Business Standard

Luka Modric, the superstar who isn’t

The celebrity footballer­s have gone home. And an unassuming, under-appreciate­d genius will lead his team into the FIFA World Cup final. Dhruv Munjal on Croatian midfielder Luka Modric

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Where to begin? He was, as always, everywhere. Thirty minutes into the World Cup semi-final between Croatia and England is probably a decent place to start. So just past the half hour on a Moscow evening bubbling with febrile anticipati­on, Luka Modric received the ball in the opposition box. Space was expectedly tight and Modric tried to ghost past Jordan Henderson, the ever-pugnacious Englishman, who, to his considerab­le credit, stayed with him. Now confronted with Henderson at the byline, Modric, instead of firing in a low and wholly hopeless cross and winning a corner, pirouetted, sucked Ashley Young into his path and played the ball to an unmarked Ante Rebic. Rebic drilled it in with pace from wide; John Stones lunged and cleared.

To the untrained eye, this was an innocuous, utterly unremarkab­le passage of play: banal in its constructi­on, lack lust re in its conclusion. Yet, in more ways than one, this was vintage Mod ric: composure, intelligen­ce, skill, vision, clarity of thought. The move manifested a kind of unique footballin­g amalgamati­on that is both deceptive and dazzling at the same time.

“They under estimated Croatia tonight and that was a huge mistake. All these words from them we take, we were reading and we were saying :‘ Okay, today we will see who will be tired .’ They should be more humble and respect their opponents more ,” said Mod ric, 32, of English pundits and journalist­s, after mastermind­ing yet another victory in extra-time on Wednesday night.

A select few from the jingoistic“it’ s cominggang, disguised as“neutral experts” on the telly, may have dismissed them, but England and Gareth South gate definitely did not, coming up with a plan to specifical­ly counter Mod ric. England tweaked their shape somewhat and harried and strangled him, smart ly blocking him out of the game early on. And then, like all great players, Modric adjusted.

He dropped deeper and turned Croatia’s half of the pitch into his own personal, immaculate­ly manicured lawn, silkily marauding through the grass, creating, inventing, inspiring and eventually, winning.

As a child growing up during the Croatian War of Independen­ce, Mod ric and his family had to flee homein1991. Later that year, his grandfathe­r, from whom he takes his firstname, was captured and executed by Se rb rebels. And just as he was over coming the trauma of a childhood spent amid the din of guns and grenades, his coaches told him that he was too frail and too shy to take up football seriously. In 2012, when Jose M our in ho signed him for Real Madrid, he was dub bed the“worst signing at the time ”, often finding himself playing only a peripheral role in the team.

On Sunday, the boy from Mod rici, the long-haired football angel with an aquiline nose, will lead his country out in the final of the WorldCup.

We love getting drunk on football superstard­om. Andour closed, superficia­l world of select idol worship simply does not allow us to even warm to a guy like Mod ric. He isn’ t projected as the saviour of humanity on humongous billboards; he doesn’ t pose with goats; he isn’ t in the business of growing goa tees; and hysterical teenagers do not clutch a this pictures and run to the nearest hair dresser. He just plays football.

In a tournament where arguably the three biggest “superstars” of the world game initially impressed, then underwhelm­ed, and eventually faltered, Modric has been an exemplar of major-tournament consistenc­y. His talismanic force has propelled a country of just over four million people into the final of the World Cup, reminding us that the solipsisti­c streak of the modern-day footballer can be, in fact, hugely damaging to the game.

And unlike Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo or Neymar, Modric does not do unimaginab­le things on a football pitch— nothing will make you gasp in wonderment or impel you to keep rewinding highlight reels. Johan Cruyff once remarked that “playing football is very simple, but playing simple football is the hardest thing there is”. Modric is so ludicrousl­y good at this that you could actually paste the axiom next to his beaming face on a poster and plaster it all across Zagreb. He does the most ordinary of things in the most extraordin­ary of ways. It’s so simple you think you can do it, too. Only you can’t.

In club football, this subtle but staggering quality has powered his club, Real Madrid, to three straight Champions League titles, and there is a general consensus that elite European football has long surpassed the level of its internatio­nal counterpar­t. What makes Modric’s Russian adventure all the more astonishin­g, however, is the clear lack of world-class quality around him. At Madrid, his talents are supplement­ed by the tenacity of Casemiro and the distributi­on of Toni Kroos, not to mention the glut of attacking flair further up the field. For Croatia, in a much weaker team and at a much higher level of pressure, he only has at his disposal the stability of the supremely talented Ivan Rakitic.

Sohow does he do it? Modricisa Swiss knife of a football er—he can do a bit of everything. He combines the vision of Andrea P ir lo and the passing of Paul Sc holes; the grace of Z in edi ne Z ida ne and the determinat­ion of Daniele De Rossi—the utopian football er who will most likely win the Golden Ball no matter who prevail son Sunday. Add to that his sheer work rate: Mod ric won possession 15 times against Russia in the quarter-final, and at 63km, no player has covered more ground than he has at theWorldCu­p.

Even so, our tendency to under appreciate won’ t just go away. Like two of his iconic mid field predecesso­rs, Xaviand Andrés Iniesta, Mod ric is unlikely to win a B al lo nd’ Or even if his team is cr owned kings of the world. Mod ric is not a superstar and our football snobbishne­ss will doubt less ensure he’ s not given his due.

As for Sunday, France will not faze him. Quite the opposite, infact. The French mid field trio of N’ Go lo Kan te, Paul Pogba and Bl ai se Matui di—all terrific players— will be wary of the unique genius that a waits them. After all, stopping France won’ t be such at all order if the diminutive giant from Modrici has one final say.

 ?? REUTERS ??
REUTERS
 ??  ?? For a player so brilliant at keeping the ball and creating openings, Modric’s work rate is often overlooked
For a player so brilliant at keeping the ball and creating openings, Modric’s work rate is often overlooked

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