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    Outrageous cost of pint at Premier League stadiums in 2030 predicted with fans to be hit in the pockets

    FOOTBALL fans will have to start preparing for even higher beer prices at stadiums.It has been predicted that some Premier League grounds will charge more than £13 per pint by 2030.Arsenal fans could be charged up to £13.12 per pint by 2030Credit: GettyFans at the London Stadium will be expected to pay the same for their beerCredit: ReutersBrentford fans will have the cheapest pints in the capitalCredit: GettyOld Trafford is one of the cheaper stadiums to buy a drinkCredit: PAWest Ham and Arsenal currently have the most expensive pints in the top division.On average the rivals charge £7.57 on each pint, which is an increase of £1.27 since 2022.A recent assessment of the current prices across all the grounds and the average inflation rate could shock some match-going supporters.Football shirt retailer UKSoccerShop has claimed that in six years, many clubs will be sharing at least £10 per pint.READ MORE ON FOOTBALLThe study claims that fans at the Emirates and the London Stadium will have to fork out £13.12 per pint.The Hammers also have the most expensive pie prices in the Premier League.Other London grounds will also be pricey, with only Brentford’s Gtech Community stadium charging less than a tenner.In 2030, a pint at the Bees’ venue is predicted to cost £8.33 which is up from the current average price of £4.80.Most read in FootballCASINO SPECIAL – BEST CASINO WELCOME OFFERSUp and down the country, prices will vary, but London will remain the most expensive.In Manchester, prices will almost hit £10 per pint with the Etihad expected to reach £9.58, it’s predicted.Biggest football kit fails after controversy over new England shirtHowever, at Old Trafford, the price will only be £6.25, which will make it one of the cheapest in the Premier League.Teams that would be charging over £10 include the likes of Newcastle United, Tottenham Hotspur, Crystal Palace, Aston Villa, Fulham, Chelsea and Nottingham Forest.The study was based on the inflation rate of alcoholic drinks in data collected by the Office for National Statistics.A spokesperson from UKSoccerShop said: “Drinkflation is on the rise.”With UK households feeling the cost of living squeeze, hospitality services trying to work around spiralling costs, with some choosing to serve weaker beer.”It’s likely to affect our stadiums, too. READ MORE SUN STORIES”Using inflation figures from the ONS, we can estimate what prices football fans could pay for a match day pint.”We found that over £6 could become the norm up north and over £10 in London – some may even get closer to £15 by the end of 2030.” More

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    Uefa confirm major change to European football in huge boost to Man Utd, Chelsea and Arsenal fans

    UEFA have announced a major change to ticket prices for this season’s Champions League, Europa League and Conference League.The European governing body confirmed a price cap for away fans following their favourite club in various stadium visits around the continent.UEFA have announced a price cap on away tickets for this season’s competitionsCredit: ReutersAway tickets will be reduced further more next season in Uefa competitionsCredit: GettyThe maximum ticket prices for away fans will be €60 (£51m) in the Champions League, €40 (£34) in the Europa League and €20 (£17) in the Conference League.Things will get even better next season as visiting supporters will pay no more than €50 (£42) in the Champions League, €35 (£29) in the Europa League and €20 (£17) in the Conference League.Uefa came to the decision following an agreement with European Clubs’ Association and Football Supporters’ Europe.A statement read: “Starting with the 2024/25 season, the maximum ticket prices for away fans will be €60 in the UEFA Champions League, €40 in the UEFA Europa League and €20 in the UEFA Conference League. Read More on Football”This will be further reduced in the 2025/26 season to a maximum price of €50 in the UEFA Champions League, €35 in the UEFA Europa League and still €20 in the UEFA Conference League.”The news will be welcomed by the Premier League’s representatives for this season’s Uefa competitions.Manchester City, Arsenal, Liverpool and Aston Villa fans are set for four trips in the Champions League.The same goes for Tottenham and Manchester United supporters in the Europa League.Most read in FootballChelsea fans, on the other hand, will be going on three away games in the Conference League.There will be more trips in the knockout stages if the Premier League clubs finish in the top 24 places in their competition.Cristiano Ronaldo reveals bizarre thing that ‘turns him on’ during live Champions League drawIf they finish in the top eight of their respective league phase then they will qualify straight to the Last 16 and avoid the play-off round. More

