For a dominant midfielder aiming to make their mark in the latter stages of an international tournament, Zinedine Zidane undisputably remains the benchmark in the modern era.
READ: Henderson hopeful over fitness for Croatia clash
France are two wins away from emulating their celebrated class of 1998, who prevailed 3-0 in the World Cup final against Brazil on home soil thanks largely to a first-half brace from Zidane.
That time the ex-Juventus and Real Madrid great was only just getting started.
At Euro 2000, he strode regally across a quarter-final against Spain – dispatching a precision free-kick to kick-off a 2-1 win. It was the era of golden goal extra time and Zidane displayed nerves of steel to down Portugal from the penalty spot in the semi-final. David Trezeguet brought a similarly abrupt conclusion versus Italy in the final to make it back-to-back titles for Les Blues.
READ MORE: WC win would be crazier than 1966 triumph – Southgate
By the time the 2006 World Cup rolled around, Zidane had announced the tournament would be his last. His headbutt on Marco Materazzi in the final remains an indelible piece of red-blooded punctuation before Italy gained revenge, but the 34-year-old’s form up until that point was untouchably majestic.
In the knockouts stages prior to the final, a shimmy inside Carles Puyol followed an arrowed finish completed a 3-1 last-16 win over Spain and another penalty meant more semi-final woe for Portugal.
In between those Iberian triumphs, there was a celebrated masterclass against Brazil – all improbable audacity and razor-sharp effectiveness. The simple and the sublime, never better demonstrated by the glided free-kick to present Thierry Henry with a routine winner.
If anyone representing France or Belgium can reach those standards in St Petersburg on Tuesday, World Cup glory will be significantly closer for their nation. Two men, in particular, will have studied Zidane’s footprints.
‘Maybe we are talking about Paul Pogba a bit too much, but if he can keep up his current development he can become one of the best players ever,’ Zidane told L’Equipe in 2014.
The caveat remains telling. It is hard to make a case for Pogba’s development remaining on the upward trajectory it hit during those years of Scudetto hoarding at Juventus.
Euro 2016 presented the opportunity for the parallels to become irresistible but Pogba and France fell short. Portugal exorcised their years of Zidane-inflicted misery with a shock final win at the Stade de France, the scene of Les Bleus’ finest hour 18 years earlier.
READ MORE: Lukaku, Hazard, De Bruyne in Team of the Quarter-Finals
Pogba was ineffective on the night and Didier Deschamps’ struggles to fully harness the plentiful gifts of his midfield powerhouse and the same can be said at club level.
The world’s most expensive player when he returned to Manchester United in 2016, Pogba’s performances at Old Trafford create the levels of polarisation you might expect to lead to an ill-advised referendum in modern Britain.
Almost without exception, the best United displays of Jose Mourinho’s tenure have had Pogba’s prints all over them, yet relations with the Portuguese were forebodingly strained last season as the 25-year-old was dropped for key matches.
Zidane would never have suffered such a fate in his prime but the association and thirst for succession remain. Former United captain Rio Ferdinand spoke of Pogba emulating his hero and compatriot before Russia 2018.
In a France side that still feels tantalisingly shy of the sum of its parts under Deschamps, Kylian Mbappe and Antoine Griezmann are grabbing the headlines but Pogba was a picture of brutal efficiency in the quarter-final win over Uruguay – winning 14 duels during the 90 minutes.
Mourinho probably nodded on in rueful approval. Pogba may be building towards something special. However, there is a man set to line up in Belgium red that is a step ahead in that regard, Kevin de Bruyne.
As their World Cup dream died in Kazan, the display produced by one of their tormentors might have persuaded Brazil fans it was 2006 all over again.
De Bruyne’s first-half strike of pure power and precision eventually proved the difference between the sides but throughout the contest, there was something of Zidane’s gleeful romp in Frankfurt 12 years earlier running through the Manchester City man’s display.
De Bruyne’s bristling intensity means first impressions do not immediately recall Zidane’s languid dominance of the field. But his mastery of the open spaces, both as he tirelessly devours the turf or threads the most wonderful array of destructive passes, allayed with deft ingenuity at close quarters make him the nearest approximation of Zizou in football today.
ALSO READ: Mbappe a phenomenon who scares opponents – Blanc
There is even a short, flaring temper in evidence occasionally and, thus far, it has tended to yield more productive results than headbutting an opponent in the chest.
De Bruyne shaking off an ugly challenge from Dele Alli to tear at a backpedalling Tottenham before ramming home a vicious shot off Hugo Lloris’ arm last December was a fine example of channelled fury and the 27-year-old’s innate feel for the decisive moments in big matches.
‘Kevin is one of the best players I’ve ever seen in my life in terms of how he can make absolutely [everything happen],’ said Pep Guardiola last year, a man who wearily chased Zidane’s shadow during that Euro 2000 encounter between France and Spain.
The greats generally grasp such moments and there lies the challenge for Pogba and De Bruyne at Krestovsky Stadium.