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  • Bangladesh, a country with more Argentina fans than Messi’s homeland Ian Garrahan
    It is monsoon season in Bangladesh, with rains and stifling temperatures for fans, but no heat can dampen Bangladeshi passion for the Albiceleste. Since the last World Cup, the Asian country has become the main stronghold of support for Lionel Scaloni’s team and its talisman, Leo Messi. It would be difficult to quantify how many Argentina supporters there are in this country of some 177 million inhabitants, but Bangladeshi writer and sports commentator Rajib Hasan tells EL PAÍS that there are so
     

Bangladesh, a country with more Argentina fans than Messi’s homeland

17 June 2026 at 17:17

It is monsoon season in Bangladesh, with rains and stifling temperatures for fans, but no heat can dampen Bangladeshi passion for the Albiceleste. Since the last World Cup, the Asian country has become the main stronghold of support for Lionel Scaloni’s team and its talisman, Leo Messi. It would be difficult to quantify how many Argentina supporters there are in this country of some 177 million inhabitants, but Bangladeshi writer and sports commentator Rajib Hasan tells EL PAÍS that there are some “120 million fans who watch football every four years when the World Cup comes around” and that of those “more than 60%” support Argentina. That is, 72 million people, around 26 million more than the entire population of Argentina itself.

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© DPA vía Europa Press (DPA vía Europa Press)

Bangladeshi fans watch Argentina’s match against Algeria in Dhaka, June 17.
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  • The sixth (and final) World Cup act of Leo Messi Lorenzo Calonge Calonge
    Before he became La Pulga, Leo Messi was known as Coloradito. He is still remembered that way in Rosario. “His hair was sort of reddish. At year-end tournaments, at seven or eight years old, parents would see him arrive and say, ‘Watch out, the coloradito, that number 10, is playing today.’ You knew you had already lost or were going to have an extremely hard time,” recalls Hernán, one of his opponents back then. “We were on a team called Estrellas Júniors and he was on another called Tiro Suizo
     

The sixth (and final) World Cup act of Leo Messi

Before he became La Pulga, Leo Messi was known as Coloradito. He is still remembered that way in Rosario. “His hair was sort of reddish. At year-end tournaments, at seven or eight years old, parents would see him arrive and say, ‘Watch out, the coloradito, that number 10, is playing today.’ You knew you had already lost or were going to have an extremely hard time,” recalls Hernán, one of his opponents back then. “We were on a team called Estrellas Júniors and he was on another called Tiro Suizo. Once we met in the final, which was played over two legs, and we won both 1-0. We had one shot on goal and they had 20. They gave us 10 bicycles, one for each of us. Sometimes we talk about those things in the WhatsApp group,” he says.

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© Charlie Riedel (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Leo Messi during an Argentina training session in Kansas City.
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