Modric seeks to derail Messi’s bid for World Cup glory
Tuesday’s tantalizing World Cup semifinal between Argentina and Croatia features two players who are both vying for the sport’s top honor: Lionel Messi and Luka Modric.
Reigning champions France and giant-killing Morocco, the first African team to ever make it to the World Cup final four, square off in the second semi-final on Wednesday.
But first, all eyes will be on the enormous Lusail Stadium, where Messi, who is now 35, will try to lead Argentina into the final against the runners-up from last year for the second time in eight years.
Messi, who suffered defeat to Germany in the 2014 final, is desperate to crown an extraordinary career by emulating another Argentine great, the late Diego Maradona, who lifted the trophy in 1986.
The Paris Saint-Germain forward was a pivotal figure in Friday’s stormy quarter-final win over the Netherlands, when a record 18 yellow cards were shown and players from both sides were involved in a melee as the referee fought to regain control.
Even the normally mild-mannered Messi was caught up in the bad blood, shouting abuse at Dutch players while he was being interviewed after the game.
Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni defended his players’ conduct on Monday, insisting they had nothing to apologise for.
“The game the other day was played in the right way by both teams. That is football,” said the 44-year-old Argentina coach.
“I don’t buy this idea that we don’t know how to win. The game was played in the right way.”
Croatia, who beat Japan and pre-tournament favourites Brazil in penalty shoot-outs to reach the last four, have not won a knockout game in normal time at a major tournament since the 1998 World Cup, where they came third.
Despite doing it the hard way, the country of fewer than four million people shocked the football world by reaching the final four years ago in Russia, where France crushed their dreams with a 4-2 win.
Croatia, with Real Madrid playmaker Modric still the leader on the pitch at the age of 37, have again defied the odds to stand on the brink of a second successive final.
Coach Zlatko Dalic said he wanted Tuesday’s match to be remembered as the “greatest game” in the country’s history.
“At back-to-back World Cups to be among the four best national teams, that’s an extraordinary success for Croatia,” he said.
“However, we want more,” he added. “I’m optimistic and have full confidence in my players. They’ve shown their great quality and strength of character, and deserve to be in the final.”
France are strong favourites to beat Morocco and take a step closer to defending their title on Wednesday.
But the African team’s history-making run to the semis has caught the imagination of a continent and they have been backed by legions of fans in Qatar.
The match will have added spice — France was Morocco’s colonial power and hundreds of thousands of people with Moroccan roots live and work in the country.
France captain Hugo Lloris said the champions were guarding against complacency and were braced for a pro-Morocco crowd.
“We can only have respect and admiration for what they have done, but nothing happens by chance at this level,” he said.
“When a team is capable of beating Belgium, Spain and Portugal, and finish top of their group, it is because they have lots of quality on the field and undoubtedly off it too, in terms of cohesion and team spirit.
“They will be formidable opponents, and on top of that there will be a hostile atmosphere in the stadium.”
The demand for tickets to the game has been so high that Royal Air Maroc has said it will schedule 30 additional round-trip flights to transport ecstatic fans to the Gulf state.
Morocco’s coach, Walid Regragui, claimed that his team was eager for more than just a spot in the semifinals.
“There is a problem if you reach to the semi-finals and you are not hungry,” he stated on Tuesday.
“Brazil, the tournament’s top squad, has already been eliminated. We are a driven team with ambition, but I’m not sure if that will be enough.”