The Journal Entry #027 : The Boy Who Was Bathed By Messi Is Now His Enemy
This Sunday, the world stops.
Argentina meets Spain in the 2026 World Cup final at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. Kickoff is 3 PM local time. One match. One winner. Ninety minutes that will be talked about for the next fifty years.
But this final is not just a game. It is the ending of one story and the beginning of another. And strangely, both stories share the same two people.
How They Got Here
Argentina did not walk into this final. They fought for it. In the semifinal against England, the game was locked at 1-1 deep into the second half. Then Messi, at 39 years old, produced two moments of pure class. He set up Enzo Fernández to level the tie, and minutes later, in stoppage time, his cross found Lautaro Martínez, who headed it home. Argentina won 2-1. The defending champions are one win away from doing what almost no team has ever done: winning back to back World Cups.
Spain reached the final in an even more terrifying way. They beat France 2-0, and it was their sixth clean sheet in seven matches. Think about that. A team with almost no weaknesses, conceding almost nothing, marching through the tournament like a machine built for exactly this moment.
Both teams eliminated giants to get here. Both teams believe this is their destiny.
The Photograph That Started Everything
Now here is where the story turns strange and beautiful.
Nineteen years ago, in September 2007, a 20-year-old Lionel Messi sat in the Barcelona dressing room holding a baby. That baby was being bathed with a rubber duck, laughing, completely unaware that he was in the arms of a man who would become the greatest footballer in history. The baby’s name was Lamine Yamal. He was a few months old.
That photograph stayed hidden for sixteen years. Then in 2024, Yamal’s father finally released it, with a caption that now feels almost like prophecy: the start of two legends.
Nobody could have guessed how true those words would become. Yamal grew up to become the youngest player to ever score at a European Championship. He debuted for Barcelona at fifteen. He is now, at nineteen, one of the most talked about footballers on the planet. On Sunday, for the very first time in their lives, Messi and Yamal will stand on the same pitch as rivals, not as legend and baby, but as two warriors chasing the same trophy.
What They Have Said About Each Other
This is not just a coincidence of photographs. There is real respect between them.
Messi has openly called Yamal the name he would choose if he had to pick one player from the new generation who has the brightest future ahead. Yamal, for his part, has said that whenever people question who the greatest player of all time is, he does not understand the debate, because for him, the answer is always Messi.
But do not mistake respect for softness. When Yamal was asked directly what he would do if he faced Messi in a World Cup final, he did not hesitate. He made it clear that admiration would not stop him from doing everything possible to beat his idol and lift the trophy for Spain. That is the mentality that has carried a teenager to a World Cup final.
Master Against Apprentice
Football writers are already calling this a master versus apprentice final. Messi is near the end of a career that changed the sport forever. Yamal is at the very beginning of what many believe will be an equally historic career. One man is chasing a perfect final chapter. The other is chasing his very first World Cup, at an age when most footballers have not even become regular starters for their club.
There is something almost cruel about football writing a story this perfect. The man who once cradled a baby in a locker room now has to find a way to stop that same baby from lifting the World Cup away from him.
Why This Final Feels Bigger Than Football
Every football fan, whether they support Argentina, Spain, or neither, understands what is at stake here. This is not simply two strong teams meeting in a final. It is a passing of the torch, happening in real time, in front of the entire world.
Somewhere in that stadium on Sunday, a 39-year-old man and a 19-year-old boy will look at each other across the pitch. One of them will win. One of them will lose. But football will remember this moment regardless of the scoreline, because some stories are simply too good to be written by anyone except real life.
Set your alarms. Clear your Sunday evening. This is not a match to miss.

