Tag: Luka Modric

  • Croatia’s Modric milestone overshadowed by Budimir’s late heroics

    Croatia’s World Cup revival began the moment Ante Budimir stepped off the bench. On a night when Luka Modric became only the fourth man to reach 200 senior caps for his country, it was the substitute striker who delivered the decisive moment in a 1-0 victory over Panama that kept Croatia’s qualification hopes alive. The win, sealed by Budimir’s ninth-minute strike after the break, overshadowed Modric’s landmark achievement and left Zlatko Dalic’s side a point behind England and Ghana going into their final group game.

    Budimir’s impact redefines Croatia’s tournament

    Ante Budimir arrived at the hour mark to inject fresh urgency into Croatia’s World Cup campaign. Within nine minutes of his introduction, he had turned the game with a poacher’s finish from Josip Stanisic’s whipped cross at the back post. The move began with Marco Pasalic’s backheel to Stanisic, whose low delivery evaded a scrambling Panama defence and found Budimir unmarked six yards out. The striker’s composed finish left goalkeeper Orlando Mosquera with no chance, sparking wild celebrations behind the goal.

    The goal came after Dalic’s double substitution, replacing Petar Musa and Josko Gvardiol with Kramaric and Budimir. The change re-energised a Croatia side that had struggled to break down Panama’s disciplined 5-4-1 shape in the first half. While Panama’s defence held firm, their own attacking threat remained muted, with only a handful of half-chances created in a cagey opening period. Croatia, by contrast, had dominated possession but lacked the cutting edge until Budimir’s intervention.

    Modric’s milestone fades amid the tension

    Luka Modric’s 200th cap for Croatia arrived in a match that never quite matched the occasion’s significance. The 40-year-old midfield maestro, who joined Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi and Kuwait’s Bader al-Mutawa in the sport’s exclusive 200-cap club, was serenaded by Croatia’s travelling support before kick-off. Yet the weight of history struggled to break through the game’s defensive stalemate. Modric, playing in his fifth World Cup, completed 82 passes in the first half but found little room to dictate proceedings against Panama’s compact midfield.

    The milestone was celebrated in the dressing room at full-time, where teammates hoisted Modric into the air. But the relief of victory quickly took precedence. Croatia’s nervy performance—marked by a string of half-chances squandered, including Pasalic’s one-on-one miss—highlighted the fragility of a side still searching for rhythm after their opening defeat to England. The win, though narrow, keeps their qualification hopes intact ahead of a must-win clash with Ghana on Saturday.

    Panama bow out with pride intact

    Panama exited the tournament with their heads held high, despite a record of no wins in their last five World Cup matches. Their defensive organisation frustrated Croatia for long spells, particularly in the first half when wingers Jose Luis Rodriguez and Amir Murillo tested Dominik Livakovic with early crosses. Yet their lack of attacking cutting edge ultimately cost them, as they failed to convert any of their limited chances.

    Their elimination means they will finish the group stage pointless, a stark contrast to their recent rise under Danish manager Thomas Christiansen. The side that reached the 2024 Copa América knockout stages and the 2025 Concacaf Nations League final—both times beating the United States—will now depart without a goal in this World Cup. Their physical, counter-attacking approach, while effective in regional tournaments, proved insufficient against the technical quality of Croatia and England.

    For Croatia, the victory is a lifeline, but the underlying issues remain. Their reliance on Modric’s experience and Budimir’s late impact suggests a squad still transitioning to a new generation. Dalic’s side will need far greater defensive solidity if they are to trouble England in their next fixture. With Ghana also in the mix, the pressure is on to secure a top-two finish—and avoid the kind of defensive lapses that nearly cost them against Panama.

    In Toronto, the night belonged to Budimir. Modric’s milestone, while historic, was a footnote to a game decided by a substitute’s opportunism. Croatia’s World Cup campaign now hinges on whether they can build on this narrow win—or risk falling short once more.

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