Luka Modric: Croatia's conductor in his last World Cup
Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 - Round of 16 - Japan v Croatia - Al Janoub Stadium, Al Wakrah, Qatar - December 5, 2022 Croatia's Luka Modric celebrates after the match as Croatia progress to the quarter finals REUTERS/Lee Smith
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Luka Modric
said before arriving in Qatar that this World Cup would likely be his last
major tournament and he has again orchestrated another deep run for Croatia.
The veteran
midfielder's side will face their biggest challenge yet when they take on
Brazil in the quarter-finals on Friday.
The
five-time champions sent out a warning to their fellow title hopefuls with a
wonderful first-half display in their 4-1 victory over South Korea in the last
16.
But Croatia,
the 2018 World Cup finalists, are likely to pose a far tougher test for the
Selecao -- seven of their past eight major tournament knockout ties have gone
to extra time.
Modric is
still the heartbeat of the team and coach Zlatko Dalic has said he expects the
37-year-old to be involved at next year's Nations League finals.
But the Real
Madrid midfielder does not see himself playing at a fifth World Cup, 20 years
after his first, in 2026 in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
"I'm
aware that I'm of a certain age and that this is my last competition in the
Croatian national team," he told FIFA before the tournament.
Modric still
toils selflessly in midfield but was clearly fading when he was substituted in
extra-time of Croatia's last-16 win over Japan on penalties.
The Balkan
nation will be counting on him to dig deep again, though, as he looks to
replicate the form that helped Croatia reach the final in Moscow in 2018, where
they lost 4-2 to France.
"When
you see people like Luka Modric running and dying on the pitch, it gives us
younger players extra energy to run," said full-back Josip Juranovic.
Modric is a
hero in his home nation after a 16-year international career in which he has
made 159 appearances.
His trophy
cabinet includes five Champions League titles with Real Madrid.
Humble
beginnings
Modric broke
Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo's 10-year grip on the Ballon d'Or in 2018,
when he also won the World Cup player of the tournament award.
Modric grew
up during Croatia's war of independence, between 1991 and 1995, during which
his hometown, Zadar, and the surrounding region were heavily shelled by Serb
forces.
Those
experiences shaped Modric's character and made him mentally strong, according
to those close to him.
"It
happened a million times that we were going to training as the shells were
falling, and we were running to shelters," said childhood friend Marijan
Buljat, who trained and played with Modric while growing up.
"It is
certainly one of the factors that contributed... that drove him to become one
of the best in the world."
Modric's
grandfather, after whom Luka was named, was killed by Serb forces, the house
was burned out and the family fled to Zadar, 40 kilometres (25 miles) away.
"I'm
sad that he (grandfather) didn't get to see at least something of what I've
achieved," Modric told FIFA.
It was in
Zadar that Modric, born in 1985, began his footballing odyssey, catching the
eye.
"I
heard about a little hyperactive boy constantly playing with a football in the
corridor of a refugee hotel, even going to sleep with it," said Josip
Bajlo, who was then coach at NK Zadar.
Modric left
Zadar as a teenager for Dinamo Zagreb and moved to Premier League club
Tottenham in 2008, where he stayed for four years before moving to Spain.
Trees now
grow inside the roofless ruin of his grandparents' house, in the hinterland of
the coastal town of Zadar.
"Mines
- Keep out!" warns a sign next to the house, lying on a mountain road
winding through the Modrici hamlet.
Its most
famous son will be hoping to extend his final bid for World Cup glory on
Friday.


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