

Egypt national team exits after VAR call
Egypt’s national football team left the 2026 FIFA World Cup after Argentina won 3-2 at Atlanta Stadium on July 7 in the Round of 16 knockout match between the 2 sides.
Yasser Ibrahim and Mostafa Zico scored for Egypt before Argentina answered through Cristian Romero, Lionel Messi, and Enzo Fernández. The late comeback turned a 2-goal deficit into a quarterfinal place for Argentina.

Egypt took control before late collapse
Ibrahim’s first-half goal and Zico’s second-half finish put Egypt ahead in Atlanta. That lead placed Hossam Hassan’s team within reach of a first World Cup quarterfinal appearance against the defending champions.
Argentina cut the gap through Romero in the 79th minute, then Messi leveled 4 minutes later. Enzo Fernández scored the winning goal during stoppage time at Atlanta Stadium after Egypt’s penalty appeals.

Egypt goal review changed the scoreline
Zico appeared to score another Egypt goal in the 62nd minute after Salah’s pass. Video review found Marwan Attia had fouled Lisandro Martínez earlier in the attacking sequence before the finish.
The decision erased a finish that would have doubled Egypt’s lead sooner and changed the match rhythm. Egypt later scored again through Zico, but the overturned goal shaped the post-match debate.

Egypt bench protested a penalty decision
Egypt appealed for a penalty after a challenge on Salah before Argentina’s final goal. Referee François Letexier allowed play to continue as the attack moved toward the other end of the field.
Enzo Fernández scored soon after the appeal, which intensified protests near the Egyptian technical area. Hossam Hassan received a yellow card during the exchanges with the officiating team.

Egypt federation questioned match handling
The Egyptian Football Association challenged the match handling after the Round of 16 exit. The federation focused on fairness, transparency, and consistency during Argentina’s late comeback in Atlanta after several disputed decisions.
The complaint centered on the disallowed Zico goal and the Salah penalty appeal before Argentina’s winner. Egyptian officials pursued the issue through formal FIFA channels after reviewing the key incidents.

FIFA referee chief backed the review
FIFA Chief Refereeing Officer Pierluigi Collina defended the VAR process after Egypt’s objections. He said match officials work independently and apply the Laws of the Game during reviewable incidents in tournament matches.
Collina supported the foul decision before Zico’s disallowed goal. His response shifted the dispute toward interpretation, timing, and the scope of video review after the match at Atlanta Stadium.

VAR protocol allows attacking reviews
Football’s VAR protocol allows review of attacking-team offenses before a goal. That rule covers fouls in the buildup when officials check whether a score should stand during live play.
The protocol also limits reviews to clear categories, including goals and penalty decisions. Egypt’s disallowed finish fell inside the goal-review category after Attia’s contact with Martínez at Atlanta Stadium.

Egypt reached new World Cup ground
Egypt entered the Argentina match after its deepest run at the World Cup. The team recorded its first World Cup match victory and moved beyond the group stage for the first time in 2026.
The expanded 2026 format gave Egypt a wider knockout path. Results before Atlanta allowed Salah’s team to build a campaign that ended with national pride despite the late tournament exit.

Salah remained central to Egypt attack
Mohamed Salah returned before the knockout rounds after a hamstring strain. He started key matches and stayed central to Egypt’s passing, counters, chance creation, and attacking structure in 2026 play.
Against Argentina, Salah helped create the disallowed Zico finish and contributed before Egypt’s second valid goal. His involvement kept the attack connected under pressure until the final minutes at Atlanta Stadium.

Argentina advanced to face Switzerland
Argentina moved into the quarterfinals after completing the late comeback. The defending champions survived a 2-goal deficit and extended their tournament run beyond Atlanta into the next knockout stage.
The next opponent was Switzerland in Kansas City, Missouri. Argentina continued its title defense with Messi, Enzo Fernández, Romero, and a roster built around experienced knockout players and tournament veterans.

Messi recovered after missed chances
Messi missed a first-half penalty and later struck the post before scoring Argentina’s equalizer. His 83rd-minute goal pulled the match level during Egypt’s late slide under pressure at Atlanta Stadium.
The equalizer raised Messi’s World Cup scoring total to 21 goals. Argentina then found one more finish through Enzo Fernández during stoppage time to complete the full comeback at Atlanta Stadium.

Egypt supporters still marked progress
Egypt supporters followed the match in Cairo and across diaspora communities as the team pressed Argentina into stoppage time. The exit ended the run, but not the tournament milestone itself.
President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi praised the team’s campaign after the exit. Fans pointed to Egypt’s first World Cup knockout appearance as evidence of progress under Hassan during the 2026 tournament.
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VAR debate centered on transparency
The Argentina-Egypt match widened debate over how viewers understand VAR decisions. Analysts and officials focused on the disallowed Zico goal, the Salah penalty appeal, and the consistency of similar contact during attacks.
Collina defended the disallowed goal decision, while Egypt’s federation questioned the fairness and transparency of the officiating. The central issue became how officials explain decisive reviews to viewers during major matches.
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Did VAR change the story of Egypt’s World Cup run, or did Argentina simply finish stronger when pressure peaked? Share your thoughts in the comments below!
This slideshow was made with AI assistance and human editing.
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