Making of ‘Spider’: In Messi’s shadow, how Alvarez became Argentina’s hero | Football News

He waited until Argentina needed him most.With scores tied at 1-1 Switzerland retreating deeper the minute in extra time, Julian Alvarez collected the ball just outside the penalty area, shifted it onto his right foot and, with barely any backlift, bent a sublime curler beyond Gregor Kobel into the far corner. It was the kind of finish that belongs in World Cup montages — precise, composed and almost understated. There was no wild celebration, only clenched fs and teammates engulfing the man who has quietly become Argentina’s most reliable big-game scorer as they won 3-1 to set-up a semifinal date with England.
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Long before he was deciding World Cup quarter-finals, however, Alvarez was simply La Arana — the Spider.
The nickname came not from a marketing campaign or a comic-book obsession but from the dusty football grounds of Calchin, a farming town of barely 2,500 people in Cordoba province. As a child, opponents joked that the skinny forward seemed to have more than two legs. Every loose ball somehow found its way back to him. “I remember one goal, when he was about eight or nine, when he beat four or five rivals and scored a rabona goal,” his first coach Rafael Varas told the Manchester City website. “That’s when I realised we had a different kind of player, who could be a world star.”
His teammates recalled they felt like he has ‘six or seven legs’, like a spider. The nickname stuck, and today every goal is followed his now-familiar Spiderman celebration – spreading his arms wide and extending his thumb, forefinger and little finger like Spiderman.
Calchin remains central to understanding Alvarez.
His father Gustavo drove trucks. His mother Mariana worked as a kindergarten teacher. Football was woven into family life rather than imposed upon it. “In my house, the world stopped when the national team played,” Alvarez told Manchester City in an interview. “The whole family turned on the TV, in the armchair at home, and not a fly would fly.”
Julian Alvarez — What a strike!!! pic.twitter.com/bzsPl32RWT
— RZ (@RnjiZen) July 12, 2026
Those who knew him best described a boy who “always had a ball at his feet” and whose competitive streak surfaced in every kickabout, whether on grass or in the family home. The town itself has embraced him as its favourite son, proudly displaying murals and signs celebrating the World Cup winner.
His first brush with greatness arrived almost too soon.
At 11, he earned a trial with Real Madrid and impressed coaches in Spain. Yet FIFA’s rules on the transfer of minors meant the move never materialised. For many youngsters, it might have been a crushing disappointment. Instead, Alvarez returned home, continued developing and eventually joined River Plate, where Marcelo Gallardo moulded him into the complete modern forward.
Gallardo saw more than goals.Story continues below this ad
He turned Alvarez into a striker who hunted defenders before hunting chances. the time Manchester City signed him in 2022, he had already won the Copa Libertadores and established himself as one of South America’s brightest prospects. Pep Guardiola later remarked that what stood out was not merely his finishing but “his work ethic”, while teammates frequently marvelled at the way he pressed as though every lost cause could still be won.
That quality has made him indispensable for Argentina.
Lionel Messi remains the conductor, but Alvarez supplies the relentless movement around him. He stretches back lines, closes down centre-backs and creates spaces others exploit. It is easy to forget that at the 2022 World Cup he began as a substitute before forcing his way into Lionel Scaloni’s starting XI. the end of the tournament, he had scored four goals, including two against Croatia in the semi-final, and formed a partnership with Messi that transformed Argentina’s attack.
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Three-and-a-half years later, his importance has only grown.
Against Switzerland, Messi spent long periods shackled Murat Yakin’s disciplined defensive structure. Chances were scarce and spaces even scarcer. It took a player whose game is built on instinct rather than extravagance to find the breakthrough. Alvarez did exactly that, curling Argentina into the semi-finals with a finish that encapsulated everything he has become: technically gifted, tactically intelligent and utterly unfazed the occasion.Story continues below this ad
For all the medals that have arrived in rapid succession — a World Cup, Copa America, Champions League and league titles — there remains something refreshingly uncomplicated about Alvarez. He is not the loudest voice, nor the biggest personality, nor even Argentina’s biggest star.
He is simply the Spider. And when Argentina’s web begins to fray, he invariably seems to be the one holding it together.

