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"I'm proud to be a part of this group," Messi said in a statement posted on his social media pages.
"They are all phenomenons, what a match they played.
"What madness. We are in the final. Let's enjoy it, it is just a little step more."
Argentina reached their first World Cup final in 24 years on Wednesday, beating the Netherlands 4-2 on penalties after the first scoreless semi in the tournament's history, with old foes Germany awaiting them in Sunday's showpiece.
- PHOTOS: Romero's heroics guide Argentina into World Cup final
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"I didn't have the feeling in the second half that we would lose," said Netherlands manager Louis van Gaal.
"And when it comes to penalties you know it's a lottery. The boys did fantastically (well). Nobody had expected this."
It was also a second semi-final defeat on penalties for the Netherlands who suffered the same fate against Brazil in 1998.
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"When you take one you have to score and that didn't happen, so it wasn't good enough," Vlaar said.
"I would never walk away from my responsibility. I wasn't nervous, I was focused. But it must go in and it didn't.
"It's tough, but that's what sport is about," he added. "It really hurts, a dream which gets put out."
Coach Louis van Gaal was forced to use defender Ron Vlaar as his first penalty taker and he was also left to regret being unable to send on his expert spot-kick saver Tim Krul for the shootout.
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‘I taught Romero how to stop penalties so that hurts’
"The penalty series is always a matter of luck," the Dutch coach said. "And, of course, I taught Romero how to stop penalties so that hurts."
Argentina keeper Sergio Romero emerged as his team's hero by saving two of the four Dutch spot-kicks and he is a player Van Gaal knows well.
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‘Brazil, get up, dust yourself off and bounce back’
"I'm immensely sorry for all of us, our fans and players," she tweeted. "But let's not let ourselves give up. Brazil, get up, dust yourself off and bounce back."
- PHOTOS: Germany pump seven past hosts Brazil, make eighth final
Brazil President Dilma Rousseff took to social media to express her disappointment to a country reeling from the loss after spending more than $11 billion on hosting the tournament.