Egypt’s dramatic World Cup exit has now turned into a full-scale controversy over refereeing. The Pharaohs lost to Argentina 3-2 in a tense final tournament, but the Egyptian camp has not accepted this result quietly.
Egypt, who conceded three goals in the closing stages after taking a 2-0 lead, believed key decisions went against them at key moments.
From their perspective, their frustration is understandable. Knockout football is decided by close margins, so when a team feels that a major call has affected the outcome, emotions naturally flow.
This is no longer just one loss. The debate surrounding tournament refereeing standards continues to grow.
Egypt files complaint with FIFA
According to journalist Ismael Mahmoud, Egyptian Football Association President Hany Abo Rida filed an official complaint against French referee François Letexier and his assistants after the defeat against Argentina.
The complaint reportedly calls for an investigation into the controversial decision and for the French refereeing team to be excluded from the remainder of the tournament.
This claim is consistent with widespread reporting on radioactive fallout. AS reported that the Egyptian Football Association felt that several serious incidents were not handled correctly and had requested a FIFA investigation into the match’s refereeing decisions.
Controversy casts shadow over Argentina’s return
Argentina’s revival was truly remarkable.
Egypt took a 2-0 lead, but Argentina fought back in the closing stages to turn the game around with goals from Cristian Romero, Lionel Messi and Enzo Fernandes.
But Egyptian anger dominated the aftermath. The main complaints seem to center on decisions made late in the game, including the penalty appeal and the incident before Argentina’s decisive goal.
For Egypt, the feeling is not just disappointment, but that a historic World Cup run may have ended unfairly.
FIFA should honestly review serious incidents, even if the outcome remains the same.
Transparency would help calm the situation and show teams that their concerns are being taken seriously.
That said, calling for the referees to be removed from the tournament is a very strong step.
This shows how angry Egypt is, but FIFA will need clear evidence of a serious mistake before taking such action.
Lionel Messi and Enzo Fernandes score fast-break double in classic World Cup return in history

