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Date: Tuesday, June 23, 2026 | Kickoff: 7:00 PM ET / 23:00 BST
Venue: BMO Field (Toronto Stadium), Toronto, Canada
Group: L | Also in Group: England, Ghana
Both Panama and Croatia arrive at BMO Field in Toronto with zero points after losing their opening matches. This match is therefore effectively an elimination contest in everything but name. With England and Ghana both on three points above them, the loser here is effectively eliminated, and even a draw leaves both sides needing results beyond their control on Matchday 3. This is a World Cup knockout game in all but name.
This is the first competitive meeting ever between Panama and Croatia. With no head-to-head history to draw from, the analysis rests entirely on current form, squad quality, and what both sides have shown so far in this tournament.

Credit: Fox Sports
| Category | Panama | Croatia |
|---|---|---|
| FIFA Ranking | 74th | 10th |
| World Cup appearances | 2nd (debut in 2018) | 8th |
| Best World Cup finish | Group stage (2018) | Runners-up (2018) |
| Head coach | Thomas Christiansen | Zlatko Dalic |
| Captain | Anibal Godoy | Luka Modric |
| Key player | Cecilio Waterman / Amir Murillo | Andrej Kramaric / Luka Modric |
| Formation | 4-4-2 / 3-4-3 | 4-3-3 |
| Matchday 1 result | 0-1 loss to Ghana | 2-4 loss to England |
| Qualifying record | Unbeaten in CONCACAF qualifying | 7 wins, 1 draw in 8 UEFA qualifiers |
| Goals scored in qualifying | Moderate | 26 goals in 8 matches |
This match as clear favorites, despite their Matchday 1 defeat. Croatia fell to England 4-2 in its opener, losing its World Cup opener for the first time since 2014, and conceding four goals in a World Cup game for the first time since the 2018 final.
However, that result must be read in context. England were arguably the most impressive side in the entire opening round of matches. Croatia still scored twice against one of the tournament favorites, which shows their attacking threat remains very much alive. Croatia boss Zlatko Dalic admitted he got it all wrong against England, but do not expect the same mistakes against Panama.
Their qualifying form gives further confidence. Croatia’s UEFA qualifying record was excellent, winning seven of eight matches and scoring 26 goals in the process. Furthermore, Croatia have seven wins from their last ten outings, making them the clear side to back here.
This is also a milestone occasion. Luka Modric is in line for his 200th international cap, a milestone for one of the finest midfielders the game has seen. That emotional backdrop could serve as extra motivation for the entire Croatian squad.
| Player | Club | Caps | Key Stat |
|---|---|---|---|
| Luka Modric | Real Madrid | 199 (200th cap today) | Captain; still runs every midfield he plays in |
| Mateo Kovacic | Manchester City | 100+ | Champions League winner; controls tempo brilliantly |
| Andrej Kramaric | Hoffenheim | 80+ | Croatia’s most reliable finisher |
| Petar Musa | Benfica | — | Scored vs England; physical, powerful target striker |
| Ivan Perisic | — | 130+ | Veteran winger; dangerous from wide areas |
| Martin Baturina | — | — | Scored long-range stunner vs England; creative spark |
Croatia (4-3-3): Livakovic; Stanisic, Sutalo, Caleta-Car, Gvardiol; Kovacic, Modric, Sucic; Baturina, Musa, Perisic.
Their structure in that game was genuinely impressive. Panama tallied 29 tackles against Ghana, more than any other side in the first round of matches. Jose Cordoba set a national record with 101 passes, while Amir Murillo created three clear chances. However, the fundamental problem remains their inability to convert. Panama’s attacking options have been unable to score a single competitive goal so far at this World Cup.
Panama has now lost all four World Cup games in its history as Los Canaleros eye their first-ever World Cup win. Generating goals against a Croatia defense that conceded only four goals across eight qualifying games will require far more creativity than Panama have consistently shown.
There is also a fitness concern ahead of this fixture. Key midfielder Coco Carrasquilla missed the first game due to a groin strain and could make the bench. Defenders Cesar Blackman and midfielder Carlos Harvey are on yellow card warnings and must be careful to avoid suspension for the final group game against England.
| Player | Club | Caps | Key Stat |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cecilio Waterman | — | 40+ | Main striking threat; physical and direct |
| Amir Murillo | Anderlecht | 80+ | Versatile right back; created 3 chances vs Ghana |
| Anibal Godoy | — | 100+ | Experienced captain and midfield organizer |
| Jose Cordoba | — | — | Set national record with 101 passes vs Ghana |
| Yoel Barcenas | — | — | Left-sided threat; key in buildup play |
Panama (3-4-3): Mosquera; Ramos, Cordoba, Andrade; Murillo, Harvey, Barcenas, Blackman; Martinez, Waterman, J. Rodriguez.
