For nearly two decades, the sport of soccer has belonged to Lionel Messi. Sunday’s World Cup final may finally introduce the player many believe could one day inherit his throne.
Argentina vs. Spain is bigger than a meeting of the tournament’s two best teams. It is a collision between soccer’s greatest living legend and its brightest young star, with 39-year-old Messi chasing one final masterpiece while a 19-year-old Lamine Yamal attempts to write the opening chapter of a career already bursting with impossible expectations.
The World Cup final will mark the first time the two players have ever competed against each other on the pitch, but their connection goes back much further.
Nineteen years ago, a 20-year-old Messi cradled an infant Yamal during a UNICEF charity photo shoot at Camp Nou. Neither could have imagined that one day they would stand on opposite sides of the biggest match the sport has to offer.
“The first time I saw it, I thought it was AI and that it wasn’t even real,” Spain’s Mikel Merino admitted Friday.
Not since Voldemort’s encounter with “the boy who lived” in Harry Potter have we seen an infant’s arc this dramatic. Now the photograph has become the backdrop to a final that feels less like coincidence and more like destiny.
Yet sentiment will disappear the moment the opening whistle blows.
Messi arrives at the final with nothing left to prove and everything left to accomplish. He’s already regarded as the greatest soccer player in history and owns virtually every trophy and individual honor the sport can offer. Sunday’s match will be his third World Cup final and in all likelihood, his final appearance for Argentina. He’s also chasing history as Argentina can become the first nation since Brazil in 1962 to successfully defend a World Cup title.
Even at 39, Messi dictates games in ways statistics can only partially explain. He leads all players in the tournament with eight goals and four assists, but his greatest weapon is his ability to manipulate space. Defenses collapse toward him almost instinctively, as three England players did on Argentina’s first goal in the semifinal. That creates passing lanes for other players to score.
Across from Messi will be the all-grown-up teenager whose career has unfolded along remarkably familiar lines. Like Messi, Yamal was discovered by Barcelona as a child, developed inside La Masia and announced himself to the first team before most players graduate high school.
Both are left-footed and capable of turning an ordinary possession into a decisive moment. Yamal now wears Messi’s iconic No. 10 shirt for Barcelona (No. 19 for Spain), but he insists he’s never tried to become “the next Messi.” Instead, he says, he wants to become the first Lamine Yamal.
One goal and zero assists in the World Cup hardly capture the influence he’s had on the pitch. Spain’s attack stretches because defenders cannot leave him isolated on the right wing. His fearless dribbling, explosive acceleration and willingness to attack defenders one-on-one have become the spark behind a Spanish side that has conceded just one goal while extending its unbeaten streak to 37 matches. In the semifinal against France, he drew the penalty that led to the game’s first goal.
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“He is one of the best players in the world right now,” Messi said with admiration rather than insecurity Friday at Fanatics FanFest. “He’s only 19 years old and he has all of his future ahead. That picture … it was crazy. Him as a baby, and now we are facing each other. I wish him the best.”
He smiled before adding another thought that sounded unmistakably like the lifelong Barcelona icon he remains.
“What’s good for him will also be good for Barcelona.”
If we’re being honest, neither team is built around one player alone, and there are plenty of players who can and will impact the game Sunday. Spain’s suffocating possession and defensive structure will test Argentina’s physical, transition-heavy approach. Former Ballon d’Or winner Rodri called La Albiceleste “the toughest rival,” while head coach Luis de la Fuente described both as “super teams” with strikingly similar football philosophies.
Still, every great final has its defining image. This one already has its before photo. The question is which image will come after.
Is it the legend lifting the trophy again and making history?
Or is it the teenager chasing the legend emphatically announcing his own?


