ATLANTA (AP) 鈥 For Mohamed Salah and Egypt, what could have been a glorious celebration turned ugly at the end.
On the cusp of upsetting the defending champion, the Pharaohs squandered a two-goal lead late in the game and fell to Lionel Messi and Argentina on Tuesday.
The winning tally came two minutes into stoppage time and in front of the Egyptian bench. A red card was shown to goalkeeping coach Saafan Elsaghir, who had to be physically restrained from going after French referee Francois Letexier. Multiple yellow cards were doled out to those griping vehemently about Argentina’s final goal.
Egypt coach Hossam Hassan held up both arms in an 鈥淴鈥 shape 鈥 the signal in soccer for calling out racial abuse 鈥 and stated flatly that his upstart squad was victimized by a soccer establishment that wanted Messi and Argentina to advance to the quarterfinals in their pursuit of a second straight title.
鈥淲e have been treated unfairly today,鈥 Hassan said. 鈥淲e have suffered injustice.鈥
In a tournament already marred by to overturn a one-game suspension for an American player, Egypt turned up the heat on soccer’s governing body.
鈥淚 just would like to say that we would have deserved to earn this win,鈥 Hassan said, 鈥渂ut we are leaving with honor, with pride, regardless of this defeat.鈥
Hassan, who has been during the tournament, was upset that a potential second goal was overturned by a video review that showed a foul by Egypt at the start of an end-to-end play.
Egypt took a 2-0 lead anyway on Mostafa Zico’s goal in the 67th minute, but there was still enough time for Argentina to pull off a comeback for the ages in the stadium that is normally the home of NFL’s Atlanta Falcons.
Cristian Romero gave the champions hope in the 79th. off the crossbar just four minutes later. And Enzo Fern谩ndez won it for Argentina in the second minute of stoppage time 鈥 a play that began at the opposite end of the field with Salah being stripped of the ball as he tried to dribble into the penalty area, winding up face down on the turf.
Even retired NFL quarterback Tom Brady took note of the comeback, going on social media to point out this rivaled the one he pulled off against the Falcons in the Super Bowl on Feb. 5, 2017, when the New England Patriots rallied from a 28-3 deficit late in the third quarter to win 34-28 in overtime.
鈥淵eah so that might top 28-3,鈥 .
Hassan couldn’t care less about what Brady had to say. The coach was still seething that the video assistant referee didn’t feel a need for Letexier to review what Egypt felt was a foul on Salah in the area, denying what could’ve been a penalty kick in the waning minutes.
鈥淭he effect of this outcome goes way beyond the defeat itself because we haven鈥檛 seen neither respect nor fair play,鈥 Hassan said. 鈥淭here has not been respect or fair play because a penalty was ruled out. A second ball that should have been called as a penalty for us was not even checked by the VAR.鈥
When Salah led a break out of the Egyptian zone that led to Zico鈥檚 goal, it appeared the African underdog 鈥 a team that had never won a World Cup game until this tournament 鈥 was headed to the quarterfinals.
Egypt fell into a defensive shell, looking to protect its seemingly safe lead, only to have Argentina pull off another wild escape. La Albiceleste needed extra time in the round of 32. This was an even closer call for Messi and company.
It was all too much for Hassan and his players to bear.
鈥淲hat I told the referee was just that this is unfair,鈥 the coach said. 鈥淚 was saying maybe he鈥檚 carrying a scar, maybe he has something to hide. Whoever has something to hide sometimes fails to hide what he is hiding and this was exactly what I felt during that conversation.鈥
Argentina moved on to face Switzerland in the quarterfinals.
For Hassan, the tournament is over.
He has no intention of watching any more soccer.
鈥淚 promise you, from the moment I go back, I鈥檓 not going to continue following the matches of this FIFA World Cup,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is my internal fight, my internal objection, my own way of speaking up and standing up.
鈥淚 am not going to watch, not a single match of this tournament.鈥
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AP Soccer Writer James Robson contributed to this report.
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