"The goal came too fast!"
"Just 19 seconds into the match, Suker scores!"
The Swiss commentator exclaimed repeatedly, his tone becoming more and more excited:
"This is Croatia! A team of youth, playing with youthful intensity—no hesitation, no retreat, only offense and aggression. They charge forward and produce a spectacular goal!"
"Listen! They've completely ignited the stadium!"
BOOM!!!!!!! —
WAAHHHH!!!!!!! —
The 20,000 Croatian fans in the stadium erupted.
The cheers were like a volcanic explosion.
They stomped in excitement, and the entire stadium seemed to shake like an earthquake. On this evening, Croatia lit the first spark of the 2008 European Championship—burning brightly.
And it wasn't just the Swiss commentators—commentators across platforms were praising the goal.
"So decisive! So confident!"
"Dujmović's long shot was bold, and Suker's follow-up finish truly opened the game up!"
"Croatia hit Poland hard right out of the gate. This is the price of not committing to a solid defense against a team like Croatia."
On the pitch, Suker had already run to the corner flag to celebrate.
After sliding on his knees, he threw a punch toward the stands.
His celebration triggered an even louder roar from the Croatian fans.
Face red with passion, fans screamed Suker's name with all their might.
This wasn't a European Championship qualifier!
This wasn't a friendly!
This was a group-stage match of the European Championship!
Suker's goal gave Croatia the lead—and such a rapid goal at that. How could they not be excited?
"Get hyped!!"
"Shout it out!"
Suker urged the fans to cheer even louder.
As he rallied them, the noise soared even higher.
His Croatian teammates quickly rushed to join him.
"Awesome!"
Modrić, Dujmović, Mandžukić and others tackled Suker to the ground in celebration, yelling in excitement.
On the sideline, Croatian head coach Slaven Bilić pumped his fist.
However, unlike usual, he didn't run around to celebrate wildly—perhaps because it was still so early in the match, and he was a bit anxious despite the goal.
Assistant coach Van Stoyac was also thrilled.
With Croatia scoring first, and with their squad already stronger on paper, they were now set up for an even better performance.
On the bench, Perišić stared at the field in a daze, eyes fixed on Suker.
When the goal went in, he too was thrilled—it was a step toward victory for Croatia.
But at the same time, Suker's scoring efficiency made him feel the pressure.
He needed to step up—both for his club and country.
On the Polish side, silence.
Polish head coach Leo Beenhakker, a seasoned Dutch manager, looked bewildered on the sidelines.
He had expected a strong Croatian counterattack—but not this strong.
And Croatia had some luck too.
Though Suker scored, the credit largely went to Dujmović's bold long-range shot.
Still, it all pointed to one thing: Beenhakker had underestimated Croatia's attacking intent.
No probing play, no caution—Croatia drew their sword immediately and even landed a blow. Beenhakker now hesitated.
Should they continue to go head-to-head with Croatia?
In the end, he decided to trust his players.
"Forget the goal. Regroup and focus!"
Beenhakker shouted from the sidelines.
On the pitch, Poland's players quickly tried to reorganize—they had to go on the attack.
Croatia, after celebrating, returned to their half, and once the ball was back in play, they pressed aggressively again.
"Damn it!"
Polish midfielder Mariusz Lewandowski cursed loudly.
Around him, Suker, Mandžukić, and Rakitić formed a tight triangle, trapping him and applying pressure.
"Lewandowski is being surrounded—can he get the ball out?"
At that moment, he tried to pass the ball laterally to create space, but Mandžukić lunged and the ball rolled behind him.
Lewandowski turned quickly to shield the ball again.
But a foot reached out and cleanly stole it away.
"Suker's got the ball!"
Lewandowski immediately tried to tackle him.
But Suker twisted, turned, and used the outside of his boot to nutmeg him, skipping over a sweeping leg and leaving him in the dust—a clean, elegant dribble.
Polish players rushed in to pressure again, but Suker had already passed the ball out.
CLAP CLAP CLAP CLAP!!
Croatian and local fans burst into applause.
They were amazed at Suker's dazzling move.
Modrić received the ball from Suker. And once it was at Modrić's feet, that meant Croatia had control again.
Poland retreated quickly into defense.
With Modrić directing, Croatia gradually pushed forward.
Suker and Mandžukić led the front line, standing parallel.
But they often dropped back.
When one dropped back, the other moved into the open space behind Poland's defense—Poland's defenders didn't dare follow.
Though Croatia played with a diamond midfield, the forward drops meant they effectively had three midfielders to match Poland—so they didn't get outnumbered.
Still, Croatia wasn't satisfied with just one goal.
They frequently threatened on the flanks.
Rakitić and Dujmović kept making forward runs and crossing into the box.
Suker and Mandžukić kept challenging for headers, getting into rhythm.
Minute 28.
Suker dropped back again, pulling Poland's defense inward. Modrić spotted the open space and played a diagonal through-ball—not to Suker directly, but to the space behind him.
There, Rakitić sprinted in from the side and reached the ball at the baseline.
In the box, Mandžukić waited in the center. Dujmović hovered at the far post.
Modrić was approaching the penalty area.
And Suker sprinted toward the near post.
"Pass it!"
Suker shouted.
Rakitić instinctively sent the ball in.
Suker jumped slightly—not a high leap—and used the inside of his left foot to tap the ball toward the near post behind him, sliding it under the Polish full-back's legs.
The ball rolled toward the near post and into the net.
It was an unconventional finish.
A pure moment of inspiration.
Poland never expected such a shot from Suker.
The goalkeeper stood frozen. Everyone watched as Suker slipped the ball into the net—and no one stopped him.
"Goal!!!"
"Another one!!!"
The Swiss commentator screamed with joy.
"Croatia's second goal—Suker with a brace—and what a finish!"
"Poland had no way to contain Suker. Letting him shoot like that has cost them two goals."
Down by two, Poland's situation became dire.
At this moment, coach Beenhakker panicked.
He subbed off Mariusz Lewandowski and brought on defender Pazdan.
That was the only option—to stabilize the back line.
Whether they could score or not wasn't the priority anymore—they needed to stop the bleeding first.
If Croatia kept playing like this, Poland would be blown out.
That early substitution—before 30 minutes—showed how much pressure Poland was under.
And for the rest of Europe watching, it was a warning.
Sure, part of it was Poland being overconfident.
But Croatia played brilliantly.
Right now, Croatia looked to be in peak form.
That's why they scored two goals so quickly.
And with the first half not even over yet, Poland looked like they were about to fall apart, especially defensively.
The way this match was going made coaches from other national teams nervous.
This Croatian team was more dangerous than expected.
They all started wondering: If we face Croatia… how should we play against them?