World Cup hits and misses
From Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe dazzling, Morocco overachieving to Cristiano Ronaldo discovering his place in the sidelines, there have been a number of hits and misses in the month-long festival of football.
Overachievers
Morocco became the first African side and the first Arab team to reach the semifinals of a World Cup. And it was no fluke.
Walid Regragui's men, ranked 22nd in the world, beat Belgium and drew with Croatia on the way to topping their group before dumping 2010 champions Spain and Portugal out of the tournament.
Japan shocked Germany and Spain to top their group before losing on penalties to Croatia in the round of 16.
South Korea underlined the progress Asian football is making by beating Portugal to qualify from their group but came unstuck against Brazil in the first knockout round.
Superstars shine
Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe, who will go head to head in Sunday's final, have certainly lived up to their stellar billing.
The forwards have five goals apiece as they vie for the Golden Boot.
Messi, 35, though lacking his former pace, has shown an uncanny knack to turn on the style at key moments, highlighted by his dazzling run to set up Julian Alvarez for the third goal against Croatia in the semi-finals.
Mbappe, 23, is ready to take on his Paris Saint-Germain teammate's mantle as the best player in the world, looking unstoppable at times for defending champions France.
Young guns
A clutch of young players have announced themselves on football's biggest stage in Qatar.
Manchester City forward Julian Alvarez has already scored four goals while Portugal's Goncalo Ramos smashed a hat-trick in a 6-1 win against Switzerland after being brought in to replace Cristiano Ronaldo.
England pair Bukayo Saka and Jude Bellingham caught the eye along with Dutch forward Cody Gakpo, while Croatia defender Josko Gvardiol enjoyed an outstanding tournament.
Fallen giants
Cristiano Ronaldo left the pitch in tears after Morocco ended his World Cup dream.
The superstar forward, without a club after his painful divorce from Manchester United, scored Portugal's first goal of the World Cup from the penalty spot but watched from the sidelines as Portugal ripped Switzerland apart and were shocked by Morocco in the quarters.
Neymar equalled Pele's record haul of 77 goals for Brazil but watched in agony as his side lost to Croatia on penalties in the quarterfinals.
Early exits
Qatar came into the World Cup with high hopes as reigning Asian champions but left their own party embarrassingly early.
They became only the second home team to crash out of a World Cup in the group stage after South Africa in 2010, losing all three of their matches and scoring just once.
Four-time winners Germany were also humiliated, exiting at the group stage for the second straight World Cup.
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