7.18amSo this photo has aged wellBy 7.16amImages from after the full-time whistleBy Morgan Rogers after the full-time whistle. Getty ImagesAlexis Mac Allister after the full-time whistle. Getty Images7.14amHow Argentina wonBy 7.12amEnglish journalists are sharpening their knivesBy They’re coming for Thomas Tuchel. The German manager, only the third foreigner in history to coach England, is not going to get out of this with full employment.7.10amHeartbreak for England at full-timeBy Morgan Rogers after the whistle blows.Getty ImagesHarry Kane reacts to the loss.AP Photo/Stephanie ScarbroughArgentina are through to the final.AP Photo/Mike StewartEngland have been knocked out. Getty Images7.09amMessi is pumping his fistsBy He is on his knees, head down, fists quivering. Then he’s up to meet the swarm heading for him from the bench. Kane’s head is bowed, his teammates in disbelief. And then, of course, there’s a full-time melee that the referee is trying to break up. Bellingham is in there. So is Rogers. Emotions are running so high. Argentina seem to care less, because they do care less. They weren’t the team leading with 84 minutes played who went on to lose.Messi celebrates the win. AP Photo/Mike Stewart7.03amFull-time: England 1-2 ArgentinaBy After 11 minutes of stoppage-time and a late, late Argentina free kick, the whistle blows and that is that … Argentina have smashed and grabbed their way into a second successive final. This time it won’t be against France, as it was four years ago, but against France’s vanquishers: Spain. Heartbreak for England, who had this sort of in their hands. Not held tightly enough to call it in control, but half-gathered. Then they put players behind the ball and invited Messi and his merry men to come and come again so many times that two of them stuck. A dramatic match, as promised.Goalscorer Enzo Fernandez celebrates Argentina’s win.Getty Images7.00amAnalysis: Is this the greatest World Cup semi-final comeback ever?By Vince RugariLook, it’s maybe a bit soon to make this sort of call, since that only just happened. But this is one of the greatest comebacks I’ve EVER seen. In a game this big, two goals so late? Absolutely incredible from Argentina.Enzo Fernandez kisses his badge after Argentina’s second goal. Getty ImagesEngland are paying the price for Thomas Tuchel’s decision to go too defensive, too early. After Gordon’s goal, they’ve sat back too deep, Argentina have had all the ball, all the momentum, and to some degree this has felt inevitable because of that. Now they’ve got six minutes to rescue the situation - but the cue, in a tactical and personnel sense, is already in the rack. If England lose this, Tuchel is going to be crucified.Another shot of Martinez’s equaliser.AP Photo/Jeff Roberson6.59amHow has this happened?By I can hear the England post-mortem already. The curse of another close call. What should have been done but wasn’t done. What simply couldn’t have been done against a team like Argentina, who by many measurements weren’t good enough to make it this far but keep coming up with good enough things to get it done. The team with nine lives.England 1-2 Argentina, 90+7 minutesMarc Guehi reacts to Argentina’s second goal. Getty Images6.53amGOAL! Martinez makes it two for ArgentinaBy Play resumes and Messi resumes too. England win the ball back and ferry it as far down the other end as they can before their opponents hit them back and Mac Allister smacks a rocket of a shot at goal that clips the outside of the right post.The clock shows nine minutes of added time just as another of those Messi crosses finds Lautaro Martinez for a simple header that has likely brought about a monumental comeback win.England 1-2 Argentina, 90+2 minutesLautaro Martinez heads the ball into the goal to take the lead for Argentina. Getty ImagesAnother assist for Messi!AP Photo/Rebecca BlackwellArgentina celebrate. Getty Images1 of 6