Sheriff's players celebrate Sebastien Thill's winning goal at Real Madrid
Sheriff Tiraspol said they had not been overawed on their first trip to the mighty Real Madrid -- and proved it by winning 2-1 late on in one of the biggest upsets in Champions League history.
With all the talk of a European Super League for the elite, the minnows from the Moldovan league gave a timely reminder of the appeal of open competition.
"We came here to win," said Frank Castaneda, the Sheriff captain. "We didn't just come here to sit around. We know how good our players are and luckily for us Madrid weren't able to take their chances -- and we took ours."
For Sheriff this was only a second match in the Champions League group stage and the estimated value of their entire squad is 12 million euros, about the same as the annual salary of Madrid defender David Alaba.
Real dominated but Sheriff scored two excellent goals and had a third disallowed for offside, and now have six points out of six.
Sebastien Thill, who has a tattoo of himself dreaming of playing in the Champions League, smashed in the winner in the 89th minute.
"It's the best and most important goal of my career, that's for sure," Thill said.
"The side were so brave with how we played and luckily enough I was able to score a bit of a stunner."
Florentino Perez, the Real Madrid president, has said he struggles to get interested in Champions League group games and he might have wished he had missed this one.
Perez is one of the staunchest advocates of the aborted European Super League. But on the same day UEFA agreed to drop sanctions against the 12 clubs involved in the project, Sheriff reminded everyone that it's not just about the perceived big boys.
The Super League was intended to put an end to seemingly unbalanced match-ups like these -- and the occasional shock that comes with them -- leaving a competition only for a self-selected elite.
"It's football, we had 20 shots or more and we scored one, they had two shots, scored both," Real's Casemiro told Movistar+.
"We have to pay more attention, especially defensively. We started well, we had total control of the game, we had opportunities to get ahead, but they scored a great goal at the end."
The romance of Sheriff's success is questionable given the club is owned by a conglomerate, called Sheriff, which effectively runs the pro-Russian separatist state of Transnistria, where the football club is based.
Yet it is hard to begrudge players like Thill their moment of glory.
"After this match we all went crazy. There are a lot of foreigners in the club, we come from all types of countries. It's our strength," said Thill, who last season was playing on loan at FC Tambov in Russia, a club that was dissolved in May and had to declare itself bankrupt.
For Real Madrid, the path to the last 16 is still open, which points to the real weakness of the current Champions League: the format, not the teams involved.
The biggest clubs rarely fail to get through to the last 16 and a few shock results can easily be absorbed.
"We've missed out on three points and the group is wide open. We need to win our next game," said Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti, adding: "It's small details that cost us this game."
Real have been scoring plenty of goals and playing an exciting style of football since Ancelotti's return but he has complained about the defence, which was again caught napping.
For Sheriff, up next in the Champions League are Inter Milan, with qualification now very achievable in Group D, where they sit top.
"We aren't thinking about the last 16 yet as we still haven't done anything extraordinary, we're just going forward step by step," said Sheriff coach Yuriy Vernydub.