Everton’s James Rodriguez worryingly wasteful for Colombia in Chile draw

Everton midfielder James Rodriguez was worrying wasteful in possession as Colombia held Chile to a 2-2 draw on Tuesday night.

The 29-year-old started the game at the Estadio Nacional de Chile as Colombia sought to build on their 3-0 World Cup qualifying victory over Venezuela, but goals from Arturo Vidal and Alexis Sanchez ensured Carlos Queiroz’s men dropped to two points behind CONMEBOL group leaders Brazil and Argentina.

Jefferson Lerma had opened the scoring for Colombia with a header in the seventh minute following a cross from Stefan Medina, but they looked set to taste defeat until Radamel Falcao unleashed a right-footed effort into the back of the net in the first minute of second-half stoppage-time.

Rodriguez had little impact on proceedings at the top of the field during his 90 minutes against Chile, with SofaScore data showing the Toffees’ sensational summer signing as failing to record a single key pass and only directing one shot on target.

The former Galactico rarely entered the Chile penalty area, either, with a predominant number of his 69 touches coming just inside the host’s half and retreating into Colombia territory more often than he visited Brayan Cortes’ box.

When Rodriguez did push forward, he barely connected with his teammates, either, with the £31.5m-rated star only picking out a Colombia player with two of his eight attempted crosses, while losing five of his seven ground duels and losing possession 21 times.

No Colombia player who started lost possession more often than Rodriguez, with left-back Johan Mojica (21) and central midfielder Juan Cuadrado (19) the nearest players to have turned over the ball as much for the visitors.

Rodriguez further gifted possession to Chile with nine of his 43 attempted passes failing to fall to the correct player and losing his only attempted dribble of the night, though picked out a teammate with each of his four long balls.

Unfortunately, the top scorer from the 2014 World Cup rarely aided Colombia defensively against Chile, as well, with Rodriguez managing just one successful interception to the three fouls committed.

Everton boss Carlo Ancelotti will be hoping that Rodriguez leaves his shaky performances in South America before flying back to England for this Saturday’s Merseyside Derby, having trusted the 29-year-old to start each of the Toffees’ four Premier League fixtures to date.

Ancelotti will also be hoping for good news on Yerry Mina, after the defender sat out Colombia’s draw with Chile as a precaution after feeling discomfort in his right thigh in training.

AND in other news, Carlo Ancelotti can look to exploit an “incredible talent” when Everton host Liverpool this Saturday.

Rangers eye 8-goal talisman as Morelos edges closer to exit

As Rangers striker Alfredo Morelos heads closer to the exit door at Ibrox, Ross Wilson may have acted quickly to swoop up a potential replacement amid reports from France over the weekend.

What’s the word?

According to Get French Football News’ sources, the Gers are set to open talks with Bordeaux over striker Josh Maja this week.

It’s not the first time that the Scottish Premiership runners-up have been linked with a move for the former Sunderland starlet as journalist Ignazio Genuardi, via GFFN, claimed a few months ago that the 21-year-old was on the shortlist of Scotland’s two biggest outfits.

Maja left the League One side last January for just £3.5m after rejecting a new contract whilst The Sun have suggested that the Frenchmen would be looking for around £10m amid interest from West Ham and Crystal Palace.

That would certainly be a nice bit of profit for Bordeaux that’s for sure.

Morelos out, Maja in?

As per Sky Sports, Lille have agreed on personal terms with the Colombian talisman, leaving Rangers negotiating a fee for this likely exit and it comes as the worst possible time with veteran Jermaine Defoe picking up an injury in a recent friendly.

The need for a striking addition is going to increase tenfold imminently and thus, Wilson has to act quickly but also smartly – a move for Maja could prove to pay dividends.

Maja, who is capped by Nigeria, hasn’t featured much since his move to Ligue 1 but that hasn’t stopped him bagging eight goals and providing three assists in just 894 minutes of action, via Transfermarkt.

