Saudi Arabia pulled off one of the great upsets in World Cup history this morning, beating widely-fancied Argentina 2-1 to bring the tournament to life and leave Lionel Messi facing the prospect of a humiliating exit at his final World Cup.
The two-time winners led through Messi, who is aiming to be world champion at the fifth attempt, but now face a battle to reach the knockouts after a remarkable second half from the Saudis.
Messi stroked home a 10th-minute penalty after Leandro Paredes was bundled over but Saudi Arabia stunned Argentina with two quick-fire goals at the start of the second half - sparking a phenomenal atmosphere inside the 80,000-seat Lusail Stadium, which will host the Final.
On this evidence, Argentina are unlikely to be back on December 18, despite arriving in Qatar among the pre-tournament favourites and aiming here to match Italy's record of 37 international games unbeaten.
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There was a sense that Lionel Scaloni's side still had to prove themselves against the best in Europe but no-one predicted they would struggle against the Group C underdogs.
Saudi Arabia took full advantage of Argentina frustration at having three first half-goals disallowed to put in a display for the ages -- their tireless running and last-ditch defending at 2-1 just as impressive as two superbly-taken goals.
Three minutes after the interval, Saleh Al-Shehri beat Tottenham's Cristian Romero to the ball and fired a brilliant, low finish across goalkeeper Emiliano Martínez to equalise and send the green wall into flag-waving delirium.
Argentine were rattled, the frustration at their earlier disallowed goals now turned to outright panic.
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Sensing blood, Saudi stayed firmly on the front foot. Romero got his head in the way of a goal-bound effort but the ball was picked up by Salem Aldawsari, who stepped inside and curled a superb effort into the top corner.
It would be a contender for goal of the tournament, even without the remarkable context.
Scaloni had seen enough and ripped up his side with a triple change, Romero among the players withdrawn and Manchester pair Lisandro Martinez and Julian Alvarez entering the fray
Argentina recovered an element of poise and Messi was denied by a phenomenal last-ditch tackle before Mohammed Alowais saved point-blank from Nicolás Tagliafico.
It promised to be a long final half-hour for the Saudis but even as Hervé Renard's side tired, Argentina lacked finesse and conviction in the final third, underlined when Messi uncharacteristically sent a free-kick well over the bar before heading tamely at the goalkeeper.
The 35-year-old, who has said this will likely be his last World Cup, was clearly the main attraction and started the game brightly, and saw a trademark low shot well-saved by Alowais.
Argentina thought they had doubled their lead three times before the interval but Messi and Lautaro Martínez -- twice -- were ruled fractionally offside after racing clear of the Saudi defence.
Both Martinez's disallowed goals were special, the first a dink over the onrushing Alowais, who was then sold a brilliant dummy for the second after the Inter Milan striker had been sprung again from Messi's pass.
Argentina's early penalty came after the referee consulted the pitch-side monitor but will raise further questions about consistent application of the laws at the tournament, given it was a less compelling claim than Harry Maguire's appeal in England's 6-2 win over Iran yesterday.
Argentina were dysfunctional and pedestrian in Russia four years ago and here they were just too easily unsettled by a proactive, high-pressing and well-organised Saudi side. By half-time, they had wracked up more offsides, seven, than in the entire 2018 World Cup.
Saudi Arabia, who lost captain Salman Al-Faraj to injury in the first half, will now fancy their chances of qualifying from a group containing Mexico and Poland, while the Argentines must lick their wounds and recover from an historic failure.