Argentina’s FIFA World Cup winners arrive home from Qatar to hero’s welcome

Argentina's captain and forward Lionel Messi (C) holds the FIFA World Cup Trophy on board a bus as he celebrates alongside teammates and supporters after winning the Qatar 2022 World Cup tournament in Ezeiza, Buenos Aires province, Argentina on December 20, 2022. (Photo courtesy: AFP)
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Updated 20 December 2022
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Argentina’s FIFA World Cup winners arrive home from Qatar to hero’s welcome

  • The Argentine capital has been in party mode since their dramatic victory over France in Sunday’s final
  • The series gave the country its first World Cup win since Diego Maradona hoisted the trophy 36 years ago

BUENOS AIRES: Thousands of ecstatic fans gave Argentina’s football squad a hero’s welcome in Buenos Aires in the early hours before dawn on Tuesday after the plane carrying Lionel Messi and his World Cup-winning team mates touched down at Ezeiza airport.

The Argentine capital has been in party mode since their dramatic victory over France in Sunday’s final in Qatar, which gave the country its first World Cup win since Diego Maradona hoisted the trophy 36 years ago.

The players, wearing their gold winners’ medals around their necks and taking turns to hold the World Cup trophy aloft, waved at fans from an open-top bus as the lights from thousands of mobile phones sparkled and flags fluttered in the crowd.

Joyous fans sang to the beat of a drum and fireworks lit up the sky as the bus slowly wound its way through the crowd.

Thousands had tracked the plane, the state airline Aerolineas Argentinas AR1915, all the way from Doha and a stop-off in Rome.

The players are expected to spend a few hours at the Argentine Football Association (AFA) facilities near the airport before heading at noon to the huge Obeliso monument in the center of town, where hundreds of thousands are likely to gather.

Argentina beat France 4-2 on penalties after a scintilaing 3-3 draw, with Messi scoring twice France’s Kylian Mbappe netting three times.

Messi, 35, announced that the final would be his last match in the World Cup though he intends to play a few more games for the national side.


Formula 1 champion Norris hungry for more glory

Updated 15 sec ago
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Formula 1 champion Norris hungry for more glory

  • The McLaren driver said that claiming the drivers’ crown had not changed his work ethic or his desire to be regarded a “hunter” rather than “the hunted“
MELBOURNE: Lando Norris said on ‌Thursday that winning his first Formula One championship had only made him hungry for more as he gears up to launch his title defense at the Australian ​Grand Prix.
The McLaren driver said that claiming the drivers’ crown had not changed his work ethic or his desire to be regarded a “hunter” rather than “the hunted.”
“I’ve probably done the most training and things during the course of the off-season than I’ve ever done,” the Briton told reporters at Albert Park.
“So it’s certainly not the case that I was relaxing more or partying more or whatever it might have been. It ‌was quite ‌the opposite, in fact.
“No, I’m still just as ​hungry. ‌I ⁠think ​it made ⁠me want it more, in a way, because you get that feeling.
“The same as when you have one win, you want another one in a race.
“For me, it was the same feeling as a championship; that one is amazing, but then you definitely want to achieve two.”
Norris won last year’s race from pole after arriving in Melbourne raving about the ⁠car’s performance during winter testing.
The constructors champions are less ‌bullish about the MCL40 car’s off-season performance ‌this year, with team boss Andrea Stella saying ​they were a step behind ‌Ferrari and Mercedes.
Norris’s teammate Oscar Piastri, who led last year’s championship ‌before finishing third, was similarly reserved about their early-season prospects, saying on Wednesday they should not be considered favorites to win in Melbourne.
Norris was more upbeat.
“Even if you’re second, third, or fourth quickest, I don’t think that’s on the back ‌foot,” he said.
“I think that’s still a very good position to start in. And I think in ⁠previous years where ⁠it’s been harder to improve over the course of a season, we’ve certainly proved that you could.”
This year’s championship has plenty of unknowns due to F1’s major overhaul to chassis and engine regulations.
Ferrari’s seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton said drivers faced their most challenging season ever as they grappled with the power management demands of the more electrified engines.
Norris said he was still adapting to the changes and would probably continue to well into the season.
“(It will) probably (be) at least a third of the way through this year until we drive different tracks, ​different tires, different tarmacs, different ​weather conditions until I can get close to that level of accuracy that I was requiring last year,” he said.