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    Fans say ‘this is gonna save boxing’ as new price for PPV fights is proposed

    SAUDI supremo Turki Alalshikh wants to overhaul boxing’s pay-per-view structure and LOWER prices – and fight fans are over the moon.Prices for the premier fights in the sport have shot up in recent years, much to the frustration of fans worldwide.Pay-per-view prices for big boxing fights have shot up in recent yearsCredit: GETTYSaudi boxing supremo Turki Alalshikh wants to LOWER the prices fight fans payCredit: GettyBoxing fans in the UK once paid a cool £19.95 to watch fights from the comfort of their homes, but broadcasters bumped up the price to £24.95 in December 2019 for Anthony Joshua rematch with Andy Ruiz Jr.American fans have it even worse, regularly paying between $69.99 (£53.31) and $84.99 (£64.72) to watch the elite throw down, fees which have led to an increase in illegal streaming.But Alalshikh plans to combat the rise in dodgy streaming by working with broadcasters to lower their prices to a less than £20 in the UK and $20 in the USA.During an appearance on talkSPORT, he said: “You mention the PPV, I think this is my next big fight and I want your advice also.READ MORE BOXING NEWS”I dream of a PPV with a good price to make the fans happy and subscribe and get them to watch it legally.”Usually when I see a high PPV, a lot of people go and watch the fight illegally and this is not healthy for boxing and the platform.”What I will try to push is to have our Riyadh Season shows at less than £20 in England and less than $20 around the world…”I would prefer to have one million fans subscribe and buy the PPV for £20 than less than 500,000 [for £40].Most read in BoxingBEST FREE BET SIGN UP OFFERS FOR UK BOOKMAKERS”The people go around it illegally because the price is high. In the future, this will not build boxing.”If I give the fans good fights at a good price then I will increase the fanbase.”Anthony Joshua and Daniel Dubois on track to break Tyson Fury’s stunning record at world title fight Alalshikh’s plans were well received by fight fans, one of whom said: “Salute!!”Another said: “Man of the people.”And another said: “This man might be the saviour.”One remarked: “This is gonna save boxing.”Another chimed in: “There goes my hero!”Brit boxing fans had to pay £24.99 in May to watch the historic undisputed heavyweight title fight between Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk, while Americans forked out $69.99.READ MORE SUN STORIESThey will, however, pay considerably less for this month’s IBF heavyweight title fight between defending champion Daniel Dubois and former titleholder Anthony Joshua.TNT Sports have slapped a £19.95 price tag on the domestic dust-up, which will take place in front of 96,000 fans at Wembley Stadium. More

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    Shock surge in price of replica Premier League shirts revealed including club whose top now costs £27 more than in 2019

