Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Modric: Refugee boy to Croatia Cup captain

- Agence Francepres­se

MODRICI,CROATIA: The burned-out shell of a remote cottage bears testimony to the trauma that Luka Modric lived through long before he became a Croatian hero and Real Madrid star.

Hidden in the folds of Velebit mountain, with the nearest neighbours several kilometres away, trees now grow inside the roofless ruin where Modric spent part of his childhood and a sign warns of “Mines - Keep out!”

The player’s grandfathe­r, also named Luka, lived in the house, lying on a mountain road winding through the Modrici hamlet. Modric, born in 1985, spent his early years there and in the nearby village of Zaton Obrovacki until Croatia’s 1990s independen­ce war broke out.

His grandfathe­r was killed by Serb forces, the house was burned and the family fled to the coastal town of Zadar, some 40 kilometres (19 miles) away.

“I heard about a little hyperactiv­e boy constantly playing with a football in the corridor of a refugee hotel, even going to sleep with it,” said Josip Bajlo, who was then the first-team coach at the First Division club NK Zadar, where Modric began to make a name for himself as a brilliant player.

As soon as Bajlo saw Modric play he signed him up for the club’s football school, where he immediatel­y stood out. “He was an idol to his generation, a leader, a favourite. Already children saw in him then what we are all seeing in him now in football terms,” Bajlo said.

TRAINING UNDER FIRE

The 1991-1995 war with Serb rebels, during which Zadar and the surroundin­g region were heavily shelled, toughened Modric, according to those close to him. “It happened a million times that we were going to training as the shells were falling, and we were running to shelters,” said childhood friend Marijan Buljat, who trained and played with Modric while growing up.

The 36-year-old, himself a former profession­al player, remained close to Modric over the years and believes that such a hard background contribute­d to the Croatia captain’s character and mental strength. “It is certainly one of the factors that contribute­d... that drove him to become one of the best in the world.”

Last October, Modric was named for the third time in the FIFA FIFPRO team selected by thousands of profession­al players. In 2015, he became the first Croatian voted on to the FIFPRO XI. His former club NK Zadar, now fallen on hard times in Croatia’s third division, have a history of finding talent — but Modric stands alone as a legend among fans. “Luka is for Zadar a football God,” said Slavko Strkalj, 66, a retired metal worker.

Modric left for Dinamo Zagreb in 2000 and then joined English Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur in 2008. After a bidding war he was snapped up by Real Madrid in 2012.

But his popularity in Croatia and his image as a modest family man was tarnished by his testimony last year during the multimilli­on-euro corruption trial of former Dinamo Zagreb chief Zdravko Mamic.

Modric’s testimony supported Mamic’s case against allegation­s of corruption, angering many fans who saw the trial as a chance to clean up the corruption-ridden sport. Prosecutor­s eventually charged Modric in March for giving false evidence, an offence that carries a penalty of up to five years in jail. But the indictment has yet to be approved by a court and the player is currently not threatened with arrest.

 ?? AFP ?? Burnt stone house nestled on the slopes of Croatia's Velebit mountain where Luka Modric's grandfathe­r lived.
AFP Burnt stone house nestled on the slopes of Croatia's Velebit mountain where Luka Modric's grandfathe­r lived.
 ??  ?? Luka Modric.
Luka Modric.

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