Croatia's Luka Modric celebrates with his daughter Sofia after winning the World Cup third-place playoff match between Croatia and Morocco in Doha, Qatar on December 17, 2022. Photo: VCG
Luka Modric led Croatia to the bronze medal at the World Cup on Saturday and revealed he will extend his international career into 2023 in an attempt to win the Nations League.
The 37-year-old won his 162nd cap in the 2-1 win over Morocco, four years after leading his country to the World Cup runners-up spot behind France.
Croatia will now attempt to win the Nations League title in June in the four-team finals also featuring the Netherlands, Italy and Spain.
"That's the plan," said Modric when asked if he intends to keep playing international football.
"It would be a nonsense not to play in the Nations League, and then we'll see how to proceed. I definitely want to stay for the Nations League."
Croatia were defeated by a Lionel Messi-inspired Argentina in the World Cup semifinals but Modric insisted that his team have cemented a place among the heavyweights of the sport.
"We achieved something major for the Croatian football. We wanted the gold; we were close," he said.
"In the end, we return to Croatia as winners. Croatia is not a miracle that appears every 20 years. We proved that we are constant, that we cannot be seen as dark horses but as a football power."
Even though Modric intends to keep playing at international level, coach Zlatko Dalic admits that time is ticking on other senior players.
"It's the end of a cycle. It's the last World Cup for some older players," said the coach with one eye on the qualifying tournament for Euro 2024 which kicks off in March.
"But we have very good young players who give hope - [Josip] Stanisic, [Mislav] Orsic, many players who are on the bench. We have a very good team for the future.
"Croatia have nothing to fear with this generation. What awaits us is the Nations League, and the qualifications of the Euro."
Meanwhile, fireworks lit the sky above the Croatian capital of Zagreb and many other towns in the country that joyfully celebrated the win in the third-place playoff.
"Croatia is on fire! Tears, songs, pride and joy throughout our homeland!" read the Vecernji List daily paper online edition.
The nation of fewer than 4 million people won their third World Cup medal since independence in 1991. In France 1998, Croatia were third and at the 2018 World Cup in Russia they reached the final.
Dalic added that he would "dedicate victory to a man who started all this."
"To [Miroslav] Ciro Blazevic. 'Boss' this is for you! I could win five medals, but you will always remain the 'coach of all coaches.'"
He referred to legendary coach Blazevic, 87, under whom Croatia won bronze in 1998.
On Sunday, the capital was going to organize a welcome for the squad at the main square, similar to 2018 when they returned from Russia.
At the time more than 550,000 people cheered the team during its parade on an open-top bus from the airport to the main square.
Since the independence, Zagreb has only once seen a larger crowd - for the visit of Pope John Paul II in 1994.