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Argentina’s Challenge at the World Cup: Becoming the Third Back-to-Back World Champion
Argentina will not only defend its crown at the 2026 World Cup — it will chase a feat that seems almost impossible. Only two countries have ever won back-to-back titles, and La Scaloneta wants to join that exclusive club.
Argentina wants to enter a club almost nobody has touched
The Argentina National Team will head into the 2026 World Cup carrying far more than the pressure of defending the crown won in Qatar 2022. Lionel Scaloni’s squad faces a challenge that, for decades, has seemed reserved only for legends: becoming just the third national team to win back-to-back World Cups.
Since the World Cup began, only two nations have managed what Argentina is now chasing: Italy and Brazil. No one else has succeeded, not even historic teams filled with stars and considered overwhelming favorites.
Argentina’s mission will be anything but easy. The team will arrive at the tournament as defending champions, with an established core, a group used to competing on the biggest stages, and potentially still led by Lionel Messi, who could be playing in the final World Cup of his career.
Italy and Brazil: the only nations to repeat World Cup glory
The first country to write that golden chapter was Italy, crowned champions in 1934 and 1938. The Azzurri secured the first-ever back-to-back World Cup titles under Vittorio Pozzo, still the only manager to win consecutive World Cups.
That Italian side built a winning identity during politically tense times and left a lasting mark on international football. Legends such as Giuseppe Meazza and Silvio Piola helped turn Italy into the first true powerhouse of the competition.
Decades later, another nation changed football forever: Brazil. The Seleção lifted the trophy in Sweden 1958 and repeated the feat in Chile 1962, powered by a generation that combined talent, tactical evolution, and unforgettable stars.
The rise of Pelé, alongside iconic names like Garrincha, helped establish a team that looked nearly unbeatable.
What makes it even more astonishing is that, since the 1962 triumph, no defending champion has managed to repeat the achievement. More than six decades have passed without another back-to-back world champion.
The long graveyard of champions who failed to repeat
The list of teams that failed while attempting to defend the trophy is massive. Germany, Italy, France, Spain, England, Argentina, and even mighty Brazil stumbled when trying to repeat history.
Argentina knows that pain all too well. After conquering the world in Mexico 1986, the team led by Diego Armando Maradona came painfully close to a second straight title in Italy 1990, only to lose the final against Germany after a tense match decided by a penalty.
More recently, France nearly achieved the feat. After winning Russia 2018, Les Bleus returned to the final in Qatar 2022 but ultimately fell to Argentina in one of the most dramatic World Cup matches ever played.
Can Argentina end a drought of more than 60 years?
La Scaloneta still has much of its championship core intact, has built a clear competitive identity, and enters the tournament strengthened by recent success, including the 2024 Copa América.
The leadership of Lionel Messi, the competitive mentality of the group, and the experience of players such as Emiliano “Dibu” Martínez, Rodrigo De Paul, Julián Álvarez, Lautaro Martínez, and Enzo Fernández continue to fuel the dream.




















