Croatia edge Panama to keep World Cup last-32 hopes alive
A second-half strike from substitute Ante Budimir gave 2018 finalists Croatia a 1-0 win over Panama in Toronto, eliminating the Central Americans and keeping Zlatko Dalić's side in the Group L hunt.

Croatia kept their FIFA World Cup campaign from unravelling on Tuesday evening in Toronto, grinding out a 1-0 win over Panama that ended the Central Americans' tournament and hauled the 2018 finalists back into the Group L conversation. The decisive moment came off the bench: Ante Budimir, introduced at the interval, broke the deadlock in the second half to give Zlatko Dalić's side their first three points of the competition, after an opening defeat to England had left the group standings looking uncomfortable for a side still listing itself among the European contenders.
The result is less a statement of intent than a reprieve. Croatia did not dominate; they persisted. Panama, already written off by most previews, made the 2018 finalists work for every clearance, and the margin of victory flatters the scoreline only in the sense that it could have been tighter. For Dalić, the night answered the only question that mattered on 23 June: are Croatia still alive in the tournament? Yes, narrowly, and now dependent on other results. For Panama, the mathematics are over.
A goal, finally, for a side running out of patience
The pattern of the match was familiar to anyone who watched Croatia's opening loss to England: spells of possession that ran sideways rather than forward, a midfield that controlled territory without routinely piercing the back line, and a forward line that asked the same question of the same defenders for seventy minutes without finding an answer. Sky Sports' wire summary captured the inflection point — Budimir "came off the bench to ignite Croatia's World Cup and eliminate Panama as the 2018 finalists won 1-0 in Toronto." It is a thin summary of a thin performance, but the bench impact was the story.
CBS Sports' pre-match build had framed the contest as a recovery test for Croatia and a free swing for Panama: a Group L side "looking to bounce back from their opening loss to England," with odds and predictions calibrated to that framing. The reality of the match matched the diagnosis. Croatia did not so much win as refuse to lose, then caught the one chance that mattered.
What the framing got right — and what it underplayed
The dominant English-language read of Group L going into Tuesday was a hierarchy: England first, Croatia second, anyone else making up the numbers. That hierarchy held through matchday one but came under strain on Tuesday. Panama arrived in Toronto as the lowest-ranked side in the group on most metrics and, on the evidence of the scoreline, departed having been in the match for longer than the result suggests.
Two things the wire coverage underplayed. First, the structural pressure on Dalić's side: a 2018 finalist who loses to England and fails to beat Panama goes home on the third matchday, and the discourse around the manager by Thursday would have been unforgiving. Second, the specific way the goal came — a substitute, a single moment, against a side that had absorbed everything Croatia could throw at them for an hour. France 24's brief was right to lead with the substitution rather than the performance: it was the only passage of the match that deviated from the stalemate pattern.
What the rest of Group L now requires
Croatia sit on three points with one group match remaining. Whether three points is enough depends on the result of the other Group L fixture between England and Panama's eliminated opponents, and on the goal difference that travels with Croatia into the final matchday. The wire sources do not specify the post-match group table; BBC Sport's match summary is clear only on the consequence for Panama — "knocked out of the World Cup following the loss" — and on Croatia's position: "remain in contention for a last-32 spot."
The honest read is that Croatia have bought themselves a watchable final matchday rather than a guaranteed route through. A side that needed a half-time substitution to find the net against Panama is not, on this evidence, a side that will frighten the round-of-32 favourites — but a side that has, at least, kept the conversation going.
What remains uncertain
Three things the source material does not resolve. First, the specific identity of the assist on Budimir's strike: the wires credit the goal, not the build-up. Second, the broader Group L standings after Tuesday's result: BBC and Sky report the outcome and its consequence for the two teams involved, not the full table. Third, the composition of Croatia's preferred front line going into the final group match — whether Dalić now treats Budimir as a starter or as the same kind of late-game lever he was against Panama. The reporting answers the question of who is still alive in the tournament; it does not yet answer the question of who is improving.
Desk note: this article is built from match wires rather than a Monexus reporter on site, and the framing reflects the consensus English-language read — Croatia relieved, Panama eliminated — rather than any independent tactical read of the match. The structural question of whether Tuesday's result signals Croatian recovery or merely postpones an exit will be answered on matchday three, not before.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/france24_en