The Star Malaysia

Modric: We played football when the bomb alarms went off

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The alarms are ringing and Luka Modric (pic) is running because soon the bombs are coming. He is eight years old, wearing full kit and boots, and he has a football under his arm.

When he arrives at the undergroun­d shelter, the rest of his teammates jogging in behind him, he has to wait.

Sometimes minutes, often hours and occasional­ly overnight, sleeping on the floor and staying until it was quiet, meaning it was safe to go outside. But Modric still had the ball.

“I was with it all the time,” he. “When I went to the shelter I took it with me and I played with my friends, with everyone. I organised games. It meant everything to me.”

The Croatian War of Independen­ce forced his family to leave their home just outside Zadar in 1991 but in the Hotel Kolovare, where they lived for seven years, Modric still played.

“I broke so many windows at the hotel and of people’s cars, everyone was always mad at me,” he says.

“My father had to pay for it,” he grins. “It was expensive.” Football offered an escape. “I remember the fear,” he says. “We played football and the alarms went off. It was normal.”

Two decades later and still nobody can get the ball off Modric, Real Madrid’s dancing playmaker, who can twist away from an opponent or wriggle through them, a midfield metronome described by his Croatian teammate Ivan Rakitic as “one of the best ever in his position.”

Modric writes in his autobiogra­phy My Game which came out last month, that he is calm, obedient and “fears nothing”. He says is “shy but not afraid”.

Asked what his favourite thing is to do on a football pitch, he beams, knowing the answer is unexpected for someone of his size. “Tackle!”

Recognitio­n did not come automatica­lly for the player voted Real’s worst signing of the season at the end of his first year. He faced criticism coming through the ranks at Dinamo Zagreb too.

“There was always a lot of doubt around me – about my quality, my style, my physique,” Modric says.

“They said I was too weak to make it to the top but it didn’t affect me. It motivated me more.

“People judge people without knowing them, even more today with social media, which is why I stopped reading it a long time ago.

“I have my circle and I surround myself with positivity.

“I remember that poll and it wasn’t nice at the time but I believed in myself.

“I believed I would prove I should be a player for Real Madrid.”

He has two La Liga titles and four in the Champions League, as well a Ballon d’Or and a Golden Ball from the last World Cup, the Player of the Tournament as Croatia reached the final.

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