Argentina's players and staff danced on tables, leapt into bins, cavorted with a $10 million dollar cheque and held a “moment of silence” for Kylian Mbappe in their wild celebrations after Sunday's World Cup final victory.
Footage from inside the Argentina dressing room, filmed by current and former players, shows how the World Cup winners swigged champagne, drenched manager Lionel Scaloni and compared forward Papu Gomez to David Beckham in the aftermath of their thrilling win over France.
Sergio Aguero, the former Manchester City and Barcelona striker who retired last year for health reasons, posted a 19-minute video on social media showing the scenes within the Argentina dressing room at the Lusail Stadium in Doha.
Aguero's footage shows Lionel Messi, the Argentina captain, dancing on a table with the World Cup trophy held aloft. It also shows a member of staff somersaulting head-first into a wheelie bin.
The video also captures the unveiling of an oversized winners' cheque within the dressing room, for $10m (£8.2m).
Separate footage, meanwhile, reveals how Argentina goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez jokingly called for a “minute of silence” for Mbappe, the France striker, as the players danced around the dressing room.
Mbappe had become only the second man to score a hat-trick in a World Cup final, after England's Sir Geoff Hurst, but his team-mates were thwarted by Martinez in the penalty shootout.
A few minutes earlier, as the players were waiting to lift the trophy on the pitch, Martinez had shocked supporters by celebrating his Golden Glove award with a lewd gesture. The Aston Villa goalkeeper held his individual trophy, in the shape of a giant hand, to his groin and thrusted forward in front of millions of television viewers.
In the dressing room, a champagne-sipping Aguero conducted a joke interview in English with Gomez, who has been compared to Beckham by the Argentina squad.
“I am very happy,” said Gomez, who then posed next to a picture of the former England captain in an attempt to illustrate the likeness.
Argentina's celebrations soon continued into the mixed zone — the post-match interview area — where they danced in front of the world's media and sang in Spanish about “f------ journalists”.
There were similarly wild celebrations in Buenos Aires, where hundreds of thousands of people gathered on the streets after the match.
The delight in the Argentina dressing room contrasted sharply with the sadness of the French players. Emmanuel Macron, the French president, posted a video on social media showing him addressing the team after the match. It was captioned: “Proud of you”.