Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Croatia has tough mentality

Team happy to be underdog against France’s stars

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MOSCOW — A billiondol­lar assembly of stars makes France the favorite for the World Cup final, a scenario that Dejan Lovren is pitching as perfect for Croatia’s biggest game.

“We love to be the underdogs,” Lovren said in the wake of Croatia’s 2-1 extratime win against England.

With a population of 4.3 million and a history of struggle, it’s easy to see why. Not since Uruguay’s win in 1950 has a country of so few people reached a World Cup final.

Croatia’s players were born around the time an independen­t Croatia emerged from the wars that divided the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990s. Lovren and star midfielder Luka Modric were refugees as children.

Croatia still struggles economical­ly and its soccer scene has been riven with hooliganis­m and crime.

It’s a country that breeds toughness in its players.

The key to Croatia’s success in Russia, Lovren said, is “our mentality.”

“War, all these things and even now the situation is not the best,” he said. “It’s unbelievab­le how many talents we have in sports.”

Two years ago, Croatia’s campaign at the 2016 European Championsh­ip was overshadow­ed by turmoil in the stands as fans hurled dozens of flares onto the field in protest against the football federation leadership. A year before that, a swastika was drawn on the field before a national-team game.

Those episodes have led to sanctions from soccer’s internatio­nal governing body, but Lovren is hoping the squad’s success at this World Cup will mark a turning point for the country.

“It’s not just football, it’s a bigger picture for us, unfortunat­ely,” he said. “Us players, now we change something and everyone is proud of us in Croatia.”

Despite the Balkan nation’s small population, it is a veritable talent factory in a range of sports. There’s the former U.S. Open tennis champion Marin Cilic, a raft of current and ex-NBA players, and Olympic champions in skiing, discus and water polo.

Most of all, Croatia is an export market for quality footballer­s, with a squad boasting stars for Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus.

Until now, Croatia’s greatest moment on the soccer field was reaching the World Cup semifinals in 1998, the country’s first tournament after becoming independen­t. Stars of that team remain household names in Croatia, including the football federation president and ex-Real Madrid striker Davor Suker, who has been with this squad all the way through this World Cup campaign. After the quarterfin­al win against Russia, Suker said he’d be delighted if Modric replaced him as Croatia’s greatest player of all time.

Instead, he said, “I’ll be the greatest president!”

Now that the 2018 squad has gone a step further than the 1998 semifinali­sts, Lovren and Croatia are creating a narrative beyond anything they experience­d as children when the stars of the national team were etched into folklore following a semifinal loss to France.

‘’I was only 9. I remember my mum was screaming, she was crying after the French game,” Lovren said. “After 20 years people will remember us not any more [than just 1998] — and this is what I wanted.”

 ?? Frank Augstein/Associated Press ?? Dejan Lovren celebrates after Croatia’s second goal against England in the World Cup semifinals.
Frank Augstein/Associated Press Dejan Lovren celebrates after Croatia’s second goal against England in the World Cup semifinals.

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