Austria v Croatia, 08 June 2008

Score1-0 to Croatia
RefereePieter Vink
CompetitionUEFA European Championship Finals Group B
VenueErnst Happel Stadion, Vienna
Attendance51,428
Kick-Off: 6.00pm local Assistant referees: Adriaan Inia (Netherlands) Hans ten Hoove (Netherlands) Fourth official: Kristinn Jakobsson (Iceland) Man of the Match: Stipe Pletikosa (Croatia) Austria went the same way as co-hosts Switzerland, opening their UEFA EURO 2008 challenge with a narrow defeat as Luka Modrić's early penalty gave Croatia victory in Vienna. The midfielder scored the only goal of the first Group B game in the fourth minute, firing in after Ivica Olić had been brought down by René Aufhauser – the fastest penalty converted in finals history. The home side took time to find their feet after that setback, but mounted a stirring late charge with substitute Roman Kienast heading centimetres past the post seconds before the whistle. Coach Josef Hickersberger ended the goalkeeper conundrum by selecting Jürgen Macho ahead of Alex Manninger but, with three minutes and 35 seconds on the clock, the Austria No21 was forced to pick the ball out of the net following the worst of starts. Modrić showed outstanding control to keep an attack alive and found Olić, who was blocked as he attempted to go outside Aufhauser. Modrić slotted in the spot kick with aplomb, driving down the centre of goal with Macho diving to his right. With an entire nation having worked themselves into a fever of anticipation, it was a blow that could have shattered Austrian morale. For Slaven Bilić's men, meanwhile, the immediate breakthrough settled nerves and there was an assurance about their football. The home team looked vulnerable every time Croatia forced a set piece, Darijo Srna's delivery proving impeccable. It left Martin Stranzl and company overworked and little was happening at the other end to lift local spirits, although Sebastian Prödl shot wide from distance with Stipe Pletikosa watching it all the way. The Austria defender then rose highest to meet a corner but his effort flew beyond the far upright. After Mladen Petrić had rushed a volley, sending the ball off target, Austria finally began to assert themselves and proved they could get behind the Croatia back line. Martin Harnik gathered a ball played incisively inside the full-back and his cutback prompted some hurried defensive measures from Josip Šimunić before a long diagonal pass found Joachim Standfest, who could not place his header on target. Austria kicked off the second half where they had left off with Harnik, a focal point for their progress down the right, bursting beyond his marker and it was unfortunate Aufhauser could not connect with the hard-driven centre. From a similar position moments later, Harnik put too much power into his cross and the chance went begging. Perhaps inspired, Modrić went on a right-sided excursion of his own, and Stranzl had to call on all his experience to avert the danger. Austria then brought on the championship's oldest player, the 38-year-old Ivica Vastic, in a bid to rescue the situation. With another substitute, Ümit Korkmaz, adding a vital spark, Austria threw everything at Croatia in a rousing finale, Harnik shooting too high when well-placed and Pletikosa almost fumbling a Vastic header. The Croatia goalkeeper then had to push aside Korkmaz's fierce drive but he was a spectator in added time as Kienast met a left-wing free-kick with a header that flew just wide as Austria's last chance went begging.

0  Austria

Manager: Josef Hickersberger

1  Croatia

Manager: Slaven Bilic

Goals:

Goals:

Luka Modrić penalty 4 P

Starting lineup:

Goalkeeper Jurgen Macho
Defender Ronald Gercaliu
Defender Emanuel Pogatetz
Defender Sebastian Prödl
Defender Martin Stranzl
Midfielder René Aufhauser
Midfielder Andreas Ivanschitz (captain)
Midfielder Jurgen Saumel
Midfielder Joachim Standfest
Forward Martin Harnik
Forward Roland Linz

Starting lineup:

Stipe Pletikosa Goalkeeper
Vedran Corluka Defender
Robert Kovač Defender
Josip Simunić Defender
Darijo Srna Defender
Niko Kovač Midfielder (captain)
Niko Kranjčar Midfielder
Luka Modrić Midfielder
Danijel Pranjič Midfielder
Ivica Olić Forward
Mladen Petrić Forward

Substitutions:

Ivica Vastić for Jurgen Saumel 61
Umit Korkmaz for Ronald Gercaliu 69
Roman Kienast for Roland Linz 73

Substitutions:

Dario Knežević for Niko Kranjčar 61
Igor Budan for Mladen Petrić 72
Ognjen Vukojević for Ivica Olić 82

Cards:

Emanuel Pogatetz 4 Y
Jurgen Saumel 21 Y
Sebastian Prödl 68 Y

Cards:

