Argentina wear replica of the country's 1986 Fifa World Cup kit for the match against England at the Nations Championship.

Argentina wore a look-alike jersey during their 1986 Fifa World Cup quarter-final win over England Argentina's rugby union players wore replicas of the football team's 1986 World Cup kit for their match against England at the Nations Championship. The footballers wore the dark blue kit during their 2-1 quarter-final victory over England at the tournament - which they later won - in a match made famous by Diego Maradona's 'Hand of God' goal, before he scored a brilliant second. Argentina's rugby side, known as the Pumas, usually wear the country's traditional white and light blue striped sporting kit. "Memories that span generations and remain alive in the collective memory. Today that legacy dresses up again," Los Pumas posted on X. The sporting rivalry between the two countries was fuelled last week as Argentina came from behind in dramatic fashion to beat the Three Lions 2-1 and reach the 2026 World Cup final. Following the match, Argentina players held up a banner reading 'Las Malvinas son Argentinas', which translates as 'The Falklands are Argentine'. Fifa is deciding whether to punish Argentina for the banner that references the Falkland Islands - a British overseas territory in the south west Atlantic Ocean that remains the subject of a sovereignty dispute between the UK and Argentina.