Croatia's World Cup clash with Russia was one of those truly special games that produced more than one set of winners.
Obviously, there were Zlatko Dalic's players, who realized their dream of emulating the heroes of the 1998 World Cup in France by triumphing 4-3 on penalties to progress to the last four.
But there were also the host nation's incredible fans, who generated the most remarkable atmosphere of the tournament to date, nearly inspiring their side to another upset win.
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And then there was England, which will face an exhausted and perhaps injury-ravaged Croatia in the semifinals in Moscow on Wednesday.
Luka Modric & Co. may not be the opponents that Gareth Southgate would have been hoping to meet at the Luzhniki Stadium, but extra time and penalties were undoubtedly his ideal outcome for the game at Fisht Stadium.
Indeed, by the end Sime Vrsaljko had been forced off injured, Danijel Subasic was nursing an apparent hamstring injury and Mario Mandzukic looked out on his feet.
He wasn't alone. This was a mentally and physically draining night of knockout football in balmy conditions in Sochi; it was exhausting just to watch, yet also truly awesome, stirring, from start to finish.
The rendition of the Russian anthem before kickoff was rousing; the hosts' start to the game was even more impressive.
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Each and every player clad in red threw themselves into tackles right from the first whistle. Croatia was rattled and a tad enraged. At one point, Ivan Rakitic asked referee Sandro Ricci how many times he had to be kicked before he would be awarded a foul.
This was no brutal assault, though. Russia was the better side in the opening half-hour. It had little possession but plenty of penetration.
Indeed, while its plan may have been crude, it was undeniably effective: get the ball forward to Artem Dzyuba as quickly as possible, and then take it from there.
It earned the Russians a deserved opening goal. Denis Cheryshev, one of the stories of the tournament, picked up the ball in midfield before driving forward.
He exchanged passes with Dzyuba before bending the ball into the top corner of the Croatia goal. As 1-2s go, it was arguably even more stunning than the Luis Suarez-Edinson Cavani combo at this very stadium just a week before.
At that stage, Croatia was lost, with Modric anonymous, Rakitic forced to play far too deep because of the omission of Marcelo Brozovic and Mandzukic isolated, slow and cumbersome up front.
With only Ante Rebic carrying any kind of attacking threat, the favorite was in real danger of being swept away by a wave of Russian intensity and industry.
Suddenly, out of nothing, the Croats conjured an equalizer, with Ivan Perisic releasing Mandzukic, who crossed for Andrej Kramaric to head home. It was Croatia's first shot on target.
They continued to struggle to create openings in the second half, primarily due to their unbalanced midfield, but they should have taken the lead on the hour when the ball dropped for Perisic in the area only for the Inter winger to see his low drive strike the inside of the left post.
It was his last contribution, with Dalic belatedly seeing the error of his ways by deciding to introduce Brozovic in an effort to allow Rakitic have a greater influence on proceedings from a more advanced position.
It was Modric who came to the fore, though, the only man whose turn of pace seemed unaffected by the game's grueling intensity.
Croatia continued to look disjointed in defense, though, and Dzyuba continued to cause havoc every time the ball was launched in his direction. The striker was involved in five of Russia's seven shots before his exit with just over 10 minutes to go.
Even his withdrawal didn't dampen the spirits of a raucous home crowd. On the contrary, in the final 10 minutes of normal time, the optimism, the belief well and truly returned.
Their hopes were lifted further by the sight of Croatia's goalkeeper, Subasic, the shootout hero against Denmark, receiving intensive treatment on an apparent hamstring strain before the start of extra time.
Subasic battled on, though, and so did Croatia. Domagoj Vida headed them into the lead in the first half of extra time only to see Mario Fernandes respond in kind to force penalties.
At that stage, Croatia looked spent, emotionally and physically, yet it roused itself to win the shootout, thanks to a combination of Subasic, Fernandes' horrible strike, good fortune for Modric and another seemingly nerveless spot kick from Rakitic.
As a result, it is Croatia, not Russia, that marches on to Moscow. A fitter and fresher England awaits. Perhaps the Three Lions were the biggest winners of all on Saturday night.