Cooling vests make Austria a recovery test for Argentina

Cooling vests make Austria a recovery test for Argentina

Argentina's latest training details shift the Austria preview from pure lineup talk to load management. This article explains why cooling vests, managed minutes and Tagliafico caution should shape how fans read Scaloni's next team sheet.

Argentina Focus
June 19, 2026 · 6:06 AM
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Argentina's next Austria decision is starting to look less like a debate over names and more like a test of recovery. The clearest clue from the last 24 hours was not another record projection for Lionel Messi. It was Cuti Romero and Lisandro Martinez training in cooling vests after a 36C session in Kansas City, while the staff split the group between regenerative work and ball work after the 3-0 win over Algeria. 1
That matters because Austria arrives quickly. Argentina play their second Group J match on Monday, June 22 at 17:00 UTC in Dallas, with the final group game against Jordan five days later. 2 If Scaloni changes the XI, the first read should be physical management, not dissatisfaction.

The new signal is recovery, not a reshuffle for its own sake

TyC reported that Argentina used cooling vests and insulated boots after training in Kansas heat, borrowing a method more familiar from Formula 1 and already used by Spain at this World Cup. The same report said players who had logged 45 minutes or more against Algeria did regenerative work, while those who had not played worked with the ball. 1
Cooling vests and boots used in World Cup heat
Cooling gear has become part of Argentina's post-opener recovery routine in U.S. heat. 1
That is a small detail with a big tactical consequence. Argentina are not just choosing the best eleven in isolation. They are managing players who came into the tournament with uneven rhythm, then played a first match in a compressed group-stage calendar.
TyC also reported that, before the evening session, the players had a short family window: some stayed around the camp, some went out in Kansas City, and others used the pool at the Compass Minerals National Performance Center because of the heat. The later training session was lighter than usual because less than 24 hours had passed since the opener. 3
None of this means Argentina are easing off. It means the staff are treating the Austria match as the first real load-management decision of the tournament.

Why Molina and Alvarez are different cases from Almada

The right-back call is the cleanest example. Gonzalo Montiel started against Algeria, but TyC reported that his halftime replacement by Nahuel Molina had been planned because both players needed managed minutes. Molina had missed the warm-up matches while recovering, then came through the second half without physical issues. 4
Julian Alvarez belongs in the same bucket. He came into the tournament short of full rhythm because of left-ankle inflammation, entered after halftime against Algeria, and, according to TyC, left good physical impressions. That gives Scaloni a route back toward one of his habitual starters without framing Lautaro Martinez's opener as a failed audition. 4
Thiago Almada is the different case. TyC's latest read is that the fourth-midfielder spot is the main tactical doubt: Almada started the opener, but the introduction of Nico Gonzalez with Alvarez changed the front structure and gave the team a different profile. 4
Lionel Scaloni at Argentina training
Scaloni's Austria decisions now sit between recovery, rhythm and matchup needs. 4
So there are two kinds of possible changes. Molina and Alvarez would be returns to normal hierarchy after injury management. Gonzalez over Almada would be a tactical preference for Austria's profile.

Tagliafico still looks like the line Scaloni will not cross early

The left side remains the place where caution is most visible. TyC reported that Facundo Medina met expectations as an improvised left-back against Algeria and that Argentina's staff do not plan to rush Nicolas Tagliafico for Austria despite the player's desire to be available. Medina would therefore continue because of Tagliafico's physical situation. 4
ESPN added a slightly broader recovery picture: Diego Monroig reported that Tagliafico was expected to start training with the group either later on June 18 or on June 19, which would put him at least in position for the final group match against Jordan. ESPN also reported that Leandro Paredes is expected to get his first minutes of this World Cup against Austria, though not as a starter. 5
That makes the Austria team sheet easier to read. If Medina starts again, it is probably not a verdict on Tagliafico's status in the squad. It is a sign that Argentina see no reason to spend an injury risk on Matchday 2 when the third group match is still available.

Austria raise the cost of getting the balance wrong

Austria are not just a placeholder between Algeria and Jordan. Ralf Rangnick's team beat Jordan 3-1 in its opener, although TyC described the win as harder than expected: Jordan equalized in the second half, Austria only went back ahead through a 76th-minute own goal, and Marko Arnautovic settled it with a stoppage-time penalty. 6
Rangnick's own comments also point to the type of match Argentina should expect. He called Argentina a classic possession team and said the meeting would be "extremely difficult" after watching the champions' opener. 6
There is also a standings reason not to treat this as a rotation luxury. ESPN says a win over Austria would secure Argentina a place in the round of 32. 5 Infobae's group-format explainer notes that the top two in each group advance, along with eight of the twelve best third-placed teams. 7
That is why the recovery thread matters. Argentina can make Austria the match that buys time for Tagliafico, Paredes and the rest of the rotation. But only if the starters who come in keep control of the game.

The Messi records are real, but they should not drive the plan

Lionel Messi celebrating during Argentina's opener
Messi's record chase is the loudest subplot, but Argentina's next lineup still has to be built around match control and freshness. 8
Messi's next personal targets are enormous. Infobae reported that he can move past Miroslav Klose as the World Cup's all-time top scorer with one more goal, become the player with the most World Cup wins if Argentina beat Austria, and pass Rivelino for most World Cup goals from outside the box if his next one comes from distance. 8
The team context is just as encouraging. TyC placed Argentina, England and the United States among the three strongest first-round impressions of the tournament, while noting that Argentina showed it can dominate matches even without always having the ball. 9
Still, the lesson from the latest Argentina camp details is not to chase the cleanest story. The cleanest story is Messi. The more useful one is Scaloni's attempt to win the group-stage hinge match while keeping the squad healthy enough for the rest of it.
For Austria, watch the first hour more than the headline names. If Molina can start at full speed, if Alvarez can press without looking protected, if Paredes gets a controlled entry, and if Tagliafico is held back without destabilizing the left side, Argentina will have turned the cooling-vest day into something more valuable than a recovery footnote.

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