After Switzerland's surprisingly facile 2-0 win over Italy, it was revealed that Granit Xhaka had made 25 line-breaking passes. It was a seriously impressive statistic and yet nothing compared to the revelation that Kroos hadn't just bettered that tally during the group stages, he'd done so in all three of Germany's games.
Basically, there was no more progressive passer of the ball at the Euros, with Kroos breaking one distribution record after another. What's more, going into the quarter-finals, he ranked first for successful passes into the final third (113), and second for chances created, with 13 - as many as Declan Rice, Jude Bellingham, Bukayo Saka and Phil Foden combined.
Kroos' international career may not have ended in the same fairy-tale fashion as that of his club, but it was still a triumphant return, a glorious vindication of not only his decision to come out of retirement for one last tournament, but also his style of play. He has shown exactly why Xavi anointed him his heir and why Juan Roman Riquelme labelled him the Roger Federer of football. "He can play a match, the Argentine said, "and not even need to shower afterward". Quite the compliment coming from one of the most nonchalantly brilliant midfielders the game has ever seen.
Of course, it's been such a pleasure to watch Kroos play that it's hard not to echo Isco and plead with him to continue, and Ancelotti has already said that if the German changes his mind about quitting, there'll still be room for him at Madrid next season.
However, the World Cup winner said that he wanted "to be remembered as the 34-year-old Toni Kroos who played his best season for Real at the end" and that he takes it "a compliment that many people think the timing is too early".
In that sense, his retirement isn't premature at all. It's actually perfect. Just like nearly every single pass he ever played.