Croatia beat Panama 1-0, Modric marks 200th cap in FIFA WC 2026
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Croatia secured their first points of the FIFA World Cup 2026 with a hard-fought 1-0 win over Panama in Group L at Toronto Stadium on 24 June, simultaneously confirming Los Canaleros' elimination from the tournament with one group game still to play. The victory also provided the perfect backdrop for captain Luka Modric, who celebrated his landmark 200th international cap with a winning performance on the global stage.
Key Developments
The match turned on a moment of quality in the 54th minute, when substitute Ante Budimir tucked in at the back post after Josip Stanisic delivered a precise low cross from the right flank. It was the only goal of the game and proved enough for Croatia to bank three crucial points in a tight group.
The result means Panama are eliminated from the 2026 World Cup with one game remaining, unable to register even a single point in their campaign.
Panama's First-Half Dominance
The contest was far from straightforward for Croatia. Panama were the better side in the opening 45 minutes and came agonisingly close to breaking the deadlock in the 23rd minute, when Croatia goalkeeper Dominik Livakovic produced a superb reflex save to tip Jose Luis Rodriguez's powerful header on to the crossbar.
Croatia established greater control after the interval, creating the platform from which Budimir's decisive finish emerged.
Livakovic Stands Tall
Panama continued to threaten in the second half, but found Livakovic in inspired form. The Croatian shot-stopper denied the Central American side repeatedly, including a crucial double save that kept the scoreline intact. Marco Pasalic also missed a glorious opportunity to double Croatia's advantage in the 57th minute, first denied by Panama goalkeeper Orlando Mosquera before blazing the rebound off target.
Modric's Historic Milestone
Luka Modric has now featured in each of Croatia's last 21 matches at the FIFA World Cup, a sequence stretching back to their second group-stage game against Japan at the 2006 World Cup. His 200th cap is a testament to a career that has redefined Croatian football, and the captain marked the occasion in fitting fashion — with a win at the sport's grandest stage.
Croatia's pedigree, well-established through their 2018 World Cup final appearance and 2022 third-place finish, once again surfaced at a critical juncture, keeping their Group L campaign alive heading into the final round of fixtures.