France won the World Cup for the second time after beating Croatia 4-2 in a pulsating final in Moscow that included a controversial use of VAR.

Russia 2018 will be remembered as a tournament where football dazzled. Giants of the game suffered early exits, goals flew in late at an astonishing rate and England almost convinced football to come home.

Here, we take a look at the top 10 moments from a legendary five weeks but we want to hear from you, too – tweet us @BDSoccer

Ronaldo Magic

It was supposed to be all about pre-tournament favourites Spain – but the headlines were grabbed by a familiar name.

The six-time Ballon d’Or winner came to the party in a big way, hitting a hat-trick, dragging Portugal to a memorable 3-3 draw in Sochi and reclaiming the centre stage for himself. Those that declared this game the greatest ever in a World Cup wouldn’t be too far from the mark.

Spain were seemingly heading towards victory after coming from behind twice to lead 3-2 with just minutes remaining, but Ronaldo, who became the first player to score in eight consecutive major tournaments, denied them right at the death with a late free-kick that got the world off their seats. The tournament didn’t look back from that moment.

Messi Fails Against Iceland

After Ronaldo’s heroics against Spain, attention turned to Lionel Messi on the next day against Icelan.

That pressure seemed to take its toll on the Argentina maverick as he had to endure the ignominy of seeing his penalty saved as his side were held by World Cup newcomers Iceland in their World Cup opener.

When Messi stepped up, it seemed Hannes Halldorsson knew this was his moment. He grew in goal. The goalkeeper guessed correctly and dived full length to his right to keep out the penalty – the fourth time Messi has missed a spot-kick in his last seven efforts for club and country.

While Sergio Aguero scored a fine early goal, Argentina did not have the runners ahead of Messi, who had the look of a man trying too hard. Iceland got amongst him and Argentina had no answers. It set the tone for their underwhelming tournament that ended against France in the last 16.

Germans Crashing Out

The dramatic victory over Sweden had many people fearing that Germany might become unstoppable on their route to the final in Russia. However, in one of the greatest upsets in World Cup history, South Korea ended their tournament before the knockout stages.

With the game locked at 0-0 and Germany needing a win to qualify, Young-Gwon Kim bundled home from a corner and although the goal was initially ruled out for offside, a VAR review showed the ball coming off the foot of Kroos and the decision was reversed. Five minutes later, goalkeeper Manuel Neuer comically sauntered upfield and was disposessed before Heung-Min Son fired into an open net.

Japan Vs Belgium

It was a last 16 encounter that looked one-sided, but ended up producing one of the most exciting comebacks in World Cup history.

After an ineffective first half when Belgium’s golden generation lacked sparkle in the final third and found their best players restricted by Japan’s intensity, Roberto Martinez’s men were soon 2-0 down after a swift combo of ruthless attacks by the Japanese. It seemed yet another World Cup upset was on the cards.

Martinez turned to his bench and called for Marouane Fellaini. It was a game changer. As Japanese players began to tire, Belgium went direct and drew the game level. Surely time for Japan to shut up shop? Nope. They went for the win.

There were eight Japan players in Belgium’s final third as Thibaut Courtois launched the 94th-minute counter-attack by rolling the ball out to Kevin De Bruyne. The Manchester City man led the charge before Thomas Meunier’s cross was beautifully dummied by Romelu Lukaku and Nacer Chadli slotted in the winner.

England Finally Winning a TieBreaer

England won on penalties at a World Cup for the first time when coming through a dramatic shoot-out against Colombia in the last 16. It had a nation waking up the morning after, asking the question: “did that really happen?”

David Ospina saved Jordan Henderson’s penalty to put Colombia on the brink but Mateus Uribe blasted his effort against the underside of the bar before Kieran Trippier restored parity. A big left hand from Jordan Pickford then kept out Carlos Bacca’s fierce effort – leaving Eric Dier to slot home. A nation went potty. Football looked to be coming home.

Kane’s What IF Moment

England were 22 minutes away from reaching their first World Cup final since 1996 until Croatia dashed those dreams.

Ivan Perisic’s 68th-minute equaliser forced extra time in a tense semi-final that ended 1-1 after 90 minutes. England took the lead through Kieran Trippier’s wonderful fifth-minute free-kick and looked in control of proceedings but squandered big chances to finish Croatia off in the first half.

On 30 minutes, Harry Kane was presented with the key chance when one-on-one with goalkeeper Danijel Subasic. His effort was parried out but the ball fell back to the feet of Kane a few yards out, with just Domagoj Vida on the line to beat. However, Kane could only smash the ball against the post and replays showed Subasic got the most decisive of decisive touches.

France – Winning The World CUP

A fantastic World Cup was capped off by a fantastic final, which was packed with both brilliant and controversial moments.

Croatia will have plenty of complaints about the penalty awarded against Ivan Perisic, with debate raging about whether that was the correct decision or not, despite the intervention of VAR.

But there was also brilliance from both teams, with Kylian Mbappe underlining his status as the world’s most exciting young player in the world.

A pitch invasion hinted at political problems but as a sporting spectacle, the 2018 World Cup will be one to remember.