
Why Croatia remain 'huge threat' to England with Modric and a new generation
Broken hearts in 2018, a Wembley humiliation in 2007 — Croatia have a habit of haunting England, and Dallas could be next.
England open their 2026 World Cup campaign against Croatia in Dallas on June 17, and despite the comfortable gap in world rankings, Thomas Tuchel would be wise to approach the match with caution.
Croatia are ranked 11th in the world — but rankings have never told the full story with this side. For a nation of under four million people, their record in major tournaments is extraordinary: a debut third-place finish in 1998, runners-up in 2018, and third place again in 2022. They are international football's perennial overachievers, and England know that better than most.
It was Croatia who knocked England out of the 2018 World Cup semi-finals. It was Croatia who beat England at Wembley in 2007 on Steve McClaren's infamous "Wally with the Brolly" night, the last time England failed to qualify for a major tournament. Even at Euro 2020, where England beat them in the opener and went on to reach the final, Croatia were far from a comfortable opponent.
Dalic is under no illusions about the scale of the task. "From the first pot we got one of the toughest national teams," he said. "It's a bit unfortunate we're playing them in the opening match — it sets the tone. We'll have to be ready."
At 40, Luka Modric remains the heartbeat of the side. But Dalic's focus this cycle has been on building around a new generation, with the likes of Joško Gvardiol — injury permitting — leading the charge. "We have great talent and new players ready to step up," said Dalic. "We have great experience, younger players, and still a determination to win. We believe we can go past the group stage and into the knockouts."
England may be heavy favourites. Croatia have heard that before.
World CupChallenge Zone
0 games available
Latest News

Malagón ruled out — could Ochoa play in a sixth World Cup?
Mexico's first-choice keeper is out for a year — and the door just swung open for the ageless Memo Ochoa.

Mexico's World Cup injury crisis deepens as Ruiz tears ACL
Two players lost in three days, a half-dozen more sidelined — Mexico's preparations for a home World Cup are unravelling fast.

Croatia at the 2026 FIFA World Cup: Team Profile
Finalists in 2018, third place in 2022 — Croatia keep defying expectations, and with Modric still pulling the strings at 40, don't bet against them again.

Gvardiol's World Cup dream in doubt after broken leg diagnosis
A broken leg and no return date — Croatia's defensive cornerstone is in a race against time to make the World Cup.

Mané set to retire from international football after the 2026 World Cup
Senegal's talisman is winding down his international career — and the 2026 World Cup looks set to be his final bow.

Lens defender Sarr set for first Senegal call-up ahead of World Cup
After years of waiting, Malang Sarr is finally set to get his shot with the Lions of Teranga — just in time for a World Cup