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SportTuesday, June 23, 2026

Panama and Croatia Stare Down Elimination After Opening World Cup Defeats

Both sides enter their second Group L match in Toronto with zero points, knowing a second loss would all but end their 2026 tournament.

Panama and Croatia arrive at BMO Field in Toronto on Tuesday evening locked in a shared predicament: each lost its opening match of the 2026 World Cup, and a second defeat would leave either side on the brink of elimination before the final round of group play. For Panama, the wound is a 1–0 loss to Ghana, decided by Caleb Yirenkyi’s goal in the 95th minute after the Central Americans had defended resolutely for almost the entire contest. Croatia’s setback was more turbulent, a 4–2 defeat by England in which Zlatko Dalić’s team twice levelled through Martin Baturina and Petar Musa, only to be overrun in the second half. Goalkeeper Dominik Livaković made seven saves to prevent a wider margin.

Both camps have framed the fixture as a non-negotiable pursuit of three points. Panama’s Danish-born coach Thomas Christiansen, speaking to regional media, acknowledged his side is the underdog but insisted that “discipline and focus” could produce a strong performance. The return of midfield anchor Adalberto Carrasquilla, absent against Ghana, offers a measure of balance to a team that has yet to win a World Cup match across two appearances. Croatia, a semi-finalist in the past two editions, carries the weight of high domestic expectations. Dalić told reporters that “only a victory can ease the pressure inside the team,” a sentiment echoed across Balkan outlets that note the 40-year-old Luka Modrić remains the creative fulcrum, likely partnered by Mateo Kovačić and Mario Pašalić.

The arithmetic of the expanded 48-team tournament provides a slender safety net: the eight best third-placed finishers advance to the round of 32 alongside the top two from each group. Yet a second loss would leave either Panama or Croatia on zero points with only one match remaining—against England for Panama and Ghana for Croatia, both on 27 June—and dependent on a highly unfavourable combination of other results. Analysts in Latin America point out that Panama’s path was always narrow, with the Ghana fixture identified as the must-win opportunity; that chance is now gone. European observers note that Croatia’s defeat by England, while damaging, came against the group’s strongest side, leaving a clearer route to recovery if they can dispatch Panama and then Ghana.

The match, scheduled for 20:00 local time (01:00 Wednesday in Spain, 06:00 WIB in Indonesia), will be officiated by Gabonese referee Pierre Atcho. It is the first official meeting between the two nations. Projected line-ups suggest Panama will retain a three-man central defensive structure, while Croatia is expected to control possession and press high. The immediate sporting consequence is stark: the victor will carry revived qualification hopes into the final group match; the defeated side will, in all likelihood, require a sequence of results beyond its own control to avoid an early exit.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressContinental European press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press
PragmatismSkepticism

The match in Toronto is a straightforward elimination scenario: both Panama and Croatia lost their openers and now face a must-win situation. Analysts note Croatia's aging midfield and Panama's lack of World Cup wins as key vulnerabilities. The outcome will likely determine which team can still realistically chase a round-of-32 spot behind England and Ghana.

Continental European press/ Mediterranean
AlarmPragmatism

Croatia, after a painful 4-2 defeat to England, must immediately redeem themselves against Panama to keep their World Cup hopes alive. The Balkan side relies on Luka Modric's experience, but defensive frailties were exposed. A second loss would be a national sporting disaster, almost certainly ending their tournament.

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Upd. 10:42 AM2 languages · 5 outlets
5 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Panama and Croatia Stare Down Elimination After Opening World Cup Defeats

Both sides enter their second Group L match in Toronto with zero points, knowing a second loss would all but end their 2026 tournament.

Panama and Croatia arrive at BMO Field in Toronto on Tuesday evening locked in a shared predicament: each lost its opening match of the 2026 World Cup, and a second defeat would leave either side on the brink of elimination before the final round of group play. For Panama, the wound is a 1–0 loss to Ghana, decided by Caleb Yirenkyi’s goal in the 95th minute after the Central Americans had defended resolutely for almost the entire contest. Croatia’s setback was more turbulent, a 4–2 defeat by England in which Zlatko Dalić’s team twice levelled through Martin Baturina and Petar Musa, only to be overrun in the second half. Goalkeeper Dominik Livaković made seven saves to prevent a wider margin.

Both camps have framed the fixture as a non-negotiable pursuit of three points. Panama’s Danish-born coach Thomas Christiansen, speaking to regional media, acknowledged his side is the underdog but insisted that “discipline and focus” could produce a strong performance. The return of midfield anchor Adalberto Carrasquilla, absent against Ghana, offers a measure of balance to a team that has yet to win a World Cup match across two appearances. Croatia, a semi-finalist in the past two editions, carries the weight of high domestic expectations. Dalić told reporters that “only a victory can ease the pressure inside the team,” a sentiment echoed across Balkan outlets that note the 40-year-old Luka Modrić remains the creative fulcrum, likely partnered by Mateo Kovačić and Mario Pašalić.

The arithmetic of the expanded 48-team tournament provides a slender safety net: the eight best third-placed finishers advance to the round of 32 alongside the top two from each group. Yet a second loss would leave either Panama or Croatia on zero points with only one match remaining—against England for Panama and Ghana for Croatia, both on 27 June—and dependent on a highly unfavourable combination of other results. Analysts in Latin America point out that Panama’s path was always narrow, with the Ghana fixture identified as the must-win opportunity; that chance is now gone. European observers note that Croatia’s defeat by England, while damaging, came against the group’s strongest side, leaving a clearer route to recovery if they can dispatch Panama and then Ghana.

The match, scheduled for 20:00 local time (01:00 Wednesday in Spain, 06:00 WIB in Indonesia), will be officiated by Gabonese referee Pierre Atcho. It is the first official meeting between the two nations. Projected line-ups suggest Panama will retain a three-man central defensive structure, while Croatia is expected to control possession and press high. The immediate sporting consequence is stark: the victor will carry revived qualification hopes into the final group match; the defeated side will, in all likelihood, require a sequence of results beyond its own control to avoid an early exit.

Source divergence

Sport · 5 outlets · 2 languages

0%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressContinental European press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press
PragmatismSkepticism

The match in Toronto is a straightforward elimination scenario: both Panama and Croatia lost their openers and now face a must-win situation. Analysts note Croatia's aging midfield and Panama's lack of World Cup wins as key vulnerabilities. The outcome will likely determine which team can still realistically chase a round-of-32 spot behind England and Ghana.

Continental European press/ Mediterranean
AlarmPragmatism

Croatia, after a painful 4-2 defeat to England, must immediately redeem themselves against Panama to keep their World Cup hopes alive. The Balkan side relies on Luka Modric's experience, but defensive frailties were exposed. A second loss would be a national sporting disaster, almost certainly ending their tournament.

This story appeared in

5 outlets · 2 languages

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