Les Girondins’ head coach Paolo Sousa claims the young forward is a “scorer” who’s got “sharp and strong qualities” whilst ex-Black Cats boss Chris Coleman believed the youngster offered something “different” through his “big injection of personality.”

Interestingly, Defoe has already had an impact on Maja’s career and could prove to be vital if he returns to the shores of the UK.

“Jermain Defoe was probably one of my biggest admirers because I think he just liked the fact that I was good at finishing.”

Wilson must not hold back with this deal, if the Gers are to close the gap, then the manager needs to bolster that frontline, especially with Morelos on his way out.

AND in other news, Alan Hutton urges Rangers to hand new deal to Gerrard fave… 

Ollie Watkins is a dream fit for Leeds and Marcelo Bielsa

Leeds United must land Marcelo Bielsa one man in particular if they are to succeed in the big time next season…

What’s the word?

According to The Athletic’s Phil Hay, Brentford striker Ollie Watkins was “a name mentioned” to the reliable Whites correspondent this week, meaning he could be someone that the Yorkshire giants are indeed taking a look at.

Elsewhere, it has been reported that the Bees value their leading talisman in excess of £25m following their failure to gain promotion in the Championship playoff final.

Aston Villa, who are managed by Watkins’ ex-coach Dean Smith, are also keen on landing the impressive forward.

Exactly what Bielsa needs

The striking position is an interesting headache for Bielsa, he clearly likes Patrick Bamford but he shouldn’t sniff away from upgrading that position now they’re back in the top-flight.

Despite hitting 16 goals for the season, Bamford was hugely wasteful and was one major cause of Leeds ranking inside the bottom five for chance conversion – the title-winners scored just 12.5% of their opportunities per Transfermarkt.

Watkins scored a whopping 26 goals in the second tier last season, averaging only 2.7 shots per game as well as 1.5 key passes and 0.8 dribbles, via WhoScored.

Meanwhile, United’s number nine scored ten fewer goals yet averaged 0.5 more shots each appearance. The difference is staggering.

It’s no wonder Trevor Sinclair described him as “lethal” before likening him to Jermain Defoe. His former Exeter boss Paul Tisdale believes he “has the ability and the perfect attitude”.

These are just further ticks next to his name on the scouting list.

His ability to run defences ragged is exactly what Bielsa needs in a striker next season, and the club should absolutely pay up to clinch him.

AND in other news, Leeds mustn’t hand a second chance to £10m flop…

Sunderland: Sammy Yu claims that Stewart Donald has not responded to multiple attempts to contact him about potential takeover

Chinese businessman Sammy Yu has revealed that he has made three attempts to discuss a potential takeover from current Sunderland owner Stewart Donald.

Life at the Wearside club has been full of controversy and drama in recent years, having had the majority of it documented via Netflix series Sunderland Til I Die.

Current owner Donald has been a big part of the latest travails at the Stadium of Light, taking over from Ellis Short only to reveal that he wanted to sell the club after just 19 months.

With a second successive failure to gain promotion from League One fresh in the minds of the club’s fans, a claim made by potential new owner Yu is likely to cause more controversy.

Yu, who previously had talks with former owner Short about a potential takeover on Wearside, spoke to Sunderland Echo about his desire to make a bid for the Black Cats but also revealed that communication between himself and Donald was proving tricky.

“For Sunderland, me and my group are always interested,” the Chinese businessman said.“But after two or three different attempts, we found that it’s difficult to communicate with Mr Donald and he hasn’t been giving a proper response to allow a negotiation.“If, one day, he can come up with something concrete and has the appropriate manner to talk, then yes – it’s still on. We’re interested to go forward, but not until then.“At times we were told that we could go ahead and talk,” he continued.“But we never get to the stage where we can talk about concrete terms and conditions of the deal.“It’s quite annoying and we’re quite saddened by it.”

This is probably not going to go down well with Sunderland fans, many of whom have previously criticised Donald’s ownership of the club, and they are unlikely to be impressed with his apparently recurring failure to engage with Yu.

