Las Vegas Review-Journal

Strong second half powers Croatia into first Cup final

England falters, can’t extend early lead

- By Ronald Blum The Associated Press

MOSCOW — Croatia’s legs seemed heavy, burdened by the accumulate­d toll of consecutiv­e penalty-kicks wins needed to get this far. England had gone ahead with a free kick just five minutes in, dominated play and appeared headed to its first World Cup final since 1966.

Then the second half started and it was as if a different Croatian team had replaced the lethargic one.

Ivan Perisic tied the score in the 68th minute, Mario Mandzukic got the go-ahead goal in the 109th and Croatia shocked England with a 2-1 victory Wednesday that advanced a nation of just over 4 million to a World Cup final against France.

“Mentally strong team,” midfielder Ivan Rakitic said. “It’s just unbelievab­le to get back in the game in this way.”

When the final whistle blew and they knew they were going to their first World Cup final, the Croatians ran to their jumping and cheering fans in their iconic red-and-white checkered jerseys. Croatia joined an exclusive club of 13 nations that advanced to a World Cup final, doing it in a tournament where powers Brazil, Germany, Argentina and Spain made early exits.

“They’ve had an incredible route to the final. They’ve shown remarkable character,” said England coach Gareth Southgate, who for now will be remembered more for a fashionabl­e waistcoat than ending a half-century of hurt.

France, which won its only title at home in 1998, will have an extra day of rest after beating Belgium 1-0 on Tuesday.

Croatia, coming off 360 intense minutes at soccer’s highest level, faces its biggest sporting moment since becoming an independen­t nation in 1991.

“We started slowly, but we’ve shown our character, just as we did in the previous two knockout rounds when we were one-goal down,” Perisic said.

Football will not be coming home to England, and there will be no title to match the 1966 triumph at Wembley Stadium. Kane & Co. will deal with the same disappoint­ment that felled Shearer and Platt, Gazza and Wazza, Beckham and Gerrard. And Southgate, whose penalty-kick failure led to England’s previous semifinal loss in a major tournament, in the 1996 European Championsh­ip semifinals.

 ?? Frank Augstein ?? The face of Croatia’s Mario Mandzukic after a victory over England tells the world his team is headed to its first World Cup final where it will face France.
The Associated Press
Frank Augstein The face of Croatia’s Mario Mandzukic after a victory over England tells the world his team is headed to its first World Cup final where it will face France. The Associated Press

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States