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Caught in the Croatia crush

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AFP photograph­er Yuri Cortez has covered wars, coups, natural disasters and humanitari­an crises around the world in his three-decade career.

But nothing prepared him for the 40 seconds that have brought him internatio­nal fame: ending up beneath an avalanche of Croatia players celebratin­g the goal that sent them to the World Cup final.

Cortez was on the sidelines photograph­ing Mario Mandzukic’s extra-time goal at Thursday’s semi-final against England when he found himself swallowed up in the celebratio­n, buried beneath a pile of ecstatic Croatian footballer­s.

When they realised he was beneath them, they helped him to his feet, asked him if he was OK and put his glasses back on his head. He even got a kiss on the cheek from defender Domagoj Vida — an image that instantly went viral.

Ever the profession­al, the grinning Cortez kept his shutter clicking throughout, sending a touching series of photos that gave the world an unusually intimate look at a moment of pure football joy.

The 53-year-old El Salvador native, who caught a flight home just after the match, arrived back in Mexico City, where he is AFP’s chief photograph­er.

He had one hell of a story to share.

How did you end up beneath that mountain of Croatian footballer­s?

I was using my 400mm lens, which is the one we normally use for football. Then I see the goal … I see (Mandzukic) celebratin­g, and I see him coming toward me. I figure my lens is going to be too long, so I grab my other camera, with the wide-angle lens. When he arrives in front of me, I start taking pictures of him. At that moment, more players arrive … then more and more. When the players from the bench arrive, this kind of avalanche throws me back, with them on top of me. Fortunatel­y I didn’t lose my camera. I guess at that moment they didn’t realise there was a photograph­er bur- ied under them in that mountain. When they realise I’m there, they help me up, ask me if I’m OK, and then come all the emotional moments — handshakes, the kiss from Vida, which has become so famous …

When did you realise you’d become a celebrity?

I had to leave right away for the airport … That’s when I started getting call after call. My phone wouldn’t stop ringing. I glanced at the screen at one point and there were hundreds of missed calls.

You’ve covered wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n, violent coups, devastatin­g natural disasters — how does this compare?

The thing they have in common is the adrenalin rush — you’re running on 10,000. This is different. I never felt my life was at risk. I did get some bruises though.

Were you worried you would miss the big shot?

No, I knew I had good material, and material that was completely different from everyone else’s, because of the situation. I just kept shooting. That’s something I’ve always planned.

You weren’t even supposed to be at this match. How did you end up in the right place at the right time?

I was only supposed to cover the World Cup until July 4. As teams get eliminated, you need fewer photograph­ers. But when Mexico (the team he was following) made it through the first round … they extended my stay in Russia until July 12. And now, here I am (laughs).

 ??  ?? A NEW VIEW: AFP photograph­er Yuri Cortez snaps Croatia's forward Mario Mandzukic offering to help him up after he fell on him with teammates while celebratin­g their second against England. Mandzukic (inset left) celebrates while on top of Cortez (inset...
A NEW VIEW: AFP photograph­er Yuri Cortez snaps Croatia's forward Mario Mandzukic offering to help him up after he fell on him with teammates while celebratin­g their second against England. Mandzukic (inset left) celebrates while on top of Cortez (inset...

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