Italy 1
Pirlo 39;
Croatia 1
Mandzukic 72;

Italy: G. Buffon, L. Bonucci, D. De Rossi, G. Chiellini, C. Maggio, C. Marchisio, A. Pirlo, T. Motta (R. Montolivo 63), E. Giaccherