From the World Cup to life: why everyone talks about minute 78 in Argentina
Argentina's comeback against Egypt turned the 78th minute into a motivational phrase that went viral inside and outside of football
Argentina was losing 2-0 to Egypt, Lionel Messi had missed a penalty and elimination from the World Cup seemed inevitable. The clock read 78 minutes. Twelve minutes later, the National Team had turned the game around and was classified for the quarterfinals.
From that comeback was born a phrase that quickly escaped football: “We all have a 78th minute.”
On social networks it began to be used to talk about those moments when a situation seems lost, but there is still an opportunity to change it. It appeared in motivational videos, personal publications, messages between friends and even on products inspired by the National Team.
The story that turned a minute into a metaphor
The expression arose during the broadcast of the match. The Uruguayan journalist Jorge Arrutti told Radio La Red when Argentina was two goals down and reflected on “the 78th minute in the lives of each of us.”
Shortly after, an unexpected comeback came: Cristian Romero scored the injury time, Messi converted the tie and Enzo Fernández sealed the 3-2 score that kept the National Team alive.
Coincidence turned that phrase into something more powerful. The 78th minute stopped being just a sporting reference and came to represent the moment when giving up seems reasonable, but continuing can change everything.
“I'm in my 78th minute.”
The phrase found fertile ground because it can be easily transferred to everyday life. For some it represents a labor crisis; for others, an illness, a separation, a difficult exam or a project that has not yet produced results.
Arrutti explained that this moment does not speak only of faith, but of the decision to sustain the effort when the outcome seems adverse. “We have all had a 78th minute in our lives,” the speaker summarized when analyzing the impact of his words.
Since then, saying “I'm in my 78th minute” became a way of acknowledging a difficulty without yet accepting defeat.
The National Team and another history of resistance
The concept also connects with a characteristic that fans recognize in the Argentine team: the ability to resist under pressure.
Against Egypt, Lionel Scaloni's team was practically eliminated. However, he reacted with very little time left and turned a certain defeat into one of the most memorable comebacks of the tournament.
That's why the 78th minute became a new emotional slogan. It does not promise that everything will end well or deny difficulties. Its message is simpler: while there is time, history is not yet written.
This news has been tken from authentic news syndicates and agencies and only the wordings has been changed keeping the menaing intact. We have not done personal research yet and do not guarantee the complete genuinity and request you to verify from other sources too.

