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Sweet revenge

Croatia's upset avenges 1996 loss to Germans

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Posted: Saturday July 04, 1998 09:25 PM

  Suker (right): "When I heard [German coach] Berti Vogts called us a small country, this raised our morale by 200 percent." (AP)

LYON, France (AP) - Croatia waited two years to get revenge against Germany. When it came, it was sweet and stunning and made World Cup history.

A country that didn't exist seven years ago, Croatia vaulted into the elite club of semifinalists with a 3-0 triumph over the once-mighty Germans, the first team to get that far in its World Cup debut.

Set ablaze by patriotism, German put-downs and a lost quarterfinal in the 1996 European Championship, the Croats claimed a triumph for soccer's small powers.

"When I heard [German coach] Berti Vogts called us a small country, this raised our morale by 200 percent," exulted star striker Davor Suker. "We were fired up to send the Germans packing. This shows that small can beat big.'

Not that Croatia came completely out of nowhere. The squad's core, including playmaker Zvonomir Boban of AC Milan, goes back to the Yugoslav team that won the 1987 world youth championship.

When Yugoslavia broke up and Croatia gained independence in a 1991 war, most of is talent left for Western Europe. The team surged onto the international stage in the 1996 European Championship, where it was ousted in a rough quarterfinal with Germany, the eventual champion.

Croatia turned the tables in Saturday's World Cup quarterfinal. Aided by the 40th minute expulsion of German defender Chrstian Woerns after a tangle with their star striker Davor Suker, the Croats got a goal in first-half injury time from Robert Jarni.

The Germans, seeking their fourth world title, never recovered and with an extra man, the Croats were free to run an often sparkling counterattack game after the break.

Croatia's substitutes began celebrating after Goran Vlaovic knocked in goal No. 2 in the 80th minute and Suker added to the Germans' misery with a classy close-range goal five minutes from the end, the Real Madrid striker's fourth of the tournament.

"For 45 years in Yugoslavia, we never played with the same fire as we are for Croatia," declared defender Igor Stimac, whose sending off in the 1996 game contributed to the Croat loss.

Among those celebrating along with some 7,000 Croatian fans in Gerland Stadium was President Franjo Tudjman.

"We were very motivated, also because our president was here," said Stimac. "I've been dreaming for two years about meeting Germany again."

The Adriatic country of four million people was savoring the biggest sports success in its young history.

"The country is exploding with joy tonight," Suker said. "I'm really proud to be a Croat."

 

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