A Lionel Messi penalty on Wednesday salvaged a 1-1 draw for Argentina against Paraguay as the two-time world champions once again struggled at the Copa America.
Messi swept in a 57th-minute spot-kick at Belo Horizonte’s Mineirao stadium to cancel out a first-half opener from Paraguay’s Richard Sanchez.
Argentina also had goalkeeper Franco Armani to thank for a second-half penalty save that prevented Paraguay from taking a 2-1 lead in the Group B battle.
The draw left Argentina with one point from two games and on the bottom of the table with one game remaining.
However, with the two best third-placed teams advancing to the quarter-finals, Argentina could still reach the last eight with a decisive win over Qatar in their final group game.
“We have to win,” Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni said of his team’s date with Qatar.
“We will take stock of what we did well and what we did not do well and we will make decisions. We are lucky that we are still alive in this tournament,” Scaloni added, singling out goalkeeper Armani for special praise.
“We trust Franco,” Scaloni said. “He is our starting goalkeeper. He saved a penalty and kept us alive. I’m glad he had a good performance.”
However, the South American giants will need to raise their game to advance any further after another disjointed performance that followed their opening defeat to Colombia on Saturday last week.
A lackluster opening saw both sides struggle to generate any sort of attacking momentum, with neither side managing to get a shot on goal until Paraguay striker Derlis Gonzalez’s effort was deflected behind for a corner in the 29th minute.
From the ensuing set piece, centerhalf Junior Alonso scooped a half-chance wide as Argentina escaped.
That flurry of activity spurred Argentina fleetingly at the other end, with Lautaro Martinez winning a free-kick in a dangerous position on the edge of the area after a foul by Paraguay skipper Gustavo Gomez.
However, Messi was unable to conjure anything from the free-kick, floating his effort up and over the wall, but without the pace to trouble goalkeeper Roberto Fernandez, who gathered comfortably.
In the 37th minute, Paraguay’s more organized performance got its reward.
A swift counterattack saw the ball transferred to Newcastle United’s Miguel Almiron near halfway.
The live wire forward turned on the afterburners to roast Roberto Pereya down the left wing before crossing for Sanchez, who drove a low finish into the bottom corner of the Argentina net.
A rattled Argentina were given a huge let-off moments later when Armani came racing out of his area to shut down Gonzalez. A wild kick brought down Gonzalez, but Armani somehow escaped a red card and was only cautioned.
Scaloni went for broke at halftime, bolstering his attack with the introduction of Sergio Aguero and the move paid instant dividends.
Aguero deftly lost his marker on 51 minutes and pulled back for Martinez, whose shot cannoned off the woodwork. Messi pounced on the rebound, but Fernandez blocked with a diving save.
The chance appeared to have gone begging, but the video assistant referee had spotted that Martinez’s shot had in fact struck Ivan Piris’s arm before hitting the bar and Brazilian referee Wilson Sampaio pointed to the spot.
Messi stepped up to sweep in the spot-kick and Argentina were level.
Yet, there was more drama in the 62nd minute, when Paraguay’s Gonzalez burst into the box and was clumsily hacked down by Nicolas Otamendi for a clear penalty.
Armani, who was fortunate to be on the pitch, dived the right way and parried Gonzalez’s spot-kick wide.
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