One must wonder what Donald is playing at by refusing to dignify Yu with a response ahead of yet another season at League One level for Sunderland.

Do you think Sammy Yu will come in to replace Donald? Let us know in the comments section below…

Felipe Anderson can wreck Liverpool tonight

The focus will be on West Ham United’s Felipe Anderson and Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah on Monday night when the Hammers welcome the Reds to the London Stadium in an important league clash for both sides.

Manuel Pellegrini will be hoping his team can put in a more disciplined performance against the league leaders following a disappointing 3-0 defeat at Wolverhampton Wanderers last week.

This will require a better showing from Pellegrini’s main players, like Anderson, who has been a standout performer for the East London club this campaign.

Three defeats in as many games have seen West Ham struggling for consistency and despite the commitment from Marko Arnautovic to remain at the club for the remainder of the season, at least, a player like Anderson has failed to take responsibility when the team has had its back against the wall.

But, the quality of the 25-year-old will have any team in the competition a bit worried and Liverpool will need to be at their defensive best to keep him quiet come kick-off.

Anderson could particularly be dangerous to the Liverpool defence who are currently without Trent Alexander-Arnold and Joe Gomez and if Jurgen Klopp decides to play Jordan Henderson at right-back again, Anderson could really fancy himself on the left-wing to cause them trouble.

With Manchester City breathing down Liverpool’s neck, following their 3-1 win over Arsenal on Sunday,  Klopp will be ever reliant on the brilliance of Salah from now on to guide Liverpool through this challenging part of the season and maybe the Premier League crown.

Liverpool struggled to get going against Leicester City last week and will need the likes of Salah and Roberto Firmino to step-up and put West Ham to the sword.

However, it could be Anderson who has the last laugh.

‘Florentino Perez never loses’ – Why Real Madrid have a ‘70 or 80 per cent' chance of completing Kylian Mbappe transfer from PSG in 2024

Real Madrid have a “70 or 80 per cent” chance of signing Kylian Mbappe in 2024, with Javier Tebas claiming that “Florentino Perez never loses”.

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Blancos heavily linked with French superstarSet to become a free agent next summerThe next Galactico at the Bernabeu?WHAT HAPPENED?

The Blancos have been heavily linked with the France international forward for several years, but missed out on his signature when a move to Paris Saint-Germain was made in 2017. They have also failed to put a deal in place across recent windows, despite having offers of €200 million (£174m/$212m) plus on the table.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT THEY SAID

Mbappe has, however, stopped short of signing another new contract at PSG, meaning that he could become a free agent next summer. La Liga president Tebas expects that situation to play into Real’s hands, telling when asked about welcoming another World Cup winner to Spain: “Convinced, no, but it is a destiny for him, for sure. I think he will be in La Liga next season at 70 or 80 per cent.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Blancos president Perez is famed for his Galacticos recruitment policy – having signed the likes of Luis Figo, Zinedine Zidane, David Beckham and Cristiano Ronaldo in the past – and Tebas added on why Mbappe is likely to end up at Santiago Bernabeu when discussing future transfers and the contentious European Super League plans that Real have played a prominent part in: “Florentino never loses, he doesn’t lose at anything.”

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Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

Mbappe has admitted in the past that Real would be a dream club for him and he has already made history at PSG – becoming the club’s all-time leading goalscorer – to suggest that a new challenge will be sought at some stage in the near future.

Just reward! In-form Chelsea star Cole Palmer earns senior England call-up for Euro 2024 qualifiers alongside Man City's Rico Lewis & Aston Villa's Ezri Konsa

In-form Chelsea star Cole Palmer has earned a senior international call-up alongside Man City's Rico Lewis, amid a host of injuries for England.

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Palmer & Lewis set for senior call-upsEngland squad hit by injuriesMaddison withdraws, Bellingham doubtfulWHAT HAPPENED?

