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What We Learned From the World Cup Semi-Finals

The World Cup semi-finals delivered everything football fans could ask for: tactical masterclasses, late drama, and performances that could define legacies. As the tournament heads into its final weekend, here are five of the biggest lessons from the last four teams standing.

1. Spain might be the best team in the tournament

Forget flashy football for a moment. Spain has become incredibly complete, conceding only 1 goal throughout the competition. 

Against France, they controlled possession, pressed aggressively and took their chances clinically.

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They have looked like the most balanced side throughout the knockout stages.

2. Experience always matters

The tournament belonged to young stars, but the semi-finals reminded everyone why experienced players are priceless.

Lionel Messi once again dictated the tempo in the biggest match despite being 39 years old, while Spain’s experienced midfield controlled France from start to finish.

3. Defending deep is dangerous

England retreated after taking the lead, inviting Argentina onto them.

Instead of chasing a second goal, they protected a narrow advantage and paid the price, failing to learn from the same mistake Egypt made in the round of 16. 

Modern football rarely rewards teams that stop attacking too early.

4. Argentina still know how to win the biggest games

Image Credit: AFP/Getty Images

Champions have a habit of surviving moments that would eliminate everyone else.

Even after falling behind England, Argentina never panicked. Messi kept creating, Enzo Fernández inspired the comeback, and Lautaro Martínez delivered the decisive finish.

Winning ugly is sometimes more valuable than winning beautifully.

5. It’s not over until the referee blows the whistle 

Image Credit: Getty Images

If the quarter-finals taught us anything, the semi-finals reinforced it: no lead is safe until the game is over. 

England were minutes away from reaching their first World Cup final since 1966 before Argentina scored twice in the closing stages. The lesson is simple: elite teams keep believing until the final whistle; elite teams know how to keep their composure and dig deep even at 89 minutes. 

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