Croatia at the 2006 FIFA World Cup

Croatia participated in the 2006 FIFA World Cup. This was their third appearance. The country has qualified for every World Cup which it has been eligible for since independence in 1991.

Qualifying

Croatia was in Group 8 of UEFA's World Cup qualifications. They played alongside Bulgaria, Hungary, Iceland, Malta, and Sweden. During the course of qualifications, the team remained undefeated. At the end of qualification, the team was tied with Sweden in points. However, Croatia won the tiebreaker based on their head-to-head record (Croatia won both meetings).

The complete results were as follows:

Results
Date Venue Opponent Score
4 September 2004 Maksimir Stadium,
Zagreb
 Hungary 3:0
8 September 2004 Ullevi Stadium,
Gothenburg
 Sweden 1:0
9 October 2005 Maksimir Stadium,
Zagreb
 Bulgaria 2:2
26 March 2005 Maksimir Stadium,
Zagreb
 Iceland 4:0
30 March 2005 Maksimir Stadium,
Zagreb
 Malta 3:0
4 June 2005 Vasil Levski Stadium,
Sofia
 Bulgaria 3:1
3 September 2005 Laugardalsvöllur,
Reykjavík
 Iceland 3:1
7 September 2005 Ta' Qali,
Ta' Qali
 Malta 1:1
8 October 2005 Maksimir Stadium,
Zagreb
 Sweden 1:0
12 October 2004 Ferenc Puskás Stadium,
Budapest
 Hungary 0:0

The final standings were the following:

Final Standings
Country Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD
 Croatia 241073021516
 Sweden 241080230426
 Bulgaria 151043317170
 Hungary 14104241314-1
 Iceland 4101181427-13
 Malta 310037432-28

World Cup preparation

The Croatian national team's World Cup camp was in the spa town of Bad Brückenau in northern Bavaria, Germany. The county of Bad Kissingen in northern Bavaria was the only one to host two teams preparations. Ecuador were based in the city of Bad Kissingen,

The team also participated in several exhibition games around Europe in preparation for the World Cup:

Results
Date Venue Opponent Score
23 May 2006 Ernst Happel Stadion,
Vienna
Austria 4:1
28 May 2006 Gradski vrt,
Osijek
Iran 2:2
3 June 2006 Volkswagen Arena,
Wolfsburg
Poland 0-1
7 June 2005 Stade de Genève,
Geneva
Spain 1-2

Draw

Croatia was drawn into Group F. Croatia's opponents in the first stage were Brazil, Australia and Japan, respectively.

History

From the group, the Croatian team has only faced Japan before in a World Cup, but other matches, both official and friendly ones, have taken place with the other two. The history of those matches up until, but not including, the 2006 World Cup is as follows:

Opponent Matches Victories Ties Defeats Goals scored Goals conceded First
match
Last
match
 Brazil 1 0 1 0 1 1 1:1 (on 17 August 2005 at Poljud, Split) 1:1 (on 17 August 2005 at Poljud, Split)
 Australia 4 1 1 2 8 4 0:1 (on 7 May 1992 in Melbourne) 7:0 (on 7 June 1998 at Maksimir Stadium, Zagreb)
 Japan 2 1 0 1 4 4 3:4 (on 23 July 1989 in Tokyo) 1:0 (on 20 June 1998 at Stade de la Beaujoire, Nantes)

2006 World Cup squad

Head coach: Zlatko Kranjčar

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Club
1 1GK Stipe Pletikosa 8 January 1979 53 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
2 3MF Darijo Srna 1 May 1982 39 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
3 2DF Josip Šimunić 18 February 1978 45 Germany Hertha BSC
4 2DF Robert Kovač 6 April 1974 58 Italy Juventus
5 2DF Igor Tudor 16 April 1978 55 Italy Juventus
6 3MF Jurica Vranješ 31 January 1980 24 Germany Werder Bremen
7 2DF Dario Šimić 12 November 1975 83 Italy Milan
8 3MF Marko Babić 28 January 1981 36 Germany Bayer Leverkusen
9 4FW Dado Pršo 5 November 1974 32 Scotland Rangers
10 3MF Niko Kovač (captain) 15 October 1971 61 Austria Red Bull Salzburg
11 2DF Mario Tokić 23 July 1975 28 Austria Austria Wien
12 1GK Joey Didulica 14 October 1977 4 Netherlands AZ
13 2DF Stjepan Tomas 6 March 1976 49 Turkey Galatasaray
14 3MF Luka Modrić 9 September 1985 7 Croatia Dinamo Zagreb
15 3MF Ivan Leko 7 February 1978 13 Belgium Club Brugge
16 3MF Jerko Leko 9 April 1980 38 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
17 4FW Ivan Klasnić 29 January 1980 23 Germany Werder Bremen
18 4FW Ivica Olić 14 September 1979 39 Russia CSKA Moscow
19 3MF Niko Kranjčar 13 August 1984 24 Croatia Hajduk Split
20 3MF Anthony Šerić 15 January 1979 14 Greece Panathinaikos
21 4FW Boško Balaban 15 October 1978 27 Belgium Club Brugge
22 4FW Ivan Bošnjak 6 February 1979 14 Croatia Dinamo Zagreb
23 1GK Tomislav Butina 30 March 1974 28 Belgium Club Brugge

Team captain: Niko Kovač

Matches

All times local (UTC+2)

Round Robin

Group F

Team Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD
 Brazil 9330071+6
 Australia 43111550
 Croatia 2302123−1
 Japan 1301227−5


