Argentina vs Spain: Lionel Messi and Lamine Yamal Stand on the Verge of History in World Cup Final
When Argentina and Spain take the field for the FIFA World Cup 2026 final at the MetLife Stadium on Sunday, 19th July, all eyes will be focused on two players at completely opposite ends of their professional careers. Argentine icon Lionel Messi, now 39 years old, and Spain's teenage prodigy Lamine Yamal, just 19, are both chasing individual milestones that could completely rewrite the history books of this international fixture.
Beyond the weight of the trophy, this match features a highly unique statistical narrative. Both Messi and Yamal have the opportunity to break long-standing records for the oldest and youngest goalscorers in the history of matches between Argentina and Spain.

Lionel Messi Chasing Alfredo Di Stefano's Record
If Lionel Messi finds the back of the net in the final, he will comfortably become the oldest player to ever score in an Argentina v Spain international match. On the day of the final, Messi will be exactly 39 years and 25 days old.
The current record has stood for over 65 years, held by the legendary Alfredo Di Stefano. The Argentine-born forward, who later obtained Spanish citizenship and played for Spain, was 34 years, 11 months, and 8 days old when he scored in a 2-0 victory over Argentina in Sevilla on 11th June 1961.
Should Messi score on Sunday, he will shatter Di Stefano milestone by an incredible 3 years and 324 days (1,508 days). Messi is already very familiar with scoring in this fixture, having previously converted a penalty against Spain in 2009 and scored from open play during a 4-1 friendly win in 2010.
Lamine Yamal and the Cosmic 1966 Connection
On the other side of the pitch, Spain's sensational winger Lamine Yamal is looking to become the absolute youngest player to ever score in this fixture. Yamal, who will be 19 years and 6 days old on matchday, has an unbelievable historical connection to this specific rivalry. He was born on 13th July 2007, the exact 41st anniversary of the only previous World Cup meeting between Argentina and Spain in 1966. That iconic match took place exactly 60 years and 6 days before this upcoming final.
If Yamal manages to score against Argentina, he will comfortably break the record held by Spanish defensive legend Pirri (Jose Martinez Sanchez). Pirri was 21 years, 4 months, and 3 days old when he scored Spain's lone goal against Argentina in that 1966 World Cup group clash. A goal from Yamal would lower that youngest-scorer benchmark by 2 years and 114 days (849 days).
Remembering the Legends of the Past
As these two modern superstars chase history in New Jersey, the final also serves as a poignant reminder of the fixture's past heroes.
Former Argentine forward Jose Sanfilippo, who became the first player to ever score a brace in this international fixture back in 1960, sadly passed away on 4th June 2026 at the age of 91, just one week ahead of the 2026 World Cup opening match. Meanwhile, 87-year-old Luis Artime, who scored the match-winning brace for Argentina against Spain in 1966, remains alive and stands as the oldest living goalscorer of this international clash.


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