A STUNNING game of two halves in a vast stadium where nobody can buy a pint.
For Saudi Arabia, this is the most remarkable result in their football history and one which is sending shockwaves through the World Cup.
From a goal down after ten minutes and three hair’s-breadth offside decisions going in their favour in the first half, the Arab minnows came storming back to beat one of the tournament favourites.
And Argentina’s bewildered skipper Lionel Messi would have been proud to score both the high-quality goals which condemned the two-times world champions to an almighty giant killing.
He had stabbed his team ahead in the tenth minute by stroking home a penalty following a foul on Juve’s Leandro Paredes.
It marked the veteran’s 92nd goal in 162 games for his country and it looked like this Group C opener would become another routine rollover.
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But when Messi and strike partner Lautaro Martinez had a hat-trick of goals ruled out by narrow offsides in the first half, this game began turning on its head.
The introduction of ultra-sensitive new technology caught them out time and time again but yet there was still a feeling that vastly experienced Messi would lead his in-form team-mates to eventual victory.
Argentina were unbeaten in 36 games going into a game they were expected to stroll. And maybe that was their biggest mistake.
Saudi’s French coach Herve Renard insists his country is not here just for a ‘jolly’ but try wiping the smiles off their faces now.
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In just five minutes they upended the entire 2022 World Cup with football’s equivalent of an Arab Spring.
Just three minutes into the second half Saudi forward Saleh Al Shehri picked up a threaded through ball on a run towards the Argentina box but the danger looked well covered.
Only Tottenham’s normally formidable centre-half Cristian Romero uncharacteristically went all Spursy and shied away from making a tackle.
Instead, he allowed his opponent to outpace him over five yards then plant a laser-like shot across the face of goal into the opposite corner of the net.
We can only suspect Argentina were in shock because shortly afterwards the entire defence crumbled.
Saudi’s star man Salem Al Dawsari picked up the ball on the right hand edge of the box.
A 180-degree turn later he glided past three defenders before striking a rising shot which Aston Villa keeper Emiliano Martinez could only paw into the back of his net.
Saudi Arabia are 51st in the world, have never been beyond the last 16 at a World Cup and have won only one game at a finals since 1994.
That shows what this result means to them.
Seeing the Argentina team on the deck at the final whistle shows what this humiliation means to them.
Saudi’s heroic rearguard action was topped by a headed clearance off the line by Abdulelah Al Amri in injury time but gallant defender Yasser Al Shahrani was KO’d by a knee to the head from his own keeper.
Source: Soccer - thesun.co.uk