Lionel Scaloni insists Argentina won't take Cape Verde lightly in Round of 32 meeting

Scaloni speaks to the press
Scaloni speaks to the pressREUTERS / Paul Childs

Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni struck a measured and respectful tone on Thursday ahead of his side's ⁠World Cup last-32 clash against Cape Verde, rejecting suggestions that the tournament debutants would be easy opponents for the reigning champions.

Cape Verde are the smallest nation ‌to ever qualify for the knockout stage of the World Cup after three draws against European champions ‌Spain, Uruguay and Saudi Arabia.

Argentina enter the knockout rounds after a near-flawless group-stage ‌campaign and though Scaloni acknowledged the excitement surrounding his side, he stressed that his players ‌are treating Cape Verde with the utmost respect.

"We're in a good moment, but ‌now the margins are very small. This is a match where if you lose, you're out. We know that," Scaloni told reporters on Thursday.

Argentina are huge favourites against Cape Verde
Argentina are huge favourites against Cape VerdeOpta by StatsPerform

"They're a good team. We've already watched them, not just ‌because we are playing against them, but because we ⁠were analysing potential opponents and then they ‌qualified.

"We are not surprised, to be honest. They are a good team, and they are ​not here by chance. We must respect them and that's what we will do."

While Cape Verde are unbeaten on the back of their strong defensive ​tactics, they failed to win a match in the group stage and Scaloni said there were games the disciplined African side deserved to win.

"Against Saudi Arabia, they ⁠deserved to win. Against Spain and ​Uruguay, maybe they suffered a bit more, but they defended well," Scaloni explained.

"They also closed down the inside channels and they are really good on the counter-attack. They have skilled players."

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Over-reliance on Messi?

Lionel Messi has scored six of Argentina's eight goals to top ‌the tournament's scoring charts along with France's Kylian Mbappe.

But Scaloni dismissed concerns over their reliance on Argentina's talisman for goals, emphasising that the team continues to create numerous scoring opportunities regardless of who finishes them.

"Of course, everything he does is more visible, but there is one more striker in the team," Scaloni said.

"We do create chances and Leo Messi, apart from being a great player, he's a striker. Whether he plays with Julian (Alvarez) or Lautaro (Martinez), we will try for all of them to score just as anyone else."

Messi is the World Cup top scorer
Messi is the World Cup top scorerSOPA Images, SOPA Images Limited / Alamy / Profimedia / Opta by StatsPerform

Messi did not start the last group game as Scaloni ‌gave him a rest before the knockout stage and he is expected to return ​to the starting lineup.

But when asked about Messi's fitness and the possibility of ‌extra time in the stifling heat of Miami, Scaloni declined to speculate on how many minutes the 39-year-old would play.

"I don't think it really makes sense to reply to this now. I don't know how the match is going to be, how he's going to be feeling," he said.

"He's been playing very ⁠well. I hope that everything will ⁠go well, but it will depend ‌on how the match goes and how he feels."

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