When Lionel Messi ran to the corner and sank to his knees, the enduring image of Argentina scrambling into the World Cup's last 16 was set.
Their number 10, in the blue and white stripes, his head tilted and fingers vertical, about to be swamped moments later by adoring team-mates.
But all those cameras not positioned in Messi's corner of the Saint Petersburg Stadium quickly turned their gaze upwards and slightly to the right.
Diego Maradona, with his arms grappling his own chest, was grimacing towards the sky, a crazed look in his eyes of ecstasy, relief and delirium.
There is no telling how the hysteria that surrounds Maradona really affects the team, whether his increasingly deranged presence is a force for inspiration, sympathy or discomfort.
But as Argentina rallied to escape Group D, one of the game's most magical players, perhaps its greatest ever icon, was in the stands, only prevented from toppling over by two of his entourage next to him.
He sat slumped in his seat, seemingly dozing off, and then later upright, frazzled with nerves, his hands clawing his face.
When Rojo's volley hit the net, the performance was completed by two raised middle fingers and a shouted obscene insult, the intended target apparently anyone that would look.
Broadcasters are expected to treat Maradona with more sensitivity during Saturday's quarter-final against France. Accompanying every meaningful action with a shot of the 57-year-old perhaps made for compelling viewing, but his health cannot be taken lightly.
After the match, video emerged of him being helped into the dining area of his VIP box, seemingly unwell. Photos showed medical staff attending to him, with one appearing to take his pulse.
On Wednesday, Maradona wrote on Instagram: "I want to tell everyone that I am fine, that I am not and was not hospitalised."
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