Five days after rolling past Algeria 3-0 in their World Cup opener, Argentina arrive at AT&T Stadium with three points in the bank and Lionel Messi already among the tournament’s top scorers on three goals. The reigning world champions are not coasting, though. Austria, who beat Jordan 3-1 in their own Group Stage debut, walk into this fixture with equal confidence and a squad that Ralf Rangnick has spent two years building around intensity and pressing structure. A win for either side keeps the knockout stage firmly in sight; anything less complicates the road ahead.

What’s at stake
This is a second-round group stage fixture at the 2026 World Cup, with both Argentina and Austria entering on three points. The group format gives teams three matches before the round of 32, so a second consecutive win would put the victor in a strong position to advance, potentially with a game to spare. A draw keeps both alive but opens the door for the third team in the group to capitalize. A loss, while not mathematically fatal, creates a tight situation heading into matchday 3.
For Argentina, the incentive is straightforward: back up a comfortable opening result against tougher opposition and demonstrate that the 3-0 win over Algeria was a baseline, not a ceiling. For Austria, who have never won a World Cup knockout match in the modern era, getting a result here against the current champions would be the kind of statement Rangnick’s project needs. Lose, and they face a must-manage situation in game three just to stay in the tournament.
How they got here
Argentina have won four of their last five matches, with the only blemish being a draw against Qatar in a friendly back in March. Since then, Lionel Scaloni’s side put five past Zambia, two past Honduras, three past Iceland, and three past Algeria without conceding in any of those games. The form is clean and the goals are flowing. Messi has three in the tournament already, tied at the top of the World Cup scoring chart with Canada’s Jonathan David. Austria’s recent form is also solid: four wins from their last five, including a 5-1 demolition of Ghana and the 3-1 opener against Jordan. Their only slip was a goalless draw against Guatemala in a pre-tournament friendly.
Neither Argentina nor Austria have a league position available in this context, as this is a tournament setting rather than a domestic competition. What the numbers do show is that both teams arrive with momentum, positive goal differences, and three points. The difference is pedigree: Argentina are reigning world champions; Austria are appearing in just their second World Cup since 1998. Scaloni’s side have the edge on paper, but Rangnick’s team has already shown it can score goals and press high against disciplined opposition.
Key battle to watch
The central midfield duel will shape this match. Marcel Sabitzer and Konrad Laimer are two of the highest-energy midfielders in European football, and their ability to disrupt Argentina’s build-up will determine how much space Messi and Julian Alvarez get in transition. Argentina’s Alexis Mac Allister and Rodrigo De Paul are the engine of Scaloni’s system, and if either of them is pinned back or forced into errors, the creative pipeline to Argentina’s front line narrows quickly. Austria win this match if they can make it a scrappy, physical contest in the middle third. Argentina win it if De Paul and Mac Allister control the tempo and give Messi time on the ball in the final third.
Key Stats
Match Context
Standings
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Our Prediction
Argentina are the better team on paper and Messi’s form gives them a genuine edge in the final third, but Austria are not here to absorb pressure for 90 minutes. Rangnick’s side will press high and look to turn over possession in dangerous areas. Expect Argentina to have the better of the match overall, though Austria are capable of making it uncomfortable. A narrow Argentina win is the most likely outcome, but a draw would not be a surprise if Laimer and Sabitzer succeed in disrupting the champions’ rhythm.