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To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This video can not be played Figure caption, Canale scores winning penalty after Tah blazes over as Germany knocked out By Elizabeth Conway Spanish football reporter Published 9 minutes ago There were tears of disbelief and unbridled joy as the unflappable Jose Canale smashed home Paraguay's penalty to complete one of the greatest World Cup upsets in recent memory. The celebrations were euphoric, with players sprinting towards the match-winning defender before collapsing into a jubilant huddle, marking one of the defining moments in their team's history. Paraguay supporters of every generation embraced as tears streamed down their faces, while chants of 'Vamos!' echoed around the stadium. After 120 minutes packed with tension and controversy, La Albirroja had done the unthinkable. Relief and ecstasy were etched across every Paraguay supporter's face. A dogged and resilient side that averaged only 0.78 goals per game during qualifying, the joint-lowest of any team to reach the finals, had eliminated four-time champions Germany in their first World Cup knockout match since 2014. For Germany, the defeat was equally historic. They suffered their first World Cup elimination via a penalty shootout, having won their previous four, and only their second shootout failure at a major tournament after losing the Euro 1976 final. The end for Nagelsmann? Germany suffer their 'next football nightmare' Published 31 minutes ago 'A joke' - how a 'terrible' VAR disallowed goal cost Germany Published 1 hour ago Paraguay stun Germany on penalties to reach last 16 of World Cup 'Now everyone is going to know who Paraguay is!' To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This video can not be played Figure caption, Paraguay fan SCENES! It was a result that will live long in Paraguay's football history and ranks among the biggest World Cup shocks of the modern era, whilst certainly being the tournament's biggest upset so far. "This means so much for our country", a 16-year-old Paraguay fan, who was with her family, told BBC Sport outside the Boston Stadium. "So many people doubted us. And we proved all of of them wrong. "We haven't been to the World Cup since 2010 and I was born in 2010. "This means so much to everyone. I haven't been this happy in so long. "It is amazing and such a big thing for our country. Not many people know what or who Paraguay is. Now everyone is going to know who Paraguay is!" Paraguay weathered an early German storm to produce a disciplined, defiant performance, sitting deep and absorbing pressure throughout. Germany dominated with 75% possession, completing 719 passes to Paraguay's 161, and registered 21 shots to their opponents' seven. But this has been a feature of Paraguay's resurgence under their 63-year-old Argentine manager Gustavo Alfaro. He took charge six games into the qualifying campaign and, after one defeat in 12 matches, saw them qualify with re
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