Palmer has been rewarded for his fine form at club level with a call-up to Gareth Southgate's senior squad for the upcoming Euro 2024 qualifiers against Malta and North Macedonia. He has been joined by former team-mate and fellow Man City academy graduate Lewis and Aston Villa defender Ezri Konsa.

Advertisement(C)GettyImagesTHE BIGGER PICTURE

England have already secured their place in the tournament in Germany next summer, but Southgate's plans for the final two games of the qualifying cycle have been hampered by a number of injuries. James Maddison has already withdrawn due to the recurrence of an ankle problem, as have Callum Wilson and Lewis Dunk, while Real Madrid star Jude Bellingham is a major doubt. Palmer's club-mate Levi Colwill is expected to be passed fit despite missing Chelsea's 4-4 draw with Man City on Sunday.

WHAT DID ENGLAND SAY?

In a statement on Palmer, Lewis and Konsa's call-ups, England said: "The trio’s addition follows the withdrawal of James Maddison, Lewis Dunk and Callum Wilson across the course of the weekend. The majority of Gareth Southgate’s squad are due to report to St. George’s Park on Monday with further assessments to take place."

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GettyWHAT NEXT?

The Three Lions boss may use the two games to experiment with his line-up as a result of those absences. Palmer, Lewis and Konsa will hope to make their senior debuts when England host Malta on Friday, before a trip to North Macedonia the following Monday.

Norway's Women's World Cup crisis: Superstars Ada Hegerberg and Caroline Graham Hansen being held back as early exit looms

Hege Riise's squad is packed with top-tier talents, but they are yet to score Down Under and facing an embarrassing group-stage failure

Ada Hegerberg is a Ballon d'Or winner and six-time European champion. Caroline Graham Hansen has won 23 major trophies in three countries, which includes two Champions League triumphs. Maren Mjelde and Guro Reiten are both in double figures for titles won at Chelsea. Ingrid Engen has won the league in three different countries and recently lifted her first Champions League trophy. Emilie Haavi was just named Serie A's Most Valuable Player as Roma won the competition for the first time. Frida Maanum was nominated for the Women's Super League's Player of the Season award.

All of these names are in Norway's 2023 Women's World Cup squad and yet, the Scandinavian nation is on the brink of crashing out in the group stages – only 12 months after suffering the exact same fate at the European Championship.

Individuals don't make a team, that's for sure. There's a reason why so many nations see 'golden generations' pass by without living up to the success that many anticipate them achieving. But even knowing that, it seems remarkable that Norway could be about to succumb to another dramatically underwhelming tournament so soon after the last – and under a different coach, too.

There have been positive signs for the 1995 World Cup winners in recent years, such as Lise Klaveness' applaudable representation of the federation as its president and Hegerberg’s decision to end her five-year absence from the national team after seeing improvements at home with regards to women’s football.

But as this tournament has shown, the nation is still a way off success on the pitch. In fact, it’s not even achieving what should be the bare minimum.

GettyThe Law of Jante

When the team news came out for Norway’s crucial match with Switzerland on Tuesday, it was shocking. Following a disappointing defeat to New Zealand in the first game, head coach Hege Riise dropped Graham Hansen to the bench.

This is one of the best players in the world, a game-changer and a galvaniser, someone who played a huge role when Barcelona won the Champions League just last month – and this was an incredibly important game. It was a huge decision.

Graham Hansen would spend less than an hour on the sidelines before, at 0-0, being thrown on to try and get Norway the goal they desired. The winger was very lively and came close on a few occasions, but the game would end goalless.

“There's a lot I want to say, but you might have to bite your tongue,” she told after the final whistle. “I feel like I've been trampled on for a year. You talk about standing together as a team and as a nation. I feel that over the past year I've just taken it on the chin. I thought I had earned a certain amount of respect.”

Asked if she believed there were other reasons for her being on the bench, Graham Hansen replied: “I think I'll leave it until after the championship. I think that in Norway we have a tradition of putting everyone in the same box. The Law of Jante is strong”, she added, referring to an attitude of disapproval towards standing out and expressing individuality.

