Croatia Beat Panama 1-0 As Budimir Comes Off The Bench To Secure World Cup Victory
Croatia kept their World Cup campaign alive with a narrow 1-0 victory over Panama, secured by substitute Ante Budimir. The result moved Croatia onto three points in Group L, crucial after England’s goalless draw with Ghana. Panama’s defeat confirmed elimination for Thomas Christiansen’s side ahead of the final matchday.
Budimir struck nine minutes after the interval, turning in Josip Stanisic’s low cross from close range. The goal arrived at a tense stage, with Croatia having failed to record a shot on target before half-time. Panama responded with late pressure, but Dominik Livakovic preserved the lead with several key interventions.

The decisive goal carried historic weight for Croatia at the World Cup. Budimir, aged 34 years and 336 days, became Croatia’s oldest scorer in the tournament. The forward overtook Ivica Olic’s previous mark, set against Cameroon in 2014 when Olic was 34 years and 277 days old.
Budimir also joined a select group of Croatian substitutes to score at World Cup finals. He is the fourth Croatia player to score from the bench, after Bruno Petkovic and Lovro Majer in 2022, and Olic 24 years earlier. The impact strengthens Budimir’s claims for more minutes in Croatia’s attack.
While Budimir made headlines with the winner, Luka Modric reached a major personal milestone in Toronto. Modric made his 200th international appearance for Croatia, extending a long career at the heart of the national team. The match added to an already distinguished tournament record.
Since Modric’s first World Cup appearance in 2006, only Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi have played more matches at the competition. Ronaldo has featured 23 times, Messi 27, while this fixture took Modric to 21 outings. Modric will aim to increase that tally further if Croatia extend their stay in the tournament.
Croatia entered the Panama game under pressure, having drawn 0-0 with England in their opening Group L fixture. That performance showed flashes of attacking quality but lacked end product. England’s stalemate with Ghana then raised the stakes, leaving Croatia aware that defeat against Panama would severely damage knockout hopes.
Panama, meanwhile, started confidently in Toronto and pressed Croatia high in the early stages. Cristian Martinez caused problems for Josko Gvardiol on the flank, sending one dangerous cross into Livakovic’s arms. Livakovic then produced a superb reflex stop to push Jose Luis Rodriguez’s close-range header onto the woodwork, though the move was ruled out as Amir Murillo’s cross had gone out of play.
Croatia struggled to create clear chances before the interval against a compact Panama defence. They failed to register a shot on target in the first half, with Panama becoming only the second CONCACAF side to achieve that against Croatia in a World Cup match, after Mexico managed the same feat in 2014. Frustration grew as attacks broke down in the final third.
The first real Croatian threat came in first-half stoppage time. Martin Baturina cut inside from the left and aimed low towards the far corner. Orlando Mosquera reacted sharply, diving to stop the effort to his right. Zlatko Dalic responded at half-time by introducing Andrej Kramaric and Budimir to add greater presence in attack.
The changes quickly paid off. Marco Pasalic released Stanisic down the right with a clever backheel. Stanisic drove into space and drilled the ball across the six-yard box. Budimir read the move, arriving between defenders to steer the cross past Mosquera and give Croatia a priceless advantage.
Croatia almost extended the lead three minutes later following a trademark pass from Modric. Modric lifted a precise ball over the Panama backline to find Pasalic’s forward run. Pasalic tried to chip Mosquera, who stood tall to block. The midfielder then lashed the rebound over the crossbar from a tight angle, missing a clear chance.
Panama increased the intensity after falling behind, pushing more players forward in search of an equaliser. Murillo tested Livakovic twice in quick succession, but the Croatia goalkeeper held firm on both occasions. The pressure then shifted to set pieces, where Panama sought to exploit aerial strength and movement.
Carlos Harvey came closest for Panama from a corner routine. Harvey met the delivery with a firm header that seemed destined for the top corner. Livakovic reacted again, tipping the effort over the bar. That save effectively ended Panama’s hopes as Croatia defended crosses and long balls more securely in the closing minutes.
The match statistics underlined Croatia’s efficiency in front of goal despite a slow start. Croatia produced six shots to Panama’s eight but carried a higher expected goals value. The numbers highlighted both teams’ attacking output and reflected Croatia’s stronger chances after the interval.
{TABLE_1}Overall expected goals (xG) finished at 1.66 for Croatia against 0.62 for Panama. Those figures backed the final scoreline, showing Croatia created the better quality openings across the 90 minutes. For Panama, the defeat confirmed an early exit from Group L.
Croatia leave Toronto with a vital win, renewed belief, and several records achieved. Budimir’s decisive finish, Modric’s 200th cap and Livakovic’s saves all shaped the result. Dalic’s team now turn attention to Ghana, aware that further improvement is required to secure a top-two place in Group L and progress to the knockout rounds.


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