Argentina survived a 2-0 deficit to beat Egypt 3-2 in the 2026 FIFA World Cup Round of 16, but the scoreline tells roughly half the story. The other half belongs to a VAR review that disallowed an Egyptian goal, flipped the match’s momentum, and launched a firestorm about how technology-assisted officiating actually works in practice.
The disallowed goal, scored by midfielder Mostafa Zico around the hour mark, was chalked off after video review determined that teammate Marawan Attia had committed a foul on Argentina’s Lisandro Martinez in the buildup. What followed was a full Argentine comeback capped by an Enzo Fernandez stoppage-time winner. Egypt went from controlling a knockout match to watching their World Cup end in the span of about 30 minutes.
What actually happened on the pitch
Egypt came out swinging in the July 7 match and built a commanding 2-0 lead. Then came the Zico goal that would have made it 3-0. VAR intervened, referee Francois Letexier reviewed the footage, and the goal was wiped off the board. The reasoning: Attia’s challenge on Martinez constituted a foul in the buildup to the goal.
Egypt’s head coach Hossam Hassan did not mince words afterward. He called the VAR decision an “injustice,” pointing to what he viewed as a glaring double standard in how the technology was applied throughout the match. His central complaint: no VAR review took place for a potential foul involving Alexis Mac Allister during the sequence that led to Argentina’s winning goal. Hassan also asserted that the tournament appeared “directed towards Argentina.”










