Another celebration…
Argentines who took to the streets to celebrate their 2024 Copa America victory on Sunday night were living in a very different atmosphere to 19 months ago, when their World Cup victory sent millions pouring into a central Buenos Aires square in raucous cheers.
“It was amazing,” Diego Cáceres, a 38-year-old Buenos Aires native, recalled Argentina’s big outdoor party on Dec. 18, 2022. “This one was beautiful too,” he said of the cheering crowds and fireworks Sunday around the monument in the heart of the capital after Argentina beat Colombia 1-0 in extra time to win its third straight major tournament.
Argentina has been in economic crisis for years. But today, annual inflation is as high as 270%. Nearly 60% of the country's 45 million people live in poverty.
Argentines have grown weary of the high-stakes anxiety of the news: Anti-government protests are raging, workers’ strikes are paralyzing cities, President Javier Milei, a self-described “anarcho-capitalist,” is announcing new spending cuts and criticizing feminism.
This week, Argentine television broadcast dire warnings about the peso hitting a new low against the dollar, dragging down the value of people's savings.
The last time Cáceres celebrated his national team in Buenos Aires’ central square, he was working as a chef in various restaurants and renting an apartment. Now, he said, he is unemployed and sleeping on the streets.
“Everything is terrible now,” Cáceres said after the 2024 Copa America final between Argentina and Colombia was postponed in Miami after multiple fan overloads. “Just when you think things can’t get any more expensive, they get more expensive.”
Some in the superstitious nation joked that they had paid a heavy price in Qatar for their first World Cup win since 1986, alluding to the socio-economic crises that followed the triumph on the pitch. “Has anyone checked the terms and conditions for winning the Copa América?” read one X post widely shared among Argentines, suggesting that the Argentine people might have to “pay” for the recent title.
But Argentines say they need this tournament, and this trophy, more than they ever imagined. For Argentina, South America's biggest football championship offers more than just glory, it also offers a glimmer of escape from their grim reality.
“It’s our greatest form of entertainment, that’s why it’s so important,” said Erika Maya, a 47-year-old homeless mother of six, as she stared at the televised game through the glass door of a locked restaurant. “You can forget everything else that’s going on, just enjoy it.”
When Argentina only has football to be proud of
With each new outrage over the past 24 days, Argentines have found solace in obsessively watching their beloved national team, led by Lionel Messi, play for an hour and a half, creating moments of anguish and elation that ripple across this football-mad country.
“Soccer is the fruit of our society, it is what we are proud of, it is what we give to the world,” 21-year-old private Fabrizo Diaz, who watched the Copa America final with his girlfriend, proudly told the AP.
As the match kicked off at Miami's Hard Rock Stadium, restaurants in Buenos Aires were closed, streets were deserted and the vast city was eerily silent, with most Argentines glued to their home TVs as if under COVID-19 lockdown.
Rumours of Messi's retirement have fuelled football fever in recent weeks, with the 37-year-old captain's non-committal stories in television interviews sometimes evoking hope and despair across the country.
“I believe Messi will continue. I don’t know if he can make it to the next World Cup, but this is not the end,” said Adrian Vallejos, 32, as he watched the final with his wife and son. “I mean, God, I hope so!”
Messi's persistent foot injuries - including an ankle injury in the second half of the final that forced him off - have attracted more attention than his performances in this Copa America. But the Argentine breathed a sigh of relief when asked by ESPN this week if this match would be his last in blue and white, Messi refused to rule out playing in the 2026 World Cup.
“We are in a very profound transitional period for this team,” said Alejo Levoratti, a sports sociologist at Argentina’s CONICET research institute. “It is only in retirement that Messi reaches his peak and finds this connection with his team, this communion with Argentina.”
Another great Argentine player of the same age, Angel Di María, has announced that Sunday’s clash with Colombia will be his last game for the Albiceleste. Di María left the pitch in tears to a standing ovation after Argentina’s decisive goal. “I dreamed of retiring like this,” he told reporters.
After years of disappointment in international tournaments, Argentina's recent run of triumphs - Copa América 2021, Finalissima 2022, World Cup 2022 - has the struggling country excited once again.
President Milei, who briefly played as a goalkeeper for professional football team Chacarita Juniors, congratulated the national team with an all-caps message on social network X: “WE ARE CHAMPIONS AGAIN...!!!”.
In the trash-strewn center of Buenos Aires, the scene of many protests in recent weeks, national pride seemed to have been restored for a short time. Friends and strangers clad in Argentine flags and jerseys hugged and jumped up and down, some singing “Muchachos,” the unofficial anthem of the 2022 World Cup, others chanting Messi’s name.
Tomorrow, they will return to the burden of food and clothing worries, to increasingly gloomy news about inflation. Tomorrow, President Milei may have to deliver another message, such as the decision to cut the number of ministries in the country in half that he issued when he first took office.
No one knows what will happen to this country in economic recession. But all Argentines know, they have the right to celebrate the 2024 Copa America championship. Everything else will come later!
Nguyen Khanh
Source: https://www.congluan.vn/chuc-vo-dich-copa-america-lieu-thuoc-giam-dau-cho-dat-nuoc-argentina-post303629.html
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