Robert Kovač 51 Y

On the bench:

Goalkeeper Alex Manninger
Goalkeeper Ramazan Özcan
Defender Christian Fuchs
Defender Gyorgy Garics
Defender Martin Hiden
Defender Erwin Hoffer
Defender Markus Katzer
Defender Jurgen Patocka
Midfielder Umit Korkmaz
Midfielder Christoph Leitgeb
Forward Roman Kienast
Forward Ivica Vastić

On the bench:

Goalkeeper Mario Galinović
Goalkeeper Vedran Runje
Defender Dario Knežević
Defender Dario Simić
Defender Hrvoje Vejič
Defender/Midfielder Nikola Pokrivac
Midfielder Jerko Leko
Midfielder Ivan Rakitić
Midfielder Ognjen Vukojević
Forward Igor Budan
Forward Nikola Kalinić
Forward Ivan Klasnić

Comments:

- Following Switzerland's defeat on Saturday, Austria are now the sixth host nation to lose their opening match at a European Championship tournament.

Comments:

- Luka Modric's winning penalty for Croatia was the fastest ever spot kick in the history of this tournament. The previous fastest penalty was awarded to Italy in their match against Germany in 1996, when Gianfranco Zola failed to convert in the ninth minute of the match. - The result marked Croatia's first European Championship victory, since a 3-0 win over Denmark on 16 June 1996, ending a five match winless streak. - At the age of 22 years and 273 days, Modric became the youngest Croatian goalscorer ever at this tournament. He broke Goran Vlaovic' record who was 23 years and 309 days old when he scored against Turkey in 1996.

0  Austria

Manager: Josef Hickersberger

Goals:

Starting lineup:

Goalkeeper Jurgen Macho
Defender Ronald Gercaliu
Defender Emanuel Pogatetz
Defender Sebastian Prödl
Defender Martin Stranzl
Midfielder René Aufhauser
Midfielder Andreas Ivanschitz (captain)
Midfielder Jurgen Saumel
Midfielder Joachim Standfest
Forward Martin Harnik
Forward Roland Linz

Substitutions:

Ivica Vastić for Jurgen Saumel 61
Umit Korkmaz for Ronald Gercaliu 69
Roman Kienast for Roland Linz 73

Cards:

Emanuel Pogatetz 4 Y
Jurgen Saumel 21 Y
Sebastian Prödl 68 Y

On the bench:

Goalkeeper Alex Manninger
Goalkeeper Ramazan Özcan
Defender Christian Fuchs
Defender Gyorgy Garics
Defender Martin Hiden
Defender Erwin Hoffer
Defender Markus Katzer
Defender Jurgen Patocka
Midfielder Umit Korkmaz
Midfielder Christoph Leitgeb
Forward Roman Kienast
Forward Ivica Vastić

Comments:

- Following Switzerland's defeat on Saturday, Austria are now the sixth host nation to lose their opening match at a European Championship tournament.

1  Croatia

Manager: Slaven Bilic

Goals:

Luka Modrić penalty 4 P

Starting lineup:

Stipe Pletikosa Goalkeeper
Vedran Corluka Defender
Robert Kovač Defender
Josip Simunić Defender
Darijo Srna Defender
Niko Kovač Midfielder (captain)
Niko Kranjčar Midfielder
Luka Modrić Midfielder
Danijel Pranjič Midfielder
Ivica Olić Forward
Mladen Petrić Forward

Substitutions:

Dario Knežević for Niko Kranjčar 61
Igor Budan for Mladen Petrić 72
Ognjen Vukojević for Ivica Olić 82

Cards:

Robert Kovač 51 Y

On the bench:

Goalkeeper Mario Galinović
Goalkeeper Vedran Runje
Defender Dario Knežević
Defender Dario Simić
Defender Hrvoje Vejič
Defender/Midfielder Nikola Pokrivac
Midfielder Jerko Leko
Midfielder Ivan Rakitić
Midfielder Ognjen Vukojević
Forward Igor Budan
Forward Nikola Kalinić
Forward Ivan Klasnić

Comments:

- Luka Modric's winning penalty for Croatia was the fastest ever spot kick in the history of this tournament. The previous fastest penalty was awarded to Italy in their match against Germany in 1996, when Gianfranco Zola failed to convert in the ninth minute of the match. - The result marked Croatia's first European Championship victory, since a 3-0 win over Denmark on 16 June 1996, ending a five match winless streak. - At the age of 22 years and 273 days, Modric became the youngest Croatian goalscorer ever at this tournament. He broke Goran Vlaovic' record who was 23 years and 309 days old when he scored against Turkey in 1996.