Today at the World Cup: Croatia and Morocco prepare for third-place play-off

The pair face each other on Saturday.

Pa Sport Staff
Friday 16 December 2022 07:53 GMT
Comments
Luka Modric and Croatia manager Zlatko Dalic will dust themselves down and go again when they face Morocco in Saturday’s third-place play-off (Nick Potts/PA)
Luka Modric and Croatia manager Zlatko Dalic will dust themselves down and go again when they face Morocco in Saturday’s third-place play-off (Nick Potts/PA) (PA Wire)

Your support helps us to tell the story

This election is still a dead heat, according to most polls. In a fight with such wafer-thin margins, we need reporters on the ground talking to the people Trump and Harris are courting. Your support allows us to keep sending journalists to the story.

The Independent is trusted by 27 million Americans from across the entire political spectrum every month. Unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock you out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. But quality journalism must still be paid for.

Help us keep bring these critical stories to light. Your support makes all the difference.

Croatia and Morocco will dust themselves down and go again as they fine-tune preparations for the World Cup 2022 third-place play-off.

France and Argentina are focused on Sunday’s final at the Lusail Stadium – where Paris St Germain team-mates Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe will go head to head.

Here, we look at what lies ahead in Qatar.

Dalic targets bronze

Croatia meet Morocco in Saturday’s third-place play-off at the Khalifa International Stadium.

While the 2018 runners-up were left crestfallen after their 3-0 defeat by Argentina in the semi-finals, head coach Zlatko Dalic maintains they will be going all out to sign off in style.

“Croatia did a fantastic job, above all expectations,” he said. “The game on Saturday is not a small final for us, it is the grand final.

“There is a major difference between finishing third or fourth.”

Atlas Lions will roar again

Morocco coach Walid Regragui felt his side left everything on the pitch as their World Cup dream came to an end with defeat to France on Wednesday evening.

The Atlas Lions were the first African nation to reach the semi-finals of the showpiece tournament but just came up short after losing captain Romain Saiss to injury and West Ham defender Nayef Aguerd forced off due to illness.

Regragui, though, will not let up as Morocco aim to show their extended run in Qatar was not a one-off.

“People already respected us, but I think they respect us more now,” he said.

“You can’t win a World Cup with miracles, you need to win it through hard work and that is what we will do – we will keep working.”

Argentina regroup

Argentina returned to light training on Thursday as focus turned towards the showdown with France.

The first part of the session was open to the media – who were left wondering why captain Lionel Messi and some other key men were not among those involved.

There was, though, no need for alarm as the recovery session out on the grass was mainly for players who had not been fully involved in the win over Croatia.

Friday’s training will be behind closed doors as Argentina manager Lionel Scaloni finalises his preparations for tackling the world champions.

Griezmann ready for Messi reunion

Antoine Griezmann knows facing Messi will be “a totally different proposition” to anything else France have faced so far in Qatar – but they will be up for the challenge.

Argentina’s playmaker – and Griezmann’s former Barcelona team-mate – has shone in what looks likely to be his fifth and final World Cup.

“Any team with Messi in is a totally different proposition,” Griezmann said. “Of course, not only Messi, they have a strong side around him, so we know it is going to be a tough game.”

Griezmann, though, maintains France – who had some concerns ahead of the semi-final with illness in the camp – will be ready.

“We will get back to work, focused on it, how we can hurt them, how we can defend against them,” he said. “We will be well-prepared.”

Morocco protest

While Wednesday’s semi-final defeat was decided on fine margins, the Morocco football federation (FMRF) was left less than impressed by the decision not to award a penalty when Theo Hernandez collided with Sofiane Boufal, who was booked for a foul, as well as a challenge on Selim Amallah at a free-kick, and have lodged a formal complaint.

“The Royal Moroccan Football Federation strongly protested the arbitration of the Moroccan national team match against the French national team, led by (referee) Cesar Arturo Ramos,” a statement read.

“The FMRF has written to the relevant body to review the refereeing decisions that deprived the Moroccan team of two penalties that were indisputable in the view of several refereeing specialists.

“The FMRF was equally astonished that the video assistant referee (VAR) did not react to these situations.”

Tweet of the day

Up next

Croatia v Morocco, third-fourth place play-off (Saturday 3pm, BBC One)

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in