Turkey triumph in Vienna shoot-out
June 21, 2008 at 12:12 am | In Croatia, Turkey | 4 CommentsTags: Arda Turan, Croatia, Emre Asik, Fatih Terim, Hamit Altintop, Ivan Klasnic, Luka Modric, Mehmet Aurelio, Mehmet Topal, Robert Kovac, Rustu Recber, Semih Senturk, Slaven Bilic, Tuncay Sanli, Turkey, volkan demirel

Turkey are through to the semi-finals of the UEFA European Championship for the first time at Croatia’s expense after a thrilling match in Vienna was decided on penalties after the two sides had swapped goals in the final moments of extra time.
Sensational comeback
When Ivan Klasnić headed in Luka Modrić’s cross with a minute of the overtime period to play, Croatia looked to have booked their place in Wednesday’s semi-final against Germany. However, for the third game running, Turkey sensationally hit back at the death to force the first shoot-out of these finals when Semih Şentürk drove in, with the aid of a deflection, from just inside the area. They went on to win 3-1 on penalties after Rüştü Reçber saved Mladen Petrić’s kick following earlier misses from Modrić and Ivan Rakitić. Turkey coach Fatih Terim, though, will struggle to get a team together to play Germany with Emre Aşık, Tuncay Şanlı and Arda Turan all suspended along with Volkan Demirel after being booked here.
Terim sets no limits on success
June 21, 2008 at 12:08 am | In Croatia, Turkey | 1 CommentTags: Arda Turan, coach, Croatia, Emre Asik, Fatih Terim, Ivan Klasnic, Semih Senturk, Slaven Bilic, Tuncay Sanli, Turkey

Turkey coach Fatih Terim claimed, for his side, there is “no limit to success” after they defeated Croatia on penalties to earn a semi-final meeting with Germany. Terim’s men looked to be on the way out when Ivan Klasnić struck in the penultimate minute of extra time, but Semih Şentürk restored parity with the last kick of the game. Turkey then triumphed in the shootout. Croatia coach Slaven Bilić said Turkey have the “X factor” after watching them hit back late on for the third successive match.
Fatih Terim, Turkey coach
I would like to congratulate the Croatia players and coach. They played well but that’s football. You should never give up until the final whistle, that’s what makes football interesting. I congratulate my players, too. Both sides could have won. I think we should be proud and I still haven’t been able to do any damage assessment. Emre Aşık, Tuncay Şanlı and Arda Turan are all suspended [for Germany] because they were booked here, and we have injured players. We have worked very hard over the last two years and deserve to be in this semi-final. If Croatia had won, I would have said they deserved it too, but I’m delighted we did it. I tell my players never to give up. I set them goals and tell them not to be afraid of losing. I think this team could do even better. If only we could have the injured players back, but even without them, we are special. There is something special about this team.
I hope the people enjoy it and I ask them not to make our joy someone else’s tragedy. No win is worth someone’s life, so I ask the Turkish people to enjoy themselves, celebrate and have fun but not to hurt anyone when they do it. To lose a victory in such a short period of time is a serious mental blow for any team – I thought we would have a chance in the shoot-out because of that. If you look at our run, we have always come back and that’s not easy. Let’s hope against Germany we can take the lead. There is no limit to our success. After Croatia scored, I saw players lying on the pitch and I told Arda to get the ball out of the goal and start again. I wasn’t giving up. We could have lost but there were things we could do about it. I always say there is much more we can do as a country of 70 million people and there is more success we can achieve. We seem to come back from the dead. We always do the hard thing, not the easy thing, which shows how good my team are. When you have footballers like this, you just don’t lose.
Slaven Bilić, Croatia coach
This was a good match and I would like to congratulate everyone who took part in it. The game had an incredible ending, the kind you can only find in football. If you sum it up after 120 minutes, we had more opportunities than Turkey. They obviously exerted some pressure on us for a while and were tough opponents but we have beaten better teams so far. We expected them to do all they could to equalise in the last minute or two. Of course, they weren’t bothered about conceding a second as they had to push up to equalise. We received the ball and launched a counterattack which ended in offside.
They didn’t wait for their players to go forward, there were only a couple of them up front, but there was a powerful shot which took a deflection and went in. This is the third match Turkey have won in this extreme manner and if they continue to be lucky and don’t give up, they might even reach the final. It is obvious that they have quality and the X factor which you need in football. Turkey have already shown they’re able to do anything. Having one less rest day than Germany is a handicap and extra time and penalties are also exhausting. They have a number of injured players and suspensions, but some might come back and they won’t give up.
Bilić’s touchline waltz ends with fall
June 21, 2008 at 12:06 am | In Croatia | Leave a CommentTags: Croatia, Slaven Bilic

