Kane on ice: Argentina fans turn to superstition ahead of England game

Published 15 Jul, 2026 10:51am 3 min read
Argentine fans turn to freezers and other superstitions for World Cup glory. -- Reuters
Argentine fans turn to freezers and other superstitions for World Cup glory. -- Reuters
Juan Pablo Monsalvo places a trading card featuring England's Jude Bellingham in a freezer to "freeze" the rival as one of his superstitions on the eve of the FIFA World Cup 2026 semifinal between Argentina and England, on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Argentina. -- Reuters
Juan Pablo Monsalvo places a trading card featuring England's Jude Bellingham in a freezer to "freeze" the rival as one of his superstitions on the eve of the FIFA World Cup 2026 semifinal between Argentina and England, on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Argentina. -- Reuters
Ines Mutri, 13, looks at herself in a mirror after painting her face with the colours of the Argentine national flag to show one of her good-luck rituals when watching Argentina's matches during the FIFA World Cup 2026, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. -- Reuters
Ines Mutri, 13, looks at herself in a mirror after painting her face with the colours of the Argentine national flag to show one of her good-luck rituals when watching Argentina's matches during the FIFA World Cup 2026, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. -- Reuters
Ines Mutri, 13, looks at herself in a mirror after painting her face with the colours of the Argentine national flag to show one of her good-luck rituals when watching Argentina's matches during the FIFA World Cup 2026 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. -- Reuters
Ines Mutri, 13, looks at herself in a mirror after painting her face with the colours of the Argentine national flag to show one of her good-luck rituals when watching Argentina's matches during the FIFA World Cup 2026 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. -- Reuters
Juan Pablo Monsalvo and Juan Ignacio Calvo pose with different Argentine national team jerseys on the eve of the FIFA World Cup 2026 semifinal between Argentina and England, on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Argentina. -- Reuters
Juan Pablo Monsalvo and Juan Ignacio Calvo pose with different Argentine national team jerseys on the eve of the FIFA World Cup 2026 semifinal between Argentina and England, on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Argentina. -- Reuters

Argentina fans are leaving little to chance ahead of the World Cup semi-final against England, placing captain Harry Kane’s name in the freezer and faithfully repeating the rituals they believe bring the national team luck on the ​pitch.

The practices are part of Argentina’s long tradition of ‘cabalas’ — superstitions fans believe can influence the team’s fortunes.

As ‌defending champions, Argentina prepare to face England for a place in the final, supporters are clinging to routines they say helped deliver past victories.

Many refuse to say opponents’ names, wear the same often-unwashed jerseys, sit in the same seats and eat the same meals before each match, convinced that ​changing anything could jinx the team’s chances of lifting another trophy.

“My friends and I have a ritual,” said ​13-year-old Ines Mutri.

“We write the name of the star player and goalkeeper on the same piece ⁠of paper and freeze it in the freezer,” she said.

“This time we’re going to freeze Kane because he’s the top scorer,” ​she added.

In a country where soccer inspires a near-religious devotion, such rituals, fans say, offer a sense of control over a ​result that ultimately remains beyond their influence.

The tradition runs deep.

Carlos Bilardo, the coach who led Argentina to the 1986 World Cup title, became famous for elaborate superstitions like dictating the order in which they stepped onto the pitch, helping cement ‘cabalas’ in Argentine soccer folklore.

Even current coach Lionel ​Scaloni has acknowledged his own ritual.

“I step onto the field with my right foot and make the sign of the cross,” ​he said during the tournament.

Some customs evolve with the times.

During this year’s World Cup, fans have shared AI-generated images on social media ‌showing rival ⁠players frozen in blocks of ice, a symbolic way of preventing dangerous opponents from moving, scoring or making saves.

The idea has spilled into real life.

Student Juan Pablo Calvo, 18, said he plans to freeze Jude Bellingham’s name because he considers him “a tremendous player,” though he remains confident in Argentina.

The match renews one of international soccer’s most storied rivalries, from Diego Maradona’s “Hand of ​God” goal in 1986 to a ​series of memorable knockout ⁠encounters.

For the semi-final, Calvo is wearing a shirt like the one Maradona wore at the 1986 World Cup, when Argentina lifted the trophy.

“Even though Messi has already won every trophy there is ​to win, this is a special opportunity because he’s never faced England in a match ​like this, let ⁠alone in a semi-final,” Calvo said.

Other fans say repetition is the most important ‘cabala’.

Once Argentina win, every detail of the day must be recreated for the next match: the same people, the same seat, the same shirt and, if possible, the same meal.

Mutri is ⁠watching with ​eight friends who wear the same hats and sit in the same ​places every game.

“I feel that the match against England is going to be a nerve-racking one, like all the others,” she said.

“But it’s going to be good. ​It’s going to be fun.”

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