Lionel Messi torments defenders with dribbling so precise it borders on magic, according to players who’ve tried — and failed — to stop him.

What’s the big deal about Lionel Messi’s dribbling?

Defenders who’ve faced Lionel Messi describe the experience as both humbling and awe-inspiring. “On one hand, you feel desperate and humiliated as a player. On the other, from up close, you’re witnessing a football genius, probably the greatest,” said a former Real Madrid and France international who asked not to be named.

The Argentinian’s ability to shift direction mid-run leaves even world-class defenders frozen. “If you commit half a second too early to one side, he shifts to the other,” explained Ivan Ergic, a former Serbia and Montenegro international who played against Messi in 2006. “And when you think you’re about to win the ball, he manages to touch it just enough to keep it in front of him and under control, even in the middle of a crowd.”

How does Messi’s shooting technique break goalkeepers?

A Spanish goalkeeper who faced Messi 27 times breaks down the striker’s shooting in forensic detail. He let Messi score 18 times — yet still dissects the technique that made the Argentinian unstoppable. The keeper, who declined to be named, recalls Messi’s knack for freezing goalkeepers with a glance before striking the ball with surgical precision.

“He preserves the art of dribbling,” Ergic said. “I see something close to a miracle worker in that.” The Colombian defender who marked Messi called guarding him “childcare at its worst,” while William Gallas, the World Cup finalist, admitted in 2006 he had no idea how to stop an 18-year-old Messi.

When did Messi first expose his genius on the world stage?

Messi’s first World Cup moment came on 18 June 2006 in Gelsenkirchen. Aged 18 and still nursing a thigh injury from his Champions League return, he stepped off the bench to score and assist in a 6-0 rout of Serbia and Montenegro. Diego Maradona watched from the stands, grinning as the teenager announced himself to the planet.

Ergic, who played against Messi twice more in European ties, was stunned. “We didn’t prepare much specifically for Messi because we didn’t yet know how good he really was,” he admitted. “He’s one of those players who, even when you know which direction he’ll dribble, you have no chance.”

What’s next for Lionel Messi?

Messi now leads Argentina into the World Cup quarter-finals, fresh off eight goals in five matches. His next test comes against Switzerland — a side that’ll try to replicate the chaos he’s inflicted on defenders for two decades. The reigning champions’ campaign continues with Messi at the heart of their attack, his dribbling still the weapon that turns elite defenders into punchlines.

And while the world debates whether Messi’s the GOAT, the players who’ve faced him have already decided. “You’re not just defending,” said the French international. “You’re watching history.”