Four days after surviving a nervy 3-2 thriller against Egypt in the round of 16, Argentina arrive at Arrowhead Stadium carrying both momentum and a degree of unfinished business. Switzerland, who edged through on penalties after a 0-0 draw with Colombia, represent the one World Cup knockout opponent that Lionel Scaloni’s side has met before at this stage of the competition. Back in 2014, a single Angel Di Maria goal in extra time settled matters. Twelve years later, with Lionel Messi leading the tournament scoring charts on eight goals, the stakes are considerably higher and the histories of these two sides considerably more intertwined than a one-game H2H suggests.

A rivalry rooted in World Cup history
Argentina and Switzerland do not share a domestic derby or a continental rivalry born of proximity. Their connection is almost entirely a World Cup one, which gives their meetings a compressed, high-voltage quality. The two nations have crossed paths at the World Cup on multiple occasions across the decades, with the most recent and vivid example coming in Brazil in 2014. That round-of-16 tie in Sao Paulo went to extra time before Argentina found the winner, a moment that lodged itself firmly in Swiss football memory and gave Argentina fans reason for relief rather than comfort.
Beyond 2014, Switzerland have built a reputation at World Cups as a side capable of disrupting more fancied opponents through organisation and tactical discipline under pressure. That identity has carried through to Murat Yakin’s current squad, which features experienced figures like Granit Xhaka and Manuel Akanji alongside younger talents. Argentina, for their part, have spent the past decade constructing a generation around Messi, a project that finally delivered a World Cup title in 2022 and now aims to defend it on North American soil.
Head-to-head: the numbers
The direct record between these two at World Cup level is limited. The H2H in this context shows one meeting: Argentina 1-0 Switzerland in July 2014, in the round of 16. That single data point makes sweeping head-to-head conclusions difficult, and it would be misleading to read too much into one match played 12 years ago with largely different squads on both sides.
What recent form does offer is a clearer picture. Argentina have won all five of their matches at this tournament, including back-to-back 3-2 wins over Cape Verde and Egypt that showed both attacking potency and a willingness to be tested. Switzerland won three of their five matches, drew two, and conceded five goals across the group stage and round of 16. Their 0-0 draw with Colombia, resolved on penalties, shows a side capable of defending and grinding, but not one currently producing the kind of output that would rattle a defence of Argentina’s quality.
What makes this edition different
The most obvious variable separating this quarter-final from any previous meeting is Messi. With eight goals at this tournament, he sits at the top of the World Cup scoring charts, one ahead of Erling Haaland and Kylian Mbappe. At 38, and with this almost certainly his final World Cup, every match he plays in carries weight beyond the result itself. Switzerland’s defensive organisation will be tested against a player who has already dismantled five different defences this summer.
For Switzerland, the challenge is partly psychological. Yakin’s side showed they could frustrate Colombia over 90 minutes and take the tie to penalties, which signals defensive cohesion. But Argentina with Messi in this form, supported by Alexis Mac Allister, Rodrigo De Paul and Julian Alvarez, is a different proposition from any opponent Switzerland have faced so far. The 0-0 against Colombia also means Switzerland arrive with less attacking rhythm than Argentina, who have scored in every single game and won each one. Arrowhead Stadium provides a backdrop worthy of the occasion, and with Scaloni’s side unbeaten in five at this tournament, the weight of history leans firmly toward the South American champions.
Key Stats
World Cup knockout bracket
Knockout results, aggregate scores across legs; winners in bold, penalty shootouts noted.
Head to Head
Our Prediction
History offers only one data point, but it points one way: Argentina have never lost to Switzerland at a World Cup, and nothing in the current form of either side suggests that changes at Arrowhead. Switzerland will make this uncomfortable, as they made it uncomfortable for Colombia, but Argentina’s attacking depth and Messi’s form give Scaloni’s side too many tools. Argentina to progress, though Switzerland’s defensive structure could keep the margin tight.