Croatia

Croatia

CRO
Group L · #4
1
Played
0
Won
0
Drawn
1
Lost
24
Goals
0
Points
ℹ️ About Croatia
📅 Founded: 1993
🏟 Home: Stadion Maksimir
🌍 Country: Croatia
The Croatia national football team (Croatian: Hrvatska nogometna reprezentacija) represents Croatia in men's international football matches. The team is controlled by the Croatian Football Federation (HNS), the governing body for football in Croatia. Football is widely supported throughout the country due to the ever-present popularity of the sport. Most home matches are played at the Stadion Maksimir in Zagreb, although other smaller venues are also used occasionally. They are one of the youngest national teams (since formation) to reach the knockout stage of a major tournament, as well as the youngest team to occupy the top 10 in the FIFA World Rankings. Croatia has represented itself as an independent nation since 1993, when the team was officially recognised by both FIFA and UEFA following dissolution of Yugoslavia. However, short-lived national sides were briefly active during periods of political upheaval, representing sovereign states such as the Banovina of Croatia from 1939 to 1941, or the Independent State of Croatia from 1941 to 1944. Before the current team was formed, most Croatian players represented Yugoslavia instead. The modern-day team has played competitive matches since 1994, starting with a successful qualifying campaign for the 1996 European Championship. In 1998, they competed in their first FIFA World Cup, finishing 3rd and providing the tournament's top scorer, Davor Šuker. Exactly twenty years later, under their second golden generation, Croatia reached the 2018 World Cup Final, securing second place after losing to France. Captain Luka Modrić was awarded best player of the tournament for his performances, thus making him the first ever Croatian player to win the award. Among other nicknames, the team is colloquially referred to as the Vatreni (Blazers) or the Kockasti (The Chequered Ones). In the Italian-speaking counties the team is known as Il furioso incendio (The Blazing Fire). Since becoming eligible to compete, Croatia has only failed to qualify for two major tournaments; the 2000 European Championship and the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Their biggest defeat came in 2018 with a 6–0 loss to Spain, while their highest-scoring victory was a 10–0 friendly win over San Marino in 2016. The national team is also known for some long-standing rivalries, such as the Derby Adriatico with Italy, or the politically-charged rivalry with Serbia, both of which have led to controversial or disruptive matches. The team represents the second-smallest country by population and land mass to reach the World Cup final, behind Uruguay and Netherlands respectively. At major tournaments, Croatia holds joint-records for longest period between one goal and another of a player (2002–2014), most penalty shootouts played (2), most extra time periods played (3) and most penalties saved in a match (3). They are also one of only two teams—along with Colombia—to be named FIFA's "Best Mover of the Year" more than once, winning the award in 1994 and 1998. Upon admission to FIFA, Croatia was ranked 125th in the world; following the 1998 World Cup campaign, the side rose to third place in the rankings, making it the most volatile team in FIFA Rankings history.
📊 Group L Standings
# Team PWDL GDPts
1 1 1 0 0 +2 3
2 1 1 0 0 +1 3
3 1 0 0 1 -1 0
4 1 0 0 1 -2 0
Top 2 qualify for Round of 32
📊 Recent Form
L
W0 D0 L1
📈 Performance Metrics
2
Goals / Game
4
Conceded / Game
0
Clean Sheets
⚽ Top Scorers
1
Petar Musa
1 goal
2
Martin Baturina
1 goal
👕 Squad (26 players) Tap a player for details
🧤 Goalkeepers
DL
1
Dominik Livaković
goalkeeper
Age 31
IP
12
Ivor Pandur
goalkeeper
Age 26
DK
23
Dominik Kotarski
goalkeeper
Age 26
🛡 Defenders
JS
2
Josip Stanišić
defender
Age 26
MP
3
Marin Pongračić
defender
Age 28
JG
4
Joško Gvardiol
defender
Age 24
D�
5
Duje Ćaleta-Car
defender
Age 29
J�
6
Josip Šutalo
defender
Age 26
KJ
18
Kristijan Jakić
defender
Age 29
LV
22
Luka Vušković
defender
Age 19
ME
25
Martin Erlić
defender
Age 28
⚙️ Midfielders
NM
7
Nikola Moro
midfielder
Age 28
MK
8
Mateo Kovačić
midfielder
Age 32
LM
10
Luka Modrić
midfielder
Age 40
NV
13
Nikola Vlašić
midfielder
Age 28
MP
15
Mario Pašalić
midfielder
Age 31
MB
16
Martin Baturina
midfielder
Age 23
PS
17
Petar Sučić
midfielder
Age 22
TF
19
Toni Fruk
midfielder
Age 25
LS
21
Luka Sučić
midfielder
Age 23
⚡ Forwards
AK
9
Andrej Kramarić
forward
Age 34
AB
11
Ante Budimir
forward
Age 34
IP
14
Ivan Perišić
forward
Age 37
IM
20
Igor Matanović
forward
Age 23
MP
24
Marco Pašalić
forward
Age 25
PM
26
Petar Musa
forward
Age 28
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