MOSCOW — A World Cup of surprises concludes with a final of contrasts.
Powered by the dynamism of Kylian Mbappe, France has youthful exuberance in a side packed with some of soccer’s highest-value talent. It also has pedigree — winners in 1998 and finalists in 2006.
Croatia has a veteran roster that has been stretched to the limit but continues to win in Russia. The Croats never give in, prevailing in a shootout against Denmark, again on penalties against Russia — after being stung by a late equalizer — and then recovering from conceding early against England.
Just don’t suggest Croatia will be weary in Sunday’s final when it returns to the Luzhniki Stadium on Sunday.
Croatia’s star midfielder Luka Modric said “we will see who will be tired” was the team ethos going into Wednesday’s semifinal, feeling Croatia had been under-estimated by the English.
Modric, along with Mario Mandzukic, are the 32-year-olds who have propelled Croatia to its first major soccer final. In the previous four World Cups: Croatia failed to qualify in 2010 and was ousted in the group stage the other three occasions.
Before then, in its World Cup debut in 1998, Croatia did reach the semifinals, where it lost to France.
When Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic visited the team hotel in Moscow on Wednesday that 1998 game was on his mind — even before beating England.
“We might have the chance for the revenge in the finals with the French,” Plenkovic said.
Now they get it.
Croatia advanced to its first World Cup final with a 2-1 extra-time win over England on Wednesday night. France beat Belgium 1-0 a night earlier.