    PREMIER League sides have hiked the cost of new season shirts – with some rocketing 56 per cent in five years, we can reveal.Half the 20 top-flight clubs charge £80 or more for a standard adult replica jersey.Premier League replica shirts are soaring in priceCredit: RexMany fans are being expected to fork out £70-£80 for a jerseyCredit: GettyForest shirts have gone up a whopping 56%West Ham shirts have gone up 36%Another four want at least £70.The worst are Nottingham Forest who, in 2019, put a £48 price tag on an adult top.It now costs £75.Dr Peter Rohlmann, who is a German sports marketing expert, told The Sun on Sunday: “Ten years ago the price of Premier League replica shirts was the lowest in Europe, but demand from football fans has grown extraordinarily.READ MORE FOOTBALL NEWS“Clubs’ expectations on kit suppliers have also increased, so the battle between manufacturers is becoming stronger and more expansive. Replica shirts are now the most popular merchandise for each football club.”Consumer expert Jane Hawkes insisted the prices are “not remotely justifiable”.She said: “This is another own goal by mega-rich football clubs.“Shirt prices seem to have been soaring since the pandemic and, with no big rise in production costs, it is hard to see any justification.Most read in Football“Pricing merchandise out of reach for loyal fans in a cost-of-living crisis is unfair and could, in the long term, backfire on clubs.”Ahead of the Euros, the England shirt was being sold for £125.Meet the new Wags of the Premier League season, from a Belgian interior designer to a Portuguese modelSome clubs, including Brentford, have tried to help fans by only bringing out a new top every two years.Their 2023/25 home shirt remains one of the cheapest at £60.Tottenham charges £85.Every club was contacted for comment.Tottenham put price increases down to a rise in general manufacturing, materials and shipping costs, and vowed to give fans “the most innovative and high-quality product possible”.A Brentford spokesman said: “We believe in football being affordable for our fans. The two-year cycle not only ensures affordability, but aligns with our commitment to reducing waste and promoting a greener future.”Palace shirts have increased by 20%I spent £338 on gearNEWCASTLE fan Michael Bramley forked out £338 on kit.That included home and away adult shirts, a child’s top, shorts, socks and a kid’s jacket.He says all clubs should have two-year shirt cycles, like Brentford, to help families.Michael, 37, who makes hospital equipment, said: “Last year, we managed to buy our son, Jake, seven, a full kit for £55. But now that’s the price of the shirt.“I’ve seen the prices increasing over the years. Two-year kit cycles should be mandatory to help the fans.“There’s a pressure to buy new shirts every year and Jake wouldn’t go without the new kit.“I hope that working-class families don’t get priced out of going to games and getting the shirts if prices continue to go up.”Model and social media manager Michele Ortiz-McGhee, 36, had to get her nine-year-old son Tom to buy his own Fulham kit.The mum of two said: “He used pocket money because we can’t afford it. We are about to fork out for new school uniform.“My husband and I can’t afford new tops ourselves. The clubs are laughing all the way to the bank. It is so unfair.“There should be a limit put on the price of these tops.” More

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    The Sun launches Footie For All Fund to help protect kids’ clubs hit by the cost-of-living crisis

