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Published 12:34 14 Jul 2018 BST
"For five, ten, 15 years people have been saying 'the international break is here, the Premier League has stopped'," Gary Neville said on ITV's post-match coverage of the Croatia defeat. "That has been the attitude in our country. It has absolutely been the attitude and maybe this tournament has just given everyone just a little bit of a lift of how important the national team can be to the whole country."The confidence and the hubris of the English pundits, journalists and fans swelled with each passing round to create this tidal wave of support for the English team that really gave the #Itscominghome movement great legs when there was always the looming potential that one penalty, one shot or one Mario Mandzukic volley could instantly kill the campaign. Baddiel, Skinner & Lightning Seeds' It's Coming Home was a rallying cry for the English and a sign to the other nations that England were going all in. That this was chips to the table time for Gareth Southgate's side when he really had a four-of-a-kind in a hand when the straight flush was always in play. When the cards dropped, the hands were played and the chips had been lost, Croatia midfielder Luka Modric was standing there just waiting to highlight how much the bullishness of their media had antagonised the Croats.
“People were talking … English journalists, pundits from television,” he told ITV after the game. “They underestimated Croatia tonight and that was a huge mistake. All these words from them we take, we were reading and we were saying: ‘OK, today we will see who will be tired.’ They should be more humble and respect their opponents more. “We showed again that we were not tired – we dominated the game mentally and physically. “We should have killed the game even before extra time. This is an amazing achievement for us – it’s a dream come true after such a long time. We are in the final and that is the biggest success in Croatia history. We have to be proud.”Pride comes before the fall and Croatia could be heading for quite the plunge against France in Sunday's World Cup final but they disposed of an England team that were supposed to be unburdened by the weight of expectation heading into the tournament, and yet, had actually galvanised the opposition when that expectation took the form of an international movement that gained momentum with each passing day with everyone from Drake to Justin Timberlake looking for a seat on the bandwagon. Why more Irish people watched this game than the last World Cup final, or last year's All-Ireland hurling final is difficult to pin-point. Maybe it's simple Schadenfreude. Maybe it's wanting to see England do well. Maybe it's to see the drama of an England World Cup collapse or the surprise of an England victory. Whatever it was that compelled us to watch, we watched in greater numbers than almost any of us would have predicted and in greater numbers than any game from the last World Cup. They may not have had a fantastic team in comparison to some of their previous iterations but it was still fantastic television, and when it comes to attracting viewers, that's all that really matters.
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