Riise stood by her decision after the game and praised Graham Hansen’s impact from the bench. The following day, the player apologised for her comments in a press conference. “My emotions got the better of me,” she said.

AdvertisementGettyHard to brush under the carpet

You can’t ignore what happened though, right? After all, frustrations have boiled over before. Indeed, Graham Hansen took a break from the national team after the Euros last summer, while Hegerberg didn’t play for Norway for five years.

And the decision not to play Graham Hansen was certainly a big shock. In Riise’s press conference after the match, one journalist raised their hand and put the following to the coach: “Our football expert says that if you have one of the best players in her position, if you cannot find a space for her on the team, then you fail as a coach. What's your opinion?”

“Well, that's his opinion,” Riise responded. “I reached this decision based on what I find to be best for the team. That was my starting point and that's what I do today. I stick by that decision and that assessment. The opinions of others? Well, it's difficult for me to influence other people's opinion, but I stick to what I did.”

GettyUnderperforming

That it is players like Graham Hansen and Hegerberg that have been vocal about their frustrations at the national team, and gone against that Law of Jante, is no surprise. After all, these are two supremely-talented footballers who play for two of the biggest and best-supported clubs in the game, at Barcelona and Lyon, respectively. They want to be successful and their desire to be so with the national team is at the heart of any outspokenness.

And this team should be doing better. After the defeat to New Zealand, Graham Hansen told : "We go from championship to championship and underperform."

When we talk about ‘golden generations’ not living up to the hype, it’s often that the team has fallen in the knockout rounds too many times or just not got over the hurdle in the final. But after failing to get out of the group stage at Euro 2022, losing 8-0 to England in the process, Norway could be about to exit at the same stage at this 2023 Women’s World Cup, despite being the favourites to top a group that features New Zealand, Switzerland and the Philippines. That’s quite a dramatic underperformance.

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GettyMore than one problem

And these problems don’t just stem from benching Graham Hansen. First of all, this is a team that lacks defensive depth. They have a couple of top-level players in these areas, but are otherwise fragile. Yet it feels like the team is not set-up in a way that best masks that or protects the weakness from being exposed, either in the formation or the players in midfield that can offer support.

That would be fine if they scored lots and lots of goals, which they are capable of given how top-heavy the squad is. Hegerberg, Graham Hansen, Reiten, Haavi, Maanum – these are all attack-minded players, but Norway haven’t found the back of the net yet at the World Cup.

Again, there is team selection that can be questioned here. For example, why is Reiten, who just put up the highest number of assists in the WSL from a left-wing position, playing in midfield? Her ability to isolate a defender one-on-one and whip in a dangerous cross is one of her biggest strengths. In midfield, she has been crowded out and stifled, unable to be at her creative best.

Of course, more is expected from the individuals, too. They can create more, finish better, defend more effectively – and they’ve acknowledged that throughout the tournament. But it does also feel like Riise can get more out of them than she currently is.

Barcelona ratings vs Mallorca: Ansu Fati shows exactly why this can't be his final game at Camp Nou with match-winning double

With transfer rumours rampant, the homegrown winger made his case to remain with the Barca as they bid farewell to some club legends & their stadium

Barcelona capped off their final home game at the soon-to-be-renovated Camp Nou in style, with Ansu Fati scoring twice in a 3-0 win against a struggling Mallorca side. The Spanish champions are moving to a new stadium next season while their old home undergoes extensive repairs, and it didn't take long for Barca to celebrate Camp Nou with a goal in their final fixture.

Gavi surged down the right, before cutting the ball back to a wide-open Fati, who couldn't miss from close range. The Blaugrana were handed a further advantage by a Mallorca sending off, after Amath Ndiaye clattered Alejandro Balde and earned himself a straight red.