    THE Sun is today launching a landmark Footie For All Fund to help protect kids’ clubs hit hard by the cost-of-living crisis.We have teamed up with Tesco’s Stronger Starts programme to hand out £150,000 worth of grants to grass roots youth football clubs struggling with funds.
    The Sun is launching our landmark Footie For All Fund to help protect kids’ clubs hit hard by the cost-of-living crisisCredit: Oliver Dixon
    Harry Redknapp has backed The Sun’s Footie For All FundCredit: Louis Wood
    Gary Lineker has backed The Sun’s Footie For All FundCredit: Doug Seeburg
    The cash can be used in any way that encourages more children to take up the sport or improves access to the game.
    Perhaps you are a local team that wants to offer parents help with membership fees.
    Maybe you need new kits or more pitch space to play on.
    Grants can also be used to help with transport or general running costs.
    READ MORE ON FOOTBALL
    Earlier this year we launched our Footie For All campaign to shine a light on how financial struggles were forcing kids to give up football.
    Figures showed that 94 per cent of grass roots clubs were concerned about the impact soaring costs were having on their membership, according to charity Sported.
    In the wake of our probe we have been inundated with stories of local youth sides — who make a huge difference to their communities — struggling to cover their costs.
    Clubs across the country also told us how some kids are being forced to drop out altogether as families can not pay their membership subs or for kit and transport.
    Most read in Football
    So today we urge grass roots clubs to apply for one of our fantastic £1,000 Footie For All support grants.
    Launched in conjunction with Tesco’s Stronger Starts campaign — which funds healthy food and activities for children — we will dish out 150 grants in total to clubs across the country.
    Christine Heffernan, Tesco group communications director, said: “The Tesco Stronger Starts grant programme provides £5million of funding to get more children and their families access to healthy and nutritious food and physical activities.
    “We thought that The Footie For All programme would be a great extension to that to help kids to thrive.
    “Any child should be able to do physical activity they enjoy if they wish, taking away the worry about paying for subs or kit for example.”
    Our campaign is being backed by big names in the game.
    Match Of The Day host Gary Lineker said: “I think grass roots is vital.
    “That’s where everyone starts. Some of us finish at the top, some don’t, but we all enjoy it.”
    Sun columnist Harry Redknapp added: “Grass roots football is important, and we need to ensure there are facilities for kids.”
    Reality star Joey Essex is also keen to see kids keep playing.
    He said: “Football provides an escape for so many kids from whatever else is going on. The Sun is offering families a lifeline.”
    To apply for one of our grants, see tescostrongerstarts. org.uk/footiefund.
    Grants will be awarded by The Sun with charity Groundwork, which runs Tesco’s grant-giving programmes, on a rolling basis.
    Applications must be made by October 29.
    SOMERTON TOWN
    YOUTH football club Somerton Town, Somerset, kept its membership subs frozen for three years to help families cope through Covid and the cost-of-living crisis.
    But organisers had to raise them from £95 to £120 this season after rises of up to 30 per cent in costs.
    Somerton Town kept its membership subs frozen for three years to help families cope through Covid and the cost-of-living crisisCredit: Chris Balcombe
    Since it was founded in 2001, Somerton have played a unique social role for its 187 players, across 11 teams.
    Chairman Justin Davies, 40, says: “We have a huge catchment area that contains areas with large-scale social and economic deprivation.
    “Playing football teaches young people about teamwork, respect and fair play.
    “Little things like shaking hands before and after a match to show respect to the other team is important.
    “When we put the prices up, 21 players left, with 20 not going on to join another club. It was a financial decision.”
    Justin Davis said: ‘Playing football teaches young people about teamwork, respect and fair play’Credit: Chris Balcombe
    HACKNEY WICK FC
    AFTER leaving prison in 2019, Bobby Kasanga started Hackney Wick FC, in East London, to stop other children falling into a life of crime.
    It now has more than 180 children on its books and a waiting list of even more who want to be part of its teams.
    For many families, the club is a way to keep their children on the right path – and Bobby, 37, who spent eight years inside for armed robbery, never turns anyone away.
    He says: “We try to do as much as we can to alleviate financial stress and often let kids play without paying or offer discounts if a family has multiple kids with us.
    “We’ve seen it getting worse recently, but we know turning anyone away could see them get taken in by gangs.
    “If we can’t have them, the gangs certainly will.”
    To play a year at Hackney costs around £250.
    But Bobby and his team are writing off around £5,000 of unpaid subs because they know families can’t afford it.
    He says: “We rely on our sponsors and they’ve been amazing.
    Last year, one covered the cost of 20 kids for a year. But it’s hard to keep our heads above water.”
    The club’s relationships with local businesses provide more than just financial help.
    Bobby says: “We’ve had four of our players taken on by one of our sponsors.
    “It means they have a stable income and a potential career for life.
    “That’s so important for helping them stay out of danger.
    “But even if they end up going down a bad path, the club relationships across the whole of East London may help diffuse violent situations.
    “They may stop an attack because they know the other gang member from football.”
    Bobby adds: “I never want anyone to go through what I went through growing up.
    “We are a family and I won’t take football away from them over money.”
    BLACKBURN EAGLES
    LIKE other clubs, Blackburn Eagles have also seen more kids struggling to pay – but it never turns anyone away.
    The club, which is the biggest in its area with 650 players on its books, feels it is vital for all kids to have access to the beautiful game and tries to keep its fees low.
    Blackburn Eagles feels it is vital for all kids to have access to football and tries to keep its fees lowCredit: BLACKBURN EAGLES
    In fact, the academy’s vice-chairman, Chris Hughes, 39, says prices have not been put up in around eight years.
    He adds: “We don’t turn anyone away.
    “We just take more children, create new groups, create new training sessions and create new teams.”
    But the club has recently had to take teams out of the Junior Premier League due to the cost of the four-hour round trips to play other teams across the North West.
    Chris says: “Football gives kids a good focus and can be a massive part of certain children’s lives.
    “It might be the one thing they’ll look forward to all week, and sometimes it gets them out of situations where maybe they don’t want to be at home all the time.”
    HOW TO APPLY
    WE want to hear the story of your club and the huge difference you are making to kids and your community.
    If you are a not-for-profit grassroots football club in England, Wales or Scotland working with youngsters under the age of 18 you could be eligible for one of our 150 grants.
    Funds can be used for anything that encourages more children to take part in the sport.
    Perhaps your club needs help with pitch fees or wants to sponsor funded places for children who can not afford membership.
    To apply and for full T&Cs, see tescostrongerstarts.org.uk/footiefund.

