The defending champions Argentina are rolling, the goals are flowing and Lionel Messi is hunting history once again. Argentina arrive in Dallas on Monday knowing victory over Austria could secure top spot in Group J, while their captain stands on the verge of becoming the top scorer in the tournament’s history.
Standing in their way is an Austrian side energised by Ralf Rangnick's demanding philosophy, one built on intensity, pressing and chaos.
Whether that is enough to unsettle the tournament favourites remains the question.
Lionel Messi is one goal away from surpassing Miroslav Klose (16 goals) to become the men's FIFA World Cup all-time leading goalscorer. Scoring would also make him only the third player ever to net in six consecutive World Cup matches.
Argentina could become only the seventh nation to score three or more goals in four consecutive World Cup matches, a feat last achieved by Spain between 1998 and 2002.
Austria is a very tough team, as we're seeing with the vast majority of the teams participating in this World Cup.
Argentina assistant coach Pablo Aimar
Austria are incredibly lethal from dead-ball situations; seven of their last 10 World Cup goals have originated from set-pieces.
Austria can secure qualification for the knockout stage with a positive result -- for the first time since 1982, in what is their first tournament appearance since 1998.
Argentina have won eight consecutive matches under Lionel Scaloni, keeping clean sheets in five of their last eight competitive internationals.
We know what kind of opponent we're up against, what kind of quality they have in their ranks, even besides Messi, but also what they're capable of as a team.
Austria captain David Alaba
Defeating Austria would be Argentina's eighth consecutive World Cup win, making it the second-longest winning streak in tournament history, behind only Brazil's 11. They will also become the second reigning champions to open their title defence with back-to-back wins, matching France's 2022 start, putting to bed the infamous "champion's curse"
Argentina have not conceded a single goal in group-stage football at the World Cup since their shock 2-1 opening-match defeat to Saudi Arabia in Qatar four years ago, keeping three consecutive group-stage clean sheets since.
This is the first-ever competitive fixture between the two nations at a major international tournament. Their only two historical senior meetings were friendlies played in Austria, featuring a 5-1 win for an inspired Diego Maradona-led Argentina in 1980 and a 1-1 draw in 1990.
Ragnick’s calculated trap to stifle the champions
Ralf Rangnick has engineered a system designed to rattle the champions by combining clever spatial traps with a relentless ticking clock. Instead of chasing the ball, Austria compress the game by funnelling opposition build-up toward the flanks. An attacker executes a curved recovery run to block central escape routes, using the touchline as an extra defender to trap the ball-carrier. Once the trap is sprung, Austria trigger a fierce eight-second blitz.
We know how good Argentina are…We respect them, but we are confident in our strengths. If we bring our qualities to the pitch, we will pose problems for any team.
Austria midfielder Paul Wanner
The nearest unit swarms the opponent to reclaim possession high up the pitch, only dropping into a defensive block if they fail to win it within that strict timeframe.