Barcelona were far more dominant against 10 men, and Fati was at it again 20 minutes later, capping off a fluid move with a neat near-post finish. The Blaugrana were somewhat wasteful after the break, but the chances still came, and Gavi made it three on 70 minutes with a fine left-footed strike. Fati also could've had a third with 15 minutes remaining but squandered a good chance.

At the end of it all, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba enjoyed applause from the Barcelona faithful, the duo departing at the end of the season to conclude legendary careers in Catalunya. Fati, meanwhile, might just have done enough to prove he could be part of the next one.

GOAL rates Barcelona's players from Camp Nou…

Getty ImagesGoalkeeper & Defence

Marc-Andre ter Stegen (6/10):

Probably very bored.

Alejando Balde (5/10):

Had little involvement before being taken off with a lower leg injury. Looked a nasty one, too, though he should be fit for pre-season.

Jules Kounde (6/10):

Still doesn't convince at centre-back, despite insisting he's a centre-back. Will be interesting to see where he plays next year.

Andreas Christensen (6/10):

A solid showing once again, despite having very little to do.

Jordi Alba (7/10):

A fine Camp Nou swansong. Emotional when subbed off with 10 minutes to play. He's past his best, but will certainly be missed.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesMidfield

Sergio Busquets (7/10):

Tidy in his final Camp Nou appearance. Completed the most passes on the pitch. Got a standing ovation as he was removed.

Gavi (7/10):

Assisted Fati's first, scored one of his own to make it three. Won a few tackles. Much more influential on the ball than in recent weeks.

Frenkie de Jong (7/10):

Adventurous in his distribution and silky on the ball. Xavi has got the best out of him.

Getty ImagesAttack

Ousmane Dembele (8/10):

Lots of good stuff on the ball, created four chances, assisted Gavi. An impressive showing.

Robert Lewandowski (6/10):

Headed wide when he really should have scored. Smashed a free-kick off the bar. The Pichichi will still be his, but he's not been at his best for a while.

Ansu Fati (8/10):

Easy finish to score less than a minute in. Far more complicated one to make it two 20 minutes later. Made a case to stay amid rampant transfer speculation.

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Subs & Manager

Sergi Roberto (6/10):

Replaced an injured Balde, did his work well.

Raphinha (6/10):

Unfortunate not to start. Didn't make much of an impact in what could be his final contest at Camp Nou.

Eric Garcia (N/A):

No time to make an impact

Ferran Torres (N/A):

Blasted a free-kick over in pretty much his only involvement.

Xavi (8/10):

Went back to a 4-3-3, and handed starts to Dembele and Fati. And it worked well, with both wingers proving instrumental in a convincing win. He will be annoyed by the Balde injury, but it was an otherwise solid day for the league champs.

World Cup classic! Winners and losers as Argentina outlast Netherlands to reach semi-finals thanks to Messi and Martinez

Lionel Scaloni's side blew a 2-0 lead in the dying stages of a heated encounter but held their nerve in the shootout to reach the last four.

What. A. Game. As beautiful as it was ugly. Full of goals and gamesmanship. And, at the end of an utterly engrossing 2-2 draw, Argentina prevailed on penalties, defeating Netherlands 4-3 in the shootout to progress to the semi-finals of the World Cup.

The Dutch were disgusted when Lautaro Martinez converted the decisive spot-kick, with Denzel Dumfries particularly incensed. He spent a good two minutes in a serious discussion with the referee, Antonio Miguel Mateu Lahoz, and received a red card for his troubles. We'll be hearing more about that in the coming days, no doubt.

For now, though, Argentina can bask in the glory of victory in a World Cup contest for the ages. Lionel Scaloni's side deservedly led 2-0 thanks to the genius and composure of Lionel Messi, who created Nahuel Molina's opener with the greatest no-look pass this tournament has seen since Andrea Pirlo in 2006, and then slotted home a penalty to seemingly seal his side's progression to the last four.

The Dutch weren't done, though. Louis van Gaal, the tactical genius in his final tournament as Netherlands boss, decided to go route one in the closing stages, after sending on Luuk de Jong and Wout Weghorst.

