An almost unheard-of team from one of the poorest countries in Europe has pulled off one of the greatest shocks in Champions League history.
Sheriff Tiraspol, from the self-declared independent state of Trans-Dniester, stunned 13-times European champions Real Madrid at the Bernabeu on Tuesday night as they won 2-1 with a late strike from Sebastien Thill.
Jasur Jakhshibaev headed Sheriff into the lead in the 25th minute, but Los Blancos were level through a second-half penalty from Karim Benzema, given following a VAR review.
The visitors, though, snatched all three points with just a minute left when Thill drove the ball into the top corner from 20 yards to leave the home crowd in silence.
It is now two wins out of two in Champions League Group D for Sheriff Tiraspol.
Officially the team hails from the impoverished country of Moldova, sandwiched between Romania and Ukraine, which formed after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
However Tiraspol, is the capital of Trans-Dniester, a thin slice of land on the Ukrainian border.
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In 1992, Russian-backed forces fought a separatist war there, leaving close to 1,000 people dead, but resulting in a self-declared new state that remains unrecognised by the international community.
Trans-Dniester takes its ‘independence’ from Moldova seriously, with its own currency which sits outside the international banking system and cannot be used or exchanged outside its borders.
It also has a rather unsavoury reputation for organised crime, smuggling and corruption.
Now it has something to be truly proud of, the humbling of the most successful football team in European history.