    WHAT THE STARS SAY

    A young Phil FodenCredit: Instagram @philfoden
    Phil says football ‘brings happiness for so many people’Credit: Getty
    “GRASSROOTS football is where it began for all of us.
    “It brings happiness for so many people and it’s so important nothing gets in the way of everyone having that opportunity.”

    A young Harry MaguireCredit: Instagram
    Harry says ‘playing with a team gives kids an outlet and a chance to learn discipline’Credit: Getty
    “I SPENT my childhood with a ball at my feet.
    “Playing with a team gives kids an outlet and a chance to learn discipline and to make friends with people they might not have met.”

    A young Raheem Sterling
    Raheem said that as a kid he ‘fell in love’ with football and ‘made friends for life’Credit: Getty
    “MY mentor got me in to football to correct my behaviour.
    “I found something I wanted to put my energy in to.
    “I fell in love with it – and I made friends for life.”
    READ MORE SUN STORIES

    A young Jarrod Bowen
    Jarrod said ‘football is for everyone and it’s massively important it stays that way’Credit: Getty
    “WE can’t let kids see their dream die simply because Mum or Dad can’t afford to pay for the subs, kit and travel.
    “Football is for everyone and it’s massively important it stays that way.” More

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    How much Alan Shearer would be worth in today’s transfer market after Newcastle legend’s record-breaking career

    PREMIER LEAGUE icon Alan Shearer’s staggering transfer fee in today’s market has been revealed.The Englishman is the current record goalscorer in the Premier League with 260 goals.
    Shearer holds the record for most Prem goalsCredit: AFP
    Shearer is considered one of the greatest goalscorers to grace England’s top flight across his spells with Southampton, Blackburn Rovers and Newcastle.
    Shearer became the most expensive footballer in history when Newcastle signed him from Blackburn for £16.2million in 1996.
    However, it has been suggested that in today’s climate, the striker would have been a lot more expensive.
    Football finance expert Kieran Maguire and Jason Laws at the University of Liverpool have created a football inflation calculator, which can be used to find out the fees of footballers with inflation taken into account.
    READ MORE IN FOOTBALL
    Maguire explained how it works on Twitter: “It’s based on total revenues generated by PL each season, on basis that spending (either on wages or transfer fees) is linked to the ability to pay and therefore income generated by clubs, so reflects the inflation from higher ticket prices, TV deals etc.”
    The ‘today fee’ is based on 2019 money, before it was affected by Covid-19.
    Therefore along with the price of a pint of beer going from £1 to well over £5, a Shearer would now cost £222M.
    This would make Shearer the most expensive transfer of all time, with the fee surpassing the £198m PSG paid to Barcelona for Neymar in 2017.
    Most read in Football
    FREE BETS AND SIGN UP DEALS – BEST NEW CUSTOMER OFFERS
    Neymar’s move to France from Spain saw a new normal in the market of players being sold for over £100m.
    He also cost more than other iconic players such as Roy Keane, who’s £3.75m transfer in 1993 from Nottingham Forest to Manchester United would now be worth £94.2m.
    When speaking about the potential fee that he would have cost, Shearer told The Athletic: “How do I feel seeing my name at the top? It makes me smile!
    “It’s not a reflection of achievement and, don’t worry, I’m not putting myself in [Kylian] Mbappe’s class, but I guess it puts historical fees into a modern context.
    “Gary Lineker often says that it’s nice to see his name on goalscoring charts because it reminds people that he actually used to be a world-class footballer before he was a television presenter! I definitely empathise with that.
    “Man, to be able to do it again, to score just one more goal, to be wheeling away with my right arm in the air, to have that rush, that lose-yourself moment when there’s nothing else but this — I’d give a lot for that.
    “Football and time blur any notion of what value means, so I certainly can’t tell you I’d be worth £222m now.
    “I can’t tell you much, except one thing: If I was 24 or 25 or 26? Yeah, I’d bang a few in.” More

