Khaleej Times

Dalic’s boys look to better 1998 heroes

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zagreb — Croatia’s first World Cup semifinal for two decades has revived the memories of the country’s football highpoint and raised hopes that Luka Modric’s side can go one better than their legendary predecesso­rs.

After a dramatic win on penalties against Russia, manager Zlatko Dalic’s Croatia will play England on Wednesday in front of 80,000 people in Moscow’s Luzhniki Stadium for a place in the World Cup final. In 1998, Croatia, which had emerged from a bitter independen­ce war only three years earlier, made its debut at a World Cup finals.

With a team featuring Davor Suker, Zvonimir Boban and Robert Prosinecki wearing blues shirts with a distinctiv­e red and white chequerboa­rd pattern, they beat World Cup giants Germany 3-0 in the quarterfin­als in France, sparking delirium at home.

Although Croatia went on to suffer an agonising 2-1 defeat to host nation France in the semifinals, they beat the Netherland­s 2-1 in the third-place playoff.

Nicknamed “the Fiery Ones”, that team has stood as an example to their successors ever since.

Now, finally, there is a team ready to join them in Croatian football’s pantheon of heroes.

Robert Prosinecki, a member of the 1998 squad, said: “I would so much like that they be better than us. 1998 will never be forgotten and should not be, but I would love it if eventually the 1998 ‘Fiery Ones’ can be moved aside so that we can talk not only about 1998 but also a bit about 2018,” the former Real Madrid player said.

The coach of the 1998 side, Jaroslav Ciro Blazevic, said that for a long time he did not want any other team to match his players’ achievemen­ts. “Until five or six years ago I was bit vain, and in a way glad that in 1998 we set the bar so high that it was difficult to even contemplat­e, let alone jump over it.

“But now ... I pray and I would give anything in the world that this squad eventually ‘confines us to history’. That in future we talk about them,” said Blazevic, now 83, and known in Croatia as the “coach of all coaches”.

The penalty shootout win against hosts Russia in the quarterfin­als on Saturday seems to have gone a long way towards achieving that. — AFP

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