Sign in
Edition of 10:00 CETFriday, July 3, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages909 briefings today
SportSunday, June 28, 2026

Vlasic Header Sends Croatia Past Ghana into World Cup Knockouts

A late Nikola Vlasic goal gave Croatia a 2-1 victory over Ghana, earning second place in Group L and eliminating Scotland as both sides advanced.

Nikola Vlašić’s powerful 83rd-minute header, planted into the net from a Luka Modrić corner, earned Croatia a hard-fought 2-1 win over Ghana on Saturday in Philadelphia and confirmed both sides’ passage to the last 32 of the World Cup. The veteran playmaker’s pinpoint delivery found Vlašić unmarked at the back post, the ball ricocheting in off the inside of the goal frame to reclaim the lead after Ghana had fought back. For Scotland, the result extinguished the last hope of advancing as one of the best third-placed teams, with Ghana’s accumulated four points closing the door.

Croatia had dominated much of the first half and went ahead through Petar Sucic’s low drive from 30 yards that skidded through a crowded penalty area and past goalkeeper Benjamin Asare in the 31st minute. Vlašić had earlier rattled the post, but Ghana gradually grew into the contest and levelled with seventeen minutes remaining when Derrick Luckassen side-footed home Ernest Nuamah’s free-kick, a goal awarded only after a lengthy VAR review overruled an initial offside call. The equaliser briefly lifted Ghana into second place in the live group standings, yet Croatia’s experience told in the closing stages. Modrić, winning his 201st international cap, orchestrated the response, and after Asare’s acrobatic stop denied Mario Pašalić, the subsequent corner provided the winner.

England’s 2-0 victory over Panama elsewhere in Group L ensured Thomas Tuchel’s side topped the standings with seven points, leaving Croatia as runners-up on six. Ghana’s third-place finish on four points was still enough to progress as one of the tournament’s best third-placed sides, a format first introduced in 2026. Croatia will now face the second-placed team from Group K — which includes Portugal, Colombia and DR Congo — in Toronto, while Ghana is set to meet the Group K winner, potentially setting up a duel with Cristiano Ronaldo’s side should Portugal top the group.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

41%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressSoutheast Asian press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press
DetachmentPragmatism

The match report highlights Croatia's gritty win, but the real story is the elimination of Scotland, who needed a favorable result. Croatia's victory snatches second place from Ghana, but both teams advance, leaving Scotland out. The tone is matter-of-fact with a hint of drama about the Scottish exit.

Southeast Asian press
TriumphIrony

The coverage celebrates Croatia's victory and immediately speculates about a possible reunion of Luka Modric and Cristiano Ronaldo in the knockout stage. The win is framed as a stepping stone to a glamorous matchup, with the narrative focusing on big stars rather than the match itself. The tone is excited and sensational.

Broaden your view

Read more
Breaking
A French Star on a Rio Mototaxi, and the Streaming World That Followed·Riyad Mahrez Retires from International Football After Algeria’s World Cup Exit·Lagarde Signals She Could Leave ECB Early to Enter French Presidential Debate·Monaco Bombing Suspect Identified as Ukrainian Woman, Interpol Issues Red Notice·Services PMIs slide across major economies as Middle East conflict saps demand·Texas Teacher Sentenced to 33 Years as Child Abuse Cases Advance Across Three Continents·Moldovan Prime Minister Resigns Abruptly, Triggering Government Crisis·US edge past Bosnia in knockout thriller marred by Balogun red card·A French Star on a Rio Mototaxi, and the Streaming World That Followed·Riyad Mahrez Retires from International Football After Algeria’s World Cup Exit·Lagarde Signals She Could Leave ECB Early to Enter French Presidential Debate·Monaco Bombing Suspect Identified as Ukrainian Woman, Interpol Issues Red Notice·Services PMIs slide across major economies as Middle East conflict saps demand·Texas Teacher Sentenced to 33 Years as Child Abuse Cases Advance Across Three Continents·Moldovan Prime Minister Resigns Abruptly, Triggering Government Crisis·US edge past Bosnia in knockout thriller marred by Balogun red card·
Upd. 10:10 AM2 languages · 4 outlets
4 outlets|2 languages|2 min read
Sunday, June 28, 2026

Vlasic Header Sends Croatia Past Ghana into World Cup Knockouts

A late Nikola Vlasic goal gave Croatia a 2-1 victory over Ghana, earning second place in Group L and eliminating Scotland as both sides advanced.

Nikola Vlašić’s powerful 83rd-minute header, planted into the net from a Luka Modrić corner, earned Croatia a hard-fought 2-1 win over Ghana on Saturday in Philadelphia and confirmed both sides’ passage to the last 32 of the World Cup. The veteran playmaker’s pinpoint delivery found Vlašić unmarked at the back post, the ball ricocheting in off the inside of the goal frame to reclaim the lead after Ghana had fought back. For Scotland, the result extinguished the last hope of advancing as one of the best third-placed teams, with Ghana’s accumulated four points closing the door.

Croatia had dominated much of the first half and went ahead through Petar Sucic’s low drive from 30 yards that skidded through a crowded penalty area and past goalkeeper Benjamin Asare in the 31st minute. Vlašić had earlier rattled the post, but Ghana gradually grew into the contest and levelled with seventeen minutes remaining when Derrick Luckassen side-footed home Ernest Nuamah’s free-kick, a goal awarded only after a lengthy VAR review overruled an initial offside call. The equaliser briefly lifted Ghana into second place in the live group standings, yet Croatia’s experience told in the closing stages. Modrić, winning his 201st international cap, orchestrated the response, and after Asare’s acrobatic stop denied Mario Pašalić, the subsequent corner provided the winner.

England’s 2-0 victory over Panama elsewhere in Group L ensured Thomas Tuchel’s side topped the standings with seven points, leaving Croatia as runners-up on six. Ghana’s third-place finish on four points was still enough to progress as one of the tournament’s best third-placed sides, a format first introduced in 2026. Croatia will now face the second-placed team from Group K — which includes Portugal, Colombia and DR Congo — in Toronto, while Ghana is set to meet the Group K winner, potentially setting up a duel with Cristiano Ronaldo’s side should Portugal top the group.

Source divergence

Sport · 4 outlets · 2 languages

41%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable71%
Neutral29%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressSoutheast Asian press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press
DetachmentPragmatism

The match report highlights Croatia's gritty win, but the real story is the elimination of Scotland, who needed a favorable result. Croatia's victory snatches second place from Ghana, but both teams advance, leaving Scotland out. The tone is matter-of-fact with a hint of drama about the Scottish exit.

Southeast Asian press
TriumphIrony

The coverage celebrates Croatia's victory and immediately speculates about a possible reunion of Luka Modric and Cristiano Ronaldo in the knockout stage. The win is framed as a stepping stone to a glamorous matchup, with the narrative focusing on big stars rather than the match itself. The tone is excited and sensational.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 2 languages

Broaden your view

From Geopolitics & Politics

Trump Debuts Qatar-Gifted Air Force One Amid Bipartisan Ethics Scrutiny

10 languages · 26 outlets

From Economy & Markets

BYD Poised to Reclaim Global EV Crown as Chinese Wave Reshapes Auto Markets

3 languages · 13 outlets

From Technology

India freezes WhatsApp username rollout, extends scrutiny to Telegram and Signal

4 languages · 16 outlets

Read more