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    We have no money and no way of getting home to Argentina but seeing our hero Messi lift World Cup is all we care about

    ARGENTINA is the economic basket case of the world, with incredible 88 per cent inflation and four in ten of the population living in poverty.Its citizens are so poor — with an average wage of just £320 a month — that virtually all have two or three jobs and work 16-hour days in a desperate struggle to pay rocketing bills.
    Argentina fans have put financial worries aside to travel to Qatar to watch the World CupCredit: Dan Charity
    Fans have flown en masse to watch Lionel Messi attempt to win the World CupCredit: Dan Charity
    Messi is playing at his last World Cup and attempting to win the one trophy missing from his collectionCredit: Getty
    But an incredible 60,000 of the country’s soccer fans have somehow begged and borrowed their way 8,200 miles to Qatar to cheer on their heroes in the national team.
    And blue and white-shirted supporters were all smiles yesterday — because they have Lionel Messi and an unshakeable belief that they will win the World Cup tomorrow.
    Genius Messi — playing in his last World Cup at 35 — goes head-to-head with superstar rival Kylian Mbappe and France in tomorrow’s final at Doha’s Lusail Stadium.
    Argentina fans in the 89,000-seat venue will outnumber the French by at least ten to one, creating an astonishing wall of sound.
    READ MORE ON ARGENTINA
    But their dream of ending their nation’s 36-year wait for soccer’s Holy Grail is the only ray of hope for a country blighted by economic woes.
    Argentina has spent more time in recession than almost any other nation since the 1950s and has had double-figure inflation for decades.
    The Argentine peso has also lost 30 per cent of its value in recent months and lack of cash reserves, foreign investment and confidence in President Alberto Fernandez’s regime has sent inflation to that amazing rate of 88 per cent — with predictions it will top 100 per cent in the New Year.
    Argentina fans are expected to outnumber France supporters 10 to one at the finalCredit: Getty
    ‘WE DESERVE SOME JOY’
    But tens of thousands of fans have travelled to Qatar from Argentina — where prices have been skyrocketing faster than in any other G20 nation.
    Most read in Football
    In contrast, many England and Wales fans — with UK inflation at around just nine per cent — shunned Qatar’s pricey tournament.
    But despite Argentina’s problems at home, even senior politicians in the capital Buenos Aires believe winning the World Cup is now the impoverished nation’s top priority.
    Asked whether lifting the trophy was more important than tackling inflation, Labour Minister Kelly Olmos shrugged: “We must constantly work against inflation, but one month won’t make a huge difference.
    “We want Argentina to be champions — the Argentine people really deserve some joy.”
    Nicolas Orellano from Buenos Aires says he has no idea how he will get homeCredit: Dan Charity
    Lawyer Nicolas Orellano — who also runs a wine business in Buenos Aires to help make ends meet — used all his savings and borrowed money from his girlfriend to go to Qatar.
    He flew to Spain, then on to London to catch a flight to Dubai, then travelled by bus and train through Saudi Arabia to the capital, Doha.
    Nicolas, 30, is now virtually penniless and is living in a bustling Argentine fan commune in Barwa Barahat Al Janoub, south of Doha, dubbed “Little Buenos Aires”.
    Yesterday fans there were roasting a lamb donated by Argentina’s ambassador to Qatar on a makeshift barbecue beneath a giant Messi banner as footy anthems blared from a loudspeaker.
    Nicolas said: “I have no money and no idea how I’ll get home but there is no way I can leave, now we’re so close to seeing Lionel Messi lift the World Cup.
    “Our politicians back home have let us down but our football team has not — they are the only hope we have.
    “It is a special kind of madness which brings us here when we have so little.
    “My girlfriend supports me and loaned me $500 (£410) when my cash ran out.
    “But I know some people who have sold their homes to find the money to travel to Qatar.
    “The people of Argentina are suffering but they love it that so many of us are here and are even donating money to us so we can stay and support the team.
