DOHA: For his legions of admirers, the debate about Lionel Messi's right to be regarded as the greatest footballer in history is officially over.The absence of a World Cup winners' medal has long been Exhibit A in the argument about why Messi does not rank above Pele and Diego Maradona in football's pantheon.But with Argentina's victory over France in Sunday's (Dec 18) jaw-dropping World Cup final in Doha, the case against the 35-year-old maestro is now surely closed.In a glittering career that has spanned three decades, Messi has won 37 club trophies, seven Ballon D'Or awards and six European Golden Boots.There has been a Copa America title, an Olympic gold medal and a list of scoring and statistical records that may never be beaten.The only remaining gap on Messi's CV - a World Cup victory - was comprehensively filled in on Sunday night over the course of 120 mesmerising minutes at the Lusail Stadium.In his final World Cup appearance - a record-breaking 26th for what it is worth - Messi scored twice as Argentina battled to a 3-3 draw in extra-time before prevailing on penalties.Not even Kylian Mbappe's magical hat-trick for Les Bleus could upset Messi's appointment with destiny on a night that seemed pre-ordained.Former England and Barcelona forward Gary Lineker tweeted: "It's been an absolute privilege to watch Lionel Messi for nearly 2 decades.
Moment after moment of spellbinding, breathtakingly joyous football. He?s a gift from the footballing Gods.""Lionel Messi. The best ever," was the instant verdict of England midfielder Declan Rice after Sunday's triumph. "We will never see a player like Messi ever again."Whether Messi really is the 'greatest ever' is a question, of course, that is as futile as the answer is