Incredible scenes as Croatians welcome home World Cup runners-up

Croatians are celebrating like they won the World Cup.

Supporters of the Croatian national football team celebrate in Bana Jelacica Square in Zagreb.

Supporters of the Croatian national football team celebrate in Bana Jelacica Square in Zagreb. Source: AFP

Hundreds of thousands of Croats in red and white chequered soccer shirts and scarves poured onto the streets of the capital Zagreb to welcome home the national team and celebrate their run to the World Cup final in Russia.

Croatia achieved their best-ever result in the tournament in losing Sunday's match to France, surpassing the third-place finish of 1998.

"They lost the final, but won the world," was how daily newspaper Jutarnji List summed up the mood.

Croatian national football team arrives in Zagreb
Supporters of Croatia celebrate. Source: Anadolu

Monday's celebration was broadcast live from the moment the team's plane - escorted by two fighter jets once inside Croatian airspace - neared Zagreb airport.

Water cannons created a glistening arch that the plane taxied through, and a red carpet was rolled out for the players.

The team rode an open-topped bus towards the city centre through streets swamped with cheering crowds.

After an almost six-hour ride, the bus reached Zagreb's central square, where more than 100,000 people had gathered under a sea of welcome banners and national flags.

"Marry me, Rebic", read one, a supersized proposal to striker Ante Rebic.

Cheering erupted as he and his team-mates went up the makeshift stage one by one and addressed the crowd.

"Thanks for recognising that we played our hearts in Russia," Croatia full-back Sime Vrsaljko said.

Forward Mario Mandzukic gives an autograph.
Forward Mario Mandzukic gives an autograph. Source: AFP

"The guys wore the Croatian jerseys with pride and you were the best supporters in the world," added coach Zlatko Dalic.

In all, around half a million people took to the streets to welcome the team, state news agency Hina said - better that one in ten of the small Balkan nation's four million population.

"We must use this opportunity to build, improve our soccer infrastructure and try to be even better," said Robert Prosinecki, the midfield star of the 1998 team.


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Source: Reuters, SBS



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