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Huge crowds welcome home the Argentina team after its thrilling World Cup victory

Argentina soccer player Lionel Messi and coach Lionel Scaloni
Argentine soccer star Lionel Messi holds the World Cup trophy aloft as he and coach Lionel Scaloni deplane outside Buenos Aires on Tuesday.
(Gustavo Garello / Associated Press)
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Thousands of fans lined up in the wee hours of Tuesday to try to get a glimpse of the victorious Argentine soccer team that won one of the greatest World Cup finals of all time ahead of a day full of celebrations in Buenos Aires.

Members of the team, led by captain Lionel Messi, were all smiles as they descended from the plane in Ezeiza, right outside Argentina’s capital, shortly before 3 a.m. Tuesday onto a red carpet that had been rolled out for the squad.

Messi was the first player off the plane and carried the World Cup trophy. He stood beside by coach Lionel Scaloni, who put his arm around the captain as they walked past a sign that read, “Thank you, champions.”

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The players were welcomed by rock band La Mosca singing “Muchachos,” a song that was written by a fan to the tune of an old song by the band and became a popular unofficial anthem for Argentine fans at the World Cup in Qatar.

The newly crowned champions of the soccer world boarded an open-top bus, and several players, including Messi, could be seen singing along to “Muchachos” while they waited for everyone to get on to travel to the headquarters of the Argentine Football Assn.

The bus moved at a snail’s pace as fans, many of whom were waving Argentine flags, swarmed the bus on a highway, eager for a glimpse of the players, as law enforcement officers tried to keep them at bay.

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Lionel Messi found redemption, leading Argentina to its first World Cup victory in 36 years during a Qatar tournament that often stepped into controversy.

Throughout the trip, Messi held onto the trophy as players waved to fans and often sang along with them.

It took the bus around one hour to travel less than seven miles from the airport to AFA headquarters, where the players were welcomed with fireworks.

They will sleep at AFA headquarters for a few hours before boarding the bus later Tuesday to the Obelisk, the Buenos Aires landmark that was a sea of people Sunday afternoon after the team won the country’s third World Cup and its first since 1986.

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President Alberto Fernández declared a national holiday Tuesday so that the country could celebrate the victory.

As the World Cup in Qatar gets ready to kick off, rooting for Argentina makes me reflect on all the past joys and heartbreaks.

The day after the streets of Argentina turned into massive parties following the Sunday victory, many kept a close eye on the flight that brought the players home to celebrate. As the plane got closer to Argentine soil, almost 200,000 people were tracking its path online, and news channels gave live coverage of the arrival.

In the afternoon, people started arriving at the airport and outside AFA headquarters in hopes of getting a glimpse of the team.

Many were also already at the Obelisk, seemingly ready to spend the night there to ensure a prime spot for Tuesday’s festivities.

Several players posted photos of the plane ride on social media.

In ‘Argentina, 1985,’ actor Ricardo Darín and director Santiago Mitre dramatize the trial that held a military dictatorship accountable for atrocities.

Messi held the World Cup on the plane. Nicolás Tagliafico posted a photo of the trophy buckled into an airplane seat as if it were just another passenger.

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As of early Tuesday there were no official plans for Fernández, or any other political leaders, to take part in the celebrations, despite earlier rumors that the players would go to Government House, which was offered up for the celebrations, according to Security Minister Aníbal Fernández.

The World Cup and the success of the Messi-led squad has brought much-needed good news for a country that has been stuck in economic doldrums for years, is suffering one of the world’s highest inflation rates and where almost 4 in 10 people live in poverty.

Fernández retweeted several messages of congratulations for the World Cup victory from other world leaders, including Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“Thank you for this greeting President Putin,” Fernández wrote on Twitter after a telephone call with the Russian leader. “Let the happiness that today unites Argentina with so many countries in the world serve as an example: Our societies need unity and peace.”

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