Contrary to the Spanish proverb “the leader follows in front”, Croatia coach Slaven Bilić has very much a style of his own. Pacing the technical area like a watchful security guard he saw his Croatia side reach the brink of the UEFA EURO 2008™ semi-finals – only for comeback kings Turkey to strike again after the most dramatic of finales.
Wenger schooling
At 39, Bilić is almost young enough to be playing at these finals and as he took to his cavernous technical area after kick-off, his eagerness to get close to the action was clear to all at the Ernst-Happel-Stadion. Dressed in familiar grey suit, earring catching the stadium lights, Bilić danced a lonely waltz in Vienna. He followed the ball from one end to the other, dictating the tone and rhythm like an orchestra conductor. An early chance for Hamit Altıntop was waved away with a cursory flick of his hand, Bilić focusing instead on urging Vedran Ćorluka to push on and Luka Modrić to retain his patience. For a man who has frequently spoken about his belief that “systems are dying”, a principle germinated during time shadowing the likes of Marcello Lippi and Arsène Wenger as he started his coaching career, he seemed to have a definite game plan.
Bilić backing helps Pranjić soar
June 16, 2008 at 8:31 pm | In Croatia | Leave a CommentTags: Croatia, Danijel Pranjic, Pranjic, Slaven Bilic

It is not often that an international defender confesses to not being very good at defending, and even rarer when his team are through to the last eight at a major tournament, but Croatia left-back Danijel Pranjić knows the one man he needs to impress is already behind him.
Excellent display
“It’s not my usual position because I usually play in midfield,” he says, referring to his club role with Dutch side SC Heerenveen. “My quality is going forward. I’m not really a good defender and sometimes high balls are difficult for me, so I try to attack more.” It is an extraordinary admission, particularly since journalists tried to convince Slaven Bilić of precisely that after Croatia’s uninspiring 1-0 opening victory over Austria, but Bilić ignored their calls and Pranjić repaid his coach’s faith with an excellent display against Germany, setting up Darijo Srna for the first goal in the 2-1 win.
How far can Croatia go?
June 13, 2008 at 11:34 pm | In Croatia | Leave a CommentTags: Croatia, Ivan Rakitic, Ivica Vastic, Luka Modric, Niko Kranjcar, Slaven Bilic

Just 383 days. That is the age gap between Slaven Bilić and Ivica Vastic, two of Thursday’s prime movers but men pushing at totally opposite extremes in their respective trades. While one is the youngest coach in the competition and potentially the youngest ever to lift the trophy, the other is the tournament’s oldest player – and the man whose last-minute equaliser for Austria cemented top spot in Group B for Bilić and his charges.
Tournament contenders
Thanks to Vastic’s strident spot-kick, Croatia will avoid Portugal in the quarter-finals, a meeting many thought they were not only destined for but destined to lose. No-one will be quite so quick to write them off now, and Bilić’s pre-match comments that “any team that beats Germany can hope to beat anybody” will find real resonance when the tournament contenders are next tallied up. But what do you think? Can the mobility and technique of Luka Modrić, Niko Kranjčar and Ivan Rakitić see them through to the end or will more dynamic teams than Germany expose Robert Kovač and Josip Šimunić’s lack of pace at the back?
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