England's defeat by Argentina at the 1998 World Cup still burns deep for Alan Shearer, but he explains why this team can take their chance to change their lives forever.

It is 28 years since Argentina ended my World Cup dream at France '98 - and it still hurts now. I can still picture their players dancing and celebrating next to us as both teams waited to get on their buses after our epic last-16 tie. We had come so close to beating them, but we fell on the wrong side of a penalty shootout, and we were going home. I was captain and it was tough to take, not just personally but because we had an outstanding team and I felt we had an opportunity at that tournament to make a real statement on the world stage. I feel the same way about this England side now as they prepare for Wednesday's semi-final in Atlanta (20:00 BST), with a chance to change their lives forever. They are two wins away from immortality, and the fact it is Argentina we face again first just adds more spice to an already incredible occasion. There is something special about playing them at a World Cup because of the great rivalry between us and the drama and the controversy of our defeats in the quarter-finals in 1986 and then the one in 1998 I played in. But it is even more exciting when there is a place in the final at stake. Especially because standing in our way is the little genius himself Lionel Messi - arguably the greatest player of all time, who has never faced England before. This is the mouth-watering tie we wanted, and I definitely think we can win it... it does not really matter how.