Every World Cup has its defining stories. Some are built on domination, others on underdog triumphs. But few narratives capture football's imagination quite like a comeback.Long before social media turned "comeback kings" into a sporting cliché, the FIFA World Cup had already produced matches that rewrote history, shattered expectations and reminded fans that no lead is ever truly secure.The ongoing 2026 World Cup has offered its own reminder.Also Read | FIFA 2026: Which country has won the most FIFA World Cup titlesIn a breathless Round of 16 clash, the defending champions Argentina were pushed to the absolute brink by a heroic Egypt side.Entering the match, the weight of history was entirely against the Albiceleste, who had lost all 13 of their previous World Cup fixtures when trailing by two or more goals. When the Pharaohs stunned the world by opening up a commanding 2–0 lead deep into the second half, it seemed that historical death sentence was finally being executed, leaving Argentina on the verge of one of the greatest upsets in tournament history.However, the favorites defied their own historical curse and launched a sensational late fightback, striking three times in just thirteen minutes.Cristian Romero opened the floodgates in the 79th minute, followed by an 83rd-minute equalizer from Lionel Messi, before Enzo Fernández sealed the dramatic 3–2 victory with a stoppage-time header in the 92nd minute.It was a stark reminder that even football's biggest powers are rarely more than a few moments away from chaos—and that history is rewritten by those who refuse to lose.Yet, when it comes to the greatest recoveries the tournament has ever witnessed, two matches remain in a league of their own.FIFA World Cup 2026: Which teams produced the biggest comebacks?The quarter-final between Austria and Switzerland in 1954 was less a football match than a test of survival.Played in Lausanne under sweltering temperatures approaching 40°C, the contest unfolded in conditions that drained players almost as quickly as the goals arrived.Switzerland, playing on home soil under Austrian coach Karl Rappan, appeared to have one foot in the semi-finals within 20 minutes. Robert Ballaman opened the scoring before Josef Hugi struck twice to leave the hosts cruising at 3-0.What followed remains almost impossible to comprehend.Austria responded with three goals in three breathtaking minutes to erase the deficit before captain Ernst Ocwirk completed the turnaround. Alfred Körner then added another, turning a hopeless position into a 5-3 lead in barely half an hour.The goals refused to stop.Ballaman and Hugi kept Switzerland alive, while Theodor Wagner completed his hat-trick for Austria. Eventually, Erich Probst delivered the final blow as Austria emerged 7-5 winners in what remains the highest-scoring match in FIFA World Cup history.The scoreline has never been surpassed.Eusebio's masterpiece rescued Portugal from humiliationTwelve years later, another quarter-final threatened to deliver one of the biggest shocks the tournament had ever seen.Tournament debutants Korea DPR (North Korea) had already stunned Italy to reach the last eight, but few believed they could trouble a Portuguese side packed with stars and led by the brilliant Eusebio.Within 25 minutes at Goodison Park, those assumptions had been turned upside down.Goals from Pak Seung-zin, Li Dong-woon and Yang Seung-kook left Portugal trailing 3-0 as one of football's greatest upsets loomed.Then Eusebio took over.The Portuguese forward pulled one back before half-time and struck twice more after the restart to complete his hat-trick. Minutes later, he won and converted a penalty to score his fourth of the afternoon, completing one of the greatest individual performances in World Cup history.José Augusto added a fifth to seal a remarkable 5-3 victory, rescuing Portugal's campaign and ending Korea DPR's fairytale run.Eusebio finished the tournament with nine goals, claiming the Golden Boot and cementing his place among football's greatest icons.Why World Cup comebacks never lose their magicFootball has produced countless dramatic recoveries at club level—Liverpool's unforgettable night in Istanbul, Manchester United's stoppage-time triumph in Barcelona and Barcelona's astonishing comeback against Paris Saint-Germain among them.But the World Cup carries a different weight.There are no second chances, no return legs and no next season. A single comeback can redefine careers, transform national sporting history and become part of football folklore.That is precisely why every comeback still captures the imagination.