DUBAI, July 14 (Agencies): England and Argentina will meet for the first time in over two decades in the 2026 FIFA World Cup semi-final on Wednesday night in Atlanta.
With a place in the World Cup final at stake, this fixture could hardly be any bigger, yet the long-standing rivalry between England and Argentina adds an extra layer of intrigue.
The start of a rivalry
The roots of the football rivalry between England and Argentina lie not on the pitch, but in the South Atlantic.
In April 1982, Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands, a British Overseas Territory known in Argentina as the Islas Malvinas, triggering a 10-week conflict with the United Kingdom. The war claimed the lives of more than 900 people before Argentine forces surrendered in June 1982, leaving a lasting political and emotional legacy in both countries.
Although football matches between the two nations had been competitive before then, the Falklands War gave every subsequent meeting far greater significance. Encounters between England and Argentina came to be viewed through the lens of that conflict, with heightened emotion among players, supporters and the media. More than four decades later, the war remains the
defining backdrop to one of international football's most intense and enduring rivalries.
The Hand of God
Just four years after the Falklands War, England and Argentina were drawn together in the quarter-finals of the 1986 World Cup in Mexico.
Given the recent conflict between the two nations, the match carried enormous significance beyond football and quickly became one of the most watched and talked-about games in World Cup history.
It was a contest forever defined by the iconic Diego Maradona. The Argentina captain first scored the infamous "Hand of God" goal, punching the ball into the net with the officials unable to spot the clear infringement.
David Beckham sees red
The rivalry was reignited 12 years later when the nations met again in the round of 16 at the 1998 World Cup in France.
In another fiercely contested encounter, the two sides played out a 2-2 draw before Argentina edged through 4-3 in the penalty shootout. Yet, despite the drama of the match itself, the moment that dominated headlines came midway through the second half.
England midfielder David Beckham, then one of the country's brightest young stars, was sent off after kicking out at Argentina captain Diego Simeone following a foul. Simeone went to ground dramatically, and
Beckham's dismissal left England to play with 10 men for more than 70 minutes.
More than two decades apart
While history has often favoured Argentina on the biggest World Cup occasions, England head into this latest showdown having won the last two meetings between the sides. David Beckham gained a measure of redemption for his infamous red card at the 1998 World Cup by scoring the only goal from the penalty spot in England's 1-0 group-stage victory at the 2002 tournament. More than two decades have passed since England and Argentina last faced each other, with their most recent meeting coming in a friendly in Geneva in 2005.
England vs Argentina
The story behind one of football's fiercest rivalry
FE Team | Published: July 14, 2026 22:06:30
CLOCK-WISE: Diego Maradona tickles the ball over the head of England's Peter Shilton to give Argentina a 1-0 lead at the Azteca Stadium in 1986, England's golden boy David Beckham was sent off for kicking out at Diego Simeone in 1998 and Wayne Rooney netted for England the last time the two nations met in 2005 — AP/Reuters
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