The central tactical battle will be whether Croatia’s midfield trio can break down Panama’s compact defensive block. Modric and Kovacic, both with extensive European club experience, are among the most technically accomplished central midfielders in this tournament. Their ability to control tempo and find runners behind the defense will be the primary mechanism through which Croatia create chances.
Panama, on the other hand, will look to defend deep, stay organized, and hit Croatia on the counterattack when they can. Panama have evolved into a controlled, possession-based outfit and will fancy chasing a historic first World Cup point, but Croatia’s superior firepower should tell if their defense steadies after the messy afternoon against England.
One concern for Croatia is their continued vulnerability from set pieces. Croatia defended set pieces badly against England, and that was not the manager’s fault. Dalic’s tactical changes will focus on returning to a more recognizable 4-3-3 shape.
This is the first-ever senior international meeting between Panama and Croatia. With no historical data to draw from, the analysis rests fully on current form and squad quality. Croatia’s World Cup pedigree — runners-up in 2018, third-place in 2022 — dwarfs Panama’s relatively short history in the competition.
| Category | Panama | Croatia |
|---|---|---|
| MD1 result | 0-1 loss to Ghana | 2-4 loss to England |
| Goals scored in tournament | 0 | 2 |
| Goals conceded in tournament | 1 | 4 |
| Last 10 matches | Won 2 of last 8 | 7 wins from last 10 |
| Qualifying record | Unbeaten in CONCACAF | 7W 1D in UEFA Group |
| Pre-tournament friendlies | Lost 6-2 to Brazil | Lost to Belgium and Brazil; beat Slovenia |
| World Cup win record | 0 wins from 4 games | Multiple wins per tournament |
| Bookmaker | Panama Win | Draw | Croatia Win | Over 2.5 Goals | Under 2.5 Goals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1xBet | +620 | +310 | -210 | — | — |
| Stake | +600 | +320 | -180 | +106 | -112 |
| BetOnline / Lucky Rebel | +620 | +310 | -180 | +106 | -112 |
| CBS Sports / FanDuel | +600 | +320 | -210 | — | — |
| AK Bets | 15/1 | — | 4/7 | — | — |
| Bet365 | — | — | — | — | — |
Croatia’s status as heavy favorites is well-supported by the available evidence. The best available price on Croatia is -180 across the market. Panama can be backed at a best of +620 for a notable upset. The draw is available at a best of +310.
A few key markets stand out:
Croatia Win (-180): Croatia are the play at -180, with the quality of their squad and World Cup pedigree justifying their status as clear favorites against a Panama side yet to score at this tournament. Under the pressure of a potential group exit, Dalic’s experienced squad should find the answers.
Under 2.5 Goals (-112): Panama’s conservative defensive structure and their failure to score in their opening game points to a tight affair. Croatia may win this without needing to open up entirely, and a 1-0 or 2-0 scoreline is more likely than a high-scoring encounter. The Under represents strong value at -112.
Both Teams to Score (Yes) at 21/20: Both Teams to Score Yes appeals at 21/20 with AK Bets, given Croatia’s threat through Petar Musa and Panama’s willingness to push forward when behind. However, this is the higher-risk option given Panama’s failure to score against Ghana.
Petar Musa Anytime Scorer: Petar Musa, who scored just before halftime against England, is likely to have a say in a goal here. He is the best individual scorer option in this match.
Best Value Combination: A four-leg bet builder leaning on Croatia’s class: a Croatia win, Over 1.5 Croatia goals, plus Petar Musa and Nikola Vlasic both to find the net.
Croatia’s squad depth, World Cup experience, and the special motivation of Modric’s 200th cap all point strongly in their direction. Panama showed real defensive discipline against Ghana, but their inability to score in that match raises serious doubts about their capacity to find the net against a Croatia defense that, despite its problems against England, conceded only four goals across eight qualifying games.
This should be a tight, competitive match, but Croatia’s quality in the final third should ultimately prove the difference. The individual quality on Croatia’s roster could be enough to grind out a result, but it will not be easy with the high stakes involved. Panama’s compact organization could make things difficult, especially in the early stages of the game.
Pick: Panama 1-2 Croatia.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. Sports betting involves risk. Never bet more than you can afford to lose. Check local laws regarding online sports betting in your area.