By Sachit Subba • Football • Jun 24, 2026 03:34 AM • 125 views
TORONTO — On a night heavy with tension and historical significance by the wind-swept shores of Lake Ontario, Croatia resurrected their World Cup campaign while bringing a cruel, premature end to Panama’s.
A solitary, clinical second-half strike from substitute Ante Budimir proved the difference at Toronto Stadium, securing a hard-fought 1-0 victory for the 2018 finalists. The result injects vital life into Croatia’s Group L ambitions following their opening-match defeat, while mathematically condemning a resilient Panamanian side to an early departure from the tournament.
The backdrop to the contest was unforgiving. Following a scoreless stalemate between England and Ghana earlier in the day, both nations took the pitch fully aware that a second consecutive defeat would trigger an immediate ticket home. For the opening 45 minutes, it was Panama who looked far more comfortable with that suffocating pressure.
Deploying a highly disciplined, deeply entrenched five-man defensive wall, Thomas Christiansen’s side systematically choked the supply lines to Croatia’s legendary captain, Luka Modrić. The Real Madrid maestro was making his monumental 200th international appearance, but for large stretches of the first half, the celebration threatened to be gatecrashed.
Panama targeted the flanks with devastating pace, asking serious questions of the Croatian backline. José Luis Rodríguez and Amir Murillo repeatedly flashed dangerous deliveries across the face of the goal, lacking only the final, decisive touch to break the deadlock.
The frustration within the Croatian ranks was visible. Minutes before the interval, goalkeeper Dominik Livaković turned to the massive wall of red-and-white checkered shirts behind his net, frantically waving his arms to demand more noise, more urgency, and more life from the stands.
Recognising his side was losing the physical midfield battle, Croatia manager Zlatko Dalić made a ruthless tactical adjustment at half-time, surprisingly hooking Manchester City defender Joško Gvardiol. The gamble paid immediate dividends as the European side emerged with a renewed tactical swagger.
The match-defining breakthrough arrived in the 53rd minute, constructed with quintessential Balkan flair. Winger Marco Pašić unlocked the right flank with a deft, imaginative backheel into the path of Josip Stanišić. The full-back delivered an inviting, tantalising cross into the heart of the penalty area, where Budimir—who had been introduced to provide a focal point to the attack—guided it past Panama keeper Abduvohid Nematov with predatory precision.
Yet, despite their technical superiority, Croatia were made to sweat. Panama actually outshot their European counterparts eight to six over the course of the evening, mirroring the compact, dangerous performance they displayed in their opening 1-0 loss to Ghana.
Their golden opportunity for salvation arrived in the 68th minute. Carlos Harvey rose highest to meet a corner, powering a header that looked destined for the top corner, only for Livaković to produce a spectacular, fingertip save over the crossbar to preserve the lead.
While Panama's golden generation must now play for pride in their final group fixture against leaders England on Saturday, Croatia moves to three points. They control their own destiny heading into a blockbuster final group match against Ghana, with a place in the knockout rounds squarely back in their sights.