Sticking two big men up top paid off, with the latter forcing extra-time with two late goals, the second of which arrived after a fantastic free-kick routine.

The momentum was all with the Netherlands at that point but 99 per cent of the crowd remained fully behind Argentina, and the fans played their part in a shootout success that they were still celebrating long after Lautaro had decided a crazy game in Lusail in their favour.

Below, GOAL runs through all of the winners and losers from one of the greatest World Cup matches of all time…

GettyWinner: The World Cup's Assist King

How? How did he see that pass? The easy answer is: it’s Lionel Messi; of course he spotted that run. It’s what he does.

We’re talking about a genius that now has more World Cup knockout stage assists (five) than anyone since records began 1966, with his wonderfully-disguised pass for Molina taking him one clear of Pele. Messi has also moved ahead of Diego Maradona in terms of goal involvements (17), while his second-half penalty saw become Argentina's joint-top scorer (10) alongside Gabriel Batistuta.

These are not normal numbers, and it was interesting to hear Keanu Baccus admit after Australia's meeting with Argentina that facing Messi was a truly awesome experience, in that the diminutive No.10 doesn’t seem real.

"He looks fake on the field,” he said. “He looks a bit like a wax statue, to be honest. It's surreal how good he actually is and how he watches the game, sees the game and takes it on himself.

"It’s very special because not many people can do that. Receive the ball from anywhere on the field and back yourself, be confident to go at people and take the game on."

Against the Netherlands, Messi provided yet another stunning demonstration of that remarkable, super-human ability to know exactly where everyone is on the field at any given time.

Indeed, what was extraordinary about his assist for Molina's goal was that at no point did he look up to check where his team-mate was, because he already knew where he was.

This is why, as Jorge Valdano pointed out, Argentina's players go out of their way to get him the ball, even when he's surrounded by opponents. Because Messi sees things that nobody else can.

AdvertisementGettyWinner: Nahuel Molina

As Nahuel Molina told GOAL last year, Messi was his childhood idol.

"Because I wasn't a right-back when I was younger," he explained. "I played further forward, out wide, so I loved Messi, and not because I was similar to him or anything, just because he was such a great player, on a whole other level to everyone else!"

So, when Molina was called up to the Argentina squad for the first time, it was "like a dream come true".

What, then, must it have felt like for the 24-year-old to have taken a pass from his idol to open the scoring in a World Cup quarter-final against Netherlands?

It's safe to presume that Nahuel Molina will never, ever forget his first international goal.

GettyLosers: German Pezzella

German Pezzella was the most relieved man in this stadium when Lautaro's penalty went in. Had Argentina been eliminated here, the Betis defender never would have forgiven himself.

Argentina had the game won in normal time. They just needed to deal with one final Netherlands attack and the ball had already been half-cleared. Weghorst went for it but he had his back to goal. There was little danger. If anything, the Dutch forward was about to give away for leaning into Leandro Paredes, who was already on his way down.

However, Pezzella stupidly barged into the back of Weghorst, gifting Netherlands a free-kick on the edge of the area…

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GettyWinner: Dutch ingenuity

There was nothing pretty or sophisticated about the way in which the Dutch got themselves back into this game. This wasn't the Netherlands of the 1970s, it was Wimbledon of the 1980s. Van Gaal has never been one for Total Football, of course, but route one?… And yet it worked.

Van Gaal threw on the big men and instructed his players to get the ball into the box. Wieghorst's first goal came from a cross from the right flank and he also won the free from which Netherlands levelled the game by just making a nuisance of himself under a high ball on the edge of the area.

Credit where it's due, though: the equaliser was a stroke of genius, reminiscent of Sweden in 1994 and Argentina in 1998. With a move straight off the training ground, Steven Berghuis pretended to shoot before Teun Koopmeiners cleverly rolled the ball low into the area for Weghorst to take care of the rest. It was as ingenious as it was ballsy. Very Van Gaal, essentially.

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