longest
unbeaten run in international football - 37 matches, during which they won the
Euros for the second time in their history.
But as the shock play-off defeat by North Macedonia made
abundantly clear, theirs is a side in clear need of renewal - a process
possibly better enabled by being away from the pressures of competing at a
major tournament in the middle of another gruelling domestic season.
The process has already begun. Roberto Mancini's matchday
squad had an eye on the future, including inexperienced 23-year-olds Alessandro
Bastoni and Gianluca Scamacca and a fourth start for 22-year-old forward
Giacomo Raspadori.
His hand has also been forced, with Chiellini departing the
international stage after a typically combative 45 minutes, taking 118 caps'
worth of experience with him.
Further changes and experiments will come, but so do stern
fixtures in the shape of Germany, Hungary and England in the Nations League.
For Argentina, the sky is the limit; for Italy things may
get worse before they get better.
'It was a beautiful
final' - what they said
Messi's performance was at odds with his first season in
French football, in which he has only scored 11 times - his lowest return in 16
years. But he thrived in an atmosphere fuelled by vocal Argentine support.
"We knew it was going to be a nice match and a nice
setting to be champion," he said.
"It was a beautiful final, full of Argentines. What we
experienced here was beautiful."
Italy boss Mancini spoke in equally glowing terms of the
setting - but less enamoured with the result.
"To play in Wembley is fantastic," he said.
"Every time we play here it is an incredible moment for football and for
us.
"The atmosphere tonight was absolutely fantastic, in
the end for us maybe not so good but this is football.
"I think they played better than us. They have a
fantastic striker, midfielders, they played very, very well."