First Round

13 June 2006
21:00
Brazil  1 – 0  Croatia
Kaká  44' (Report)
Olympiastadion, Berlin
Attendance: 72,000
Referee: Archundia (Mexico)

18 June 2006
15:00
Croatia  0 – 0  Japan
(Report)

22 June 2006
21:00
Croatia  2 – 2  Australia
Srna  2'
N. Kovač  56'
(Report) Moore  38' (pen.)
Kewell  79'
Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion, Stuttgart
Attendance: 52,000
Referee: Poll (England)

Brazil vs Croatia

13 June 2006 - 21:00
Olympic Stadium, Berlin - Attendance: 72,000

 Brazil 1 – 0 Croatia 
Kaká  44' (1 – 0)
(Report)

BRAZIL:
GK 1 Dida
RB 2 Cafú (c)
CB 3 Lúcio
CB 4 Juan
LB 6 Roberto Carlos
CM 5 Emerson  42'
CM 11Zé Roberto
AM 8 Kaká
AM 10Ronaldinho
CF 7 Adriano
CF 9 Ronaldo  70'
Substitutions:
FW 23Robinho  70'
Manager:
Brazil Carlos Alberto Parreira

CROATIA:
GK 1 Stipe Pletikosa
CB 7 Dario Šimić
CB 4 Robert Kovač  67'
CB 3 Josip Šimunić
RM 2 Darijo Srna
CM 10Niko Kovač (c)  32'  41'
CM 5 Igor Tudor  90'
LM 8 Marko Babić
AM 19Niko Kranjčar
CF 9 Dado Pršo
CF 17Ivan Klasnić  56'
Substitutions:
MF 16Jerko Leko  41'
FW 18Ivica Olić  56'
Manager:
Croatia Zlatko Kranjčar
Wikinews has related news: Brazil trot to 1-0 win over Croatia in Group F

Japan vs. Croatia

18 June 2006
15:00 - FIFA World Cup Stadium Nuremberg, Nuremberg - Attendance: 41,000

 Japan 0 – 0 (0–0) Croatia 
(Report)

JAPAN:
GK 23Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi  42'
RB 21 Akira Kaji
CB 5Tsuneyasu Miyamoto (c)  21'
CB 22Yuji Nakazawa
LB 14Alex  72'
RM 8Mitsuo Ogasawara
CM 7 Hidetoshi Nakata
CM 15Takashi Fukunishi  46'
LM 10Shunsuke Nakamura
CF 9 Naohiro Takahara  85'
CF 13Atsushi Yanagisawa  61'
Substitutions:
MF 17 Junichi Inamoto  46+1'
FW 20 Keiji Tamada  61'
MF 16 Masashi Oguro  85'
Coach:
Brazil Zico

CROATIA:
GK 1 Stipe Pletikosa
CB 3 Josip Šimunić
CB 4 Robert Kovač  32'
CB 7 Dario Šimić
RM 2 Darijo Srna  69'  87'
CM 5 Igor Tudor  70'
CM 10Niko Kovač (c)
LM 8 Marko Babić
AM 19 Niko Kranjčar  78'
CF 9 Dado Pršo
CF 17Ivan Klasnić
Substitutions:
FW18Ivica Olić  70'
MF 14Luka Modrić  78'
FW 22Ivan Bošnjak  87'
Coach:
Croatia Zlatko Kranjčar
Wikinews has related news: Croatia and Japan share point in Group F

Croatia vs Australia

22 June 2006
21:00 - Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion, Stuttgart - Attendance: 52,000

 Croatia 2 – 2 (1–1) Australia 
Srna  2' (Report) Moore  39' (pen.)
Kovač  56' Kewell  79'

CROATIA:
GK 1 Stipe Pletikosa 69'
CB 7 Dario ŠimićYellow cardYellow cardRed card 32', 85'
CB 13Stjepan Tomas  79'
CB 3 Josip ŠimunićYellow cardYellow cardRed card 61'[1]
DM 5 Igor Tudor 38'
DM 10Niko Kovač (c)
RM 2 Darijo Srna
CM 19 Niko Kranjčar  65'
LM 8 Marko Babić
CF 9 Dado Pršo
CF 18Ivica Olić  73'
Substitutions:
MF 16Jerko Leko  65'
MF 14Luka Modrić  73'
FW 17Ivan Klasnić  84'
Coach:
CroatiaZlatko Kranjčar

AUSTRALIA:
GK 18Željko Kalac
CB 3 Craig Moore
CB 2 Lucas Neill
CB 14Scott Chipperfield  75'
RM 7 Brett EmertonYellow cardYellow cardRed card 80', 87'
CM 13Vince Grella  63'
LM 21 Mile Sterjovski  71'
RW 5 Jason Čulina
AM 4 Tim Cahill
LW 10Harry Kewell
CF 9 Mark Viduka (c)
Substitutions:
FW 15John Aloisi  63'
MF 23Mark Bresciano  71'
FW 19Joshua Kennedy  75'
Coach:
Netherlands Guus Hiddink
Wikinews has related news: Australia draws with Croatia 2-2, advances to next round in Group F

Miscellaneous

Prior to the Croatia's match against Brazil, 823 flares were confiscated from fans. However, Croatian fans managed to sneak in at least two and lit them during the game. This game was also marked by a Croatian fan stepping onto the field and kissing the boots of Croatian forward Dado Pršo.

References

  1. Šimunić was given three yellow cards in the match: the referee failed to send him off the pitch after the second yellow, and was only red carded after the third yellow. The original FIFA match report listed all three yellow cards, however was revised shortly after, with the second yellow card (90') not being recorded; it is unknown whether this was for consistency in the reports, or whether the card was retrospectively overturned.
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