An Irishman missed the Netherlands' dramatic comeback against Argentina after leaving the game early to "beat the traffic".
Former League of Ireland footballer Ciaran Kelly, who lives in Qatar, attended the World Cup quarter-final clash at the Lusail Stadium on Friday evening.
But the ex-Sligo Rovers goalkeeper decided to leave the game before Louis van Gaal's side came from two goals down to draw the match level, meaning he missed extra-time and the penalty shootout, which Argentina won 4-3.
READ MORE: Nicolas Otamendi explains why Argentina stars celebrated in Netherlands' players faces
Kelly is no stranger to penalties himself, having saved all four of Shamrock Rovers' spot-kicks against Sligo Rovers in the 2010 FAI Cup final as the Bit O'Red won 2-0 in the shootout to lift the trophy.
He also saved two Shelbourne penalties as Sligo retained the cup on penalties 12 months later.
But he didn't see any of Friday's shootout, posting on Twitter: "Not my brightest idea! When you make a decision to beat the traffic!"
And it was Emiliano Martinez who put on a penalty-saving masterclass this time as Argentina beat the Netherlands on penalties to settle a thrilling World Cup quarter-final.
After Lionel Messi lit up Lusail Stadium to score and assist, Argentina seemed to be coasting to a semi-final clash with Croatia, only for Wout Weghorst to hit a brace and seal a remarkable 2-2 draw.
Aston Villa stopper Martinez then took centre stage, saving from Virgil van Dijk and Steven Berghuis as the Dutch fell on penalties to Argentina in a repeat of the 2014 semi-final.
Enzo Fernandez sent his penalty wide to give the Netherlands hope as Luuk de Jong slotted home but Lautaro Martinez would thrash in the winner to send Argentina through 4-3 on penalties.
The loss was the first tasted by Louis van Gaal since he returned for a third stint in charge of the Netherlands, with the 71-year-old now retiring from management for a second time.
Messi’s magic seemed to have inspired a comfortable victory for Argentina following his fine assist for Nahuel Molina and his second-half penalty – but Burnley striker Weghorst had other ideas.
In an ill-tempered tie, Spanish referee Antonio Mateu doled out 14 cautions as the players from both sides were involved in more than one melee.
Messi’s no-look, reverse pass 10 minutes before half-time not only flummoxed two Premier League title-winning defenders in Van Dijk and Nathan Ake but was weighted to perfection, allowing Molina to score his first international goal before the skipper doubled the lead with a cool 73rd-minute penalty after Marcos Acuna – whose earlier booking rules him out of the semi-final – had been tripped by Denzel Dumfries.
Weghorst came off the bench to reduce the arrears with a header that seemingly stirred the Netherlands from an 83-minute slumber in which they had failed to test Martinez, and he was on hand to steer in a late leveller to cue bedlam among the Dutch players.
There was a feisty altercation in the closing stages, the Dutch bench erupting after Leandro Paredes smashed the ball into the dugout with Van Dijk barging him to the ground as tempers flared.
With Van Dijk and Ake joining the attack, Argentina survived a barrage of balls into their box but were undone by some fine thinking out of it.
When a last-gasp free-kick was awarded, instead of shooting, Koopmeiners rolled a pass into the area where Weghorst held off his marker to equalise.
With legs tiring, chances in the additional 30 minutes were at a premium but substitute Lautaro Martinez’s effort cannoned off Van Dijk as Argentina finished the stronger of the two.
Weghorst then unwittingly deflected a Fernandez shot just over the crossbar as the Netherlands started to struggle.
Lautaro Martinez forced a fine stop out of Andries Noppert, who was beaten all ends up as Fernandez’s next effort cracked against the woodwork with the Dutch just about holding on for penalties.
Captain Van Dijk stepped up first but his effort was well saved by Martinez before Messi stroked home a simple spot-kick to give Argentina an early lead in the shootout.
Berghuis was next for the Dutch and this time Martinez’s save was even better and, after Gonzalo Montiel and Weghorst had struck, Argentina missed as Fernandez screwed his penalty wide.
De Jong kept the Dutch dreams alive only for Lautaro Martinez to fire in – Argentina succeeding where their rivals Brazil had failed earlier in the day.
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