Will Messi Play at the 2026 World Cup? Everything We Know Right Now

livesportfootball
1

Quick Takeaways:

  • Messi, 38 years old, has still not officially confirmed he will play in 2026
  • Prediction markets give him a ~90% chance of appearing at the tournament
  • Argentina coach Scaloni says the decision is entirely Messi's "for the good of football, he has to be there."
  • Messi scored his 900th career goal for club and country in March 2026 for Inter Miami
  • Argentina's squad deadline is May 30, 2026. The world is watching

Let me be straight with you: as of right now, in May 2026, with the World Cup just weeks away, the greatest footballer who ever lived has not confirmed whether he will play. And the fact that this sentence is even possible that we're sitting here genuinely unsure whether Lionel Messi will be at the biggest sporting event on earth, tells you everything about what makes this moment in football history so extraordinary.

This isn't a retirement story. Not yet. This is something more complicated, more human, and honestly more fascinating. Let's walk through exactly where things stand.


Where Things Stand Right Now

Messi turned 38 in June 2025. He will turn 39 years old during the tournament itself. on June 24, right in the middle of Argentina's group stage. He is, by almost any measure, still playing at an extraordinary level. He has appeared in six of seven Inter Miami matches since the 2026 season began, scored his 900th career goal in March in a 3-2 win over New York City, and was named in Argentina's 30-man preliminary squad for their March friendlies.

But here's the thing: he hasn't said yes. Not officially. And that silence has the entire football world holding its breath.

90%

Probability markets now assign Messi appearing at the 2026 World Cup.

Source: Kalshi prediction markets, April 2026

What Messi Has Actually Said

Messi has been characteristically thoughtful and frustratingly vague on the subject. Back in November 2025, he told Apple TV: "I have so much desire and excitement to be at the World Cup 2026... but I want to go there feeling good myself. I have to make sure I'm ready to contribute at my best."

That's not a man who's ruling himself out. But it's also not a guarantee. What Messi is saying, and he's said it multiple times in different ways, is that he refuses to go to a World Cup just to be there. If he can't contribute meaningfully, if his body isn't at a level where he can actually impact matches, he won't go. That's the standard he holds himself to at 38, just as he did at 17, 25, and 35.

"I'll take it day by day when I start pre-season with Inter Miami and see if I can reach 100 percent, if I can still contribute, and then I'll decide. I'm really excited because it's a World Cup." Lionel Messi, October 2025

Then, after Argentina's 5-0 win over Zambia in April, a game in which Messi scored, he posted a photo on Instagram in national team colors with the caption "Argentina siempre" (Argentina always). Thefootball internet exploded. Fans took it as a sign. Maybe it was. Maybe it was just Messi being Messi.


What His Coach Says

Argentina manager Lionel Scaloni has been remarkably open about how much he wants Messi there and equally respectful about the fact that the decision isn't his to make. Speaking at a press conference in March, he said something that stuck with me:

"I'll do everything possible to make sure he's there. I believe that, for the good of soccer, he has to be there. It's not me who decides. It's difficult because it is not just the Argentinians who want to see him; everyone wants to see him." Lionel Scaloni, Argentina head coach

"Everyone wants to see him." And that's the truth, isn't it? This isn't just an Argentine story. Football fans in Morocco, Japan, England, and the United States all want to see Messi walk out onto a World Cup pitch one more time. He already holds the record for the most World Cup appearances in history, 26 games. A sixth tournament would push that to heights no one else will likely reach.


The Ronaldo Angle Nobody Can Ignore

Here's a subplot that adds a whole extra layer of drama: Cristiano Ronaldo is also expected to be at the 2026 World Cup. Both players debuted at the tournament in 2006. Both have been the defining figures of an entire generation of football. If Messi goes to 2026, it will mark the first time in football history that two players have competed in six World Cups. And the chance, however slim, that these two giants might face each other on a World Cup stage for the very last time is the kind of narrative that makes football the global religion it is.

📅 Key Dates to Watch

May 11: Argentina submits their preliminary squad list (35 players)

May 30: Final squad list submitted to FIFA (23–26 players)

June 11: World Cup kicks off in Mexico City

June 16: Argentina's first match vs Algeria in Kansas City

June 24: Messi turns 39 right in the middle of the group stage


Will He or Won't He? Our Honest Take

Here's what we genuinely believe: Messi will be at the 2026 World Cup. Every piece of evidence, his form, his inclusion in Argentina squads, his Instagram post, his coach's words, the prediction markets points in the same direction. The only real question is whether he stays injury-free through May and arrives in North America feeling like he can actually contribute.

Because that's the thing about Messi. He won't go as a passenger. He won't accept being a ceremonial presence on the bench. If he's there, he'll want to matter. And at 38, playing the best football of his MLS career and still finding the net for Argentina, there's no real reason to think he can't.

May 30 is the deadline. The world will be watching. And honestly? Whatever he decides, it'll be the right call because it'll be his call. The greatest footballer of all time has earned that much.

🐐 Follow the Messi Story Live

The squad deadline is May 30. The World Cup starts June 11. Bookmark this blog, we'll update the moment Messi makes his decision.

Know a Messi fan? Share this with them, they need to read it.

Post a Comment

1 Comments

Please Select Embedded Mode To show the Comment System.*