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Inter Miami give massive update on Lionel Messi’s hamstring injury ahead of 2026 FIFA World Cup
Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images

Inter Miami have given Argentina a cautious boost after confirming Lionel Messi’s hamstring issue before the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

The timing made the scare impossible to ignore. Messi left the Philadelphia Union match on Sunday, May 24, with the World Cup fast approaching.

The update does not remove every concern, but it sounds far less alarming than a confirmed tear or long-term muscle injury.


Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images

Inter Miami give Lionel Messi the injury update Argentina needed before the 2026 FIFA World Cup

In an official Inter Miami update, the club confirmed Messi had further tests after leaving the match against Philadelphia Union.

“Inter Miami CF’s captain had to leave the field yesterday, Sunday, May 24, during the match against Philadelphia Union, due to physical discomfort.

“After undergoing further medical tests this Monday, the initial diagnosis indicates an overload associated with muscle fatigue in his left hamstring,” the club stated.

That wording matters because it points toward workload and fatigue rather than a confirmed serious tear. For Miami, the substitution now looks like a sensible precaution. For Argentina, the key detail is that the diagnosis still leaves room for recovery before competitive World Cup action begins.

Messi’s recent muscle history means the issue still needs careful monitoring. He has dealt with hamstring and adductor problems during his Miami spell, so Argentina cannot treat any late discomfort as routine.

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The club’s return plan was deliberately careful and avoided a fixed date, by further stating, “The timeline for his return to physical activity will depend on his clinical and functional progress.”

That matters because Argentina’s tournament schedule gives him some breathing room. Their World Cup opener is listed for June 16 against Algeria in Kansas City, which gives Messi more than three weeks from the May 24 substitution.

A mild overload can clear quickly if managed properly, but the danger is rushing him through friendlies or heavy training before the hamstring is ready. Argentina do not need Messi to prove fitness in a meaningless workload spike. They need him sharp enough to start the tournament without carrying a preventable setback.

The encouraging part is that Miami’s update did not frame this as a major injury. The cautious part is that every step now has to be judged by how his body responds, not by the calendar.

For Argentina, this is not a panic. It is a warning to manage their captain with the patience a World Cup defense demands.

This article first appeared on HITC and was syndicated with permission.

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