    “I still don’t have a ticket for the final but would give anything and everything to be there, having been to five games so far — and I’m sure we will win.”
    Accountant and part-time meat trader Javier Mahmud, 36, had been struggling to save a deposit for his first home in Buenos Aires with partner of 15 years Carla Barletta, 34.
    But Carla supported his decision to clear out their entire savings account to travel to Doha via Egypt and Lebanon.
    Javier, at his third World Cup, said: “We have the best fans in the world who are giving everything to be here.
    “Our country is in a terrible state economically but Lionel Messi will repay us by winning tomorrow.
    “I have very little money left and no ticket for the final but I still hope to find a way of being there after following the team this far.
    “I’ll be flat broke when I get home, with no money to buy Christmas presents, but I won’t care and my family will understand. The only gift we want is the World Cup.”
    Fridge repair man Sergio Pendola, 30, from Buenos Aires, flew to Doha via Spain and Saudi Arabia to see his third World Cup finals.
    He said: “Diego Maradona is our god but Lionel Messi has a chance to become another god if he wins the World Cup for us — and he won’t let us down.
    “He has Maradona’s passion now because there are so many fans here willing him to win.
    “There is no question that he is the best footballer on the planet now and Kylian Mbappe will be no match for him.
    “Our fans are the 12th man for the team. I’ve spent my entire $6,000 (£4,920) savings and borrowed another $4,000 (£3,280) — but many here have sacrificed much more.
    ‘FOOTBALL IS ALL WE HAVE’
    Fan Evelyn Galiano has the middle name Milagros — Spanish for miracles — because she survived being born six months premature.
    But she said: “We do not need another miracle — we have Messi.”
    Evelyn, 26, is working in Andorra as a chef, but told her boss she needed a month off to see her idols.
    She said: “It is the last World Cup for Messi, that’s why I am here, and it has been beyond all my expectations.
    “I’m travelling alone but three of the guys here ran out of money for accommodation and are staying in my room.
    “They are staying for free — I wanted to help them. I feel completely safe because we are all fans together.”
    Mauro Fernandez, 32, a chef from Buenos Aires, travelled from Thailand via Madrid to get to Doha.
    He said: “I paid 400 US dollars (£328) for the Holland match and 600 (£492) for Croatia but I have run out of money.
    “They are asking more than 1,000 (£820) for the final ticket so I may have to watch it on a giant screen but I will go to Lusail, so I can be with the fans and see the players.
    “For me it is all about seeing Messi lift that trophy. I’ve been here for ten days and I’m not sure how I will get home.
    “I know Messi is better than Mbappe, he is the best.
    “There will be 50,000 Argentina fans at the final, there are more flights coming in from Buenos Aires. Yesterday they were completely full.”
    Gaston Didier-Lardet, 33, from San Luis, near the Argentine city of Mendoza, made the 12-hour, 6,500-mile flight from Australia, where he was working at a mine.
    He is now living in a low-rise block in the Argentine fan village, and said: “This is not the Sheraton but the atmosphere with the fans is just great.
    “It feels like home — we are surrounded by fans, we have barbecues and music.
    “I am a Messi soldier — he is proof of total sacrifice.
    “I’ve got a ticket for the final and I am very lucky. I am nervous and will not sleep, but I am looking forward to it.
    “I’ve probably spent around $10,000 (£8,200) but it is hard to explain why — I just had to be here.
    Read More on The Sun
    “I’ve heard crazy stories of people selling their houses, their cars, possessions, anything to see Messi lift that World Cup.
    “We know it is his last chance and he is a God to us. I think he is going to do it.”
    Argentina are biddingto win their first World Cup since 1986Credit: Dan Charity
    Argentina fans have made stadiums in Qatar feel like home for the playersCredit: AFP
    Argentina fans roast a lamb donated by Argentina’s ambassador to Qatar on a makeshift barbecueCredit: Dan Charity
    Argentina fans’ tributes to the great Diego Maradona are easy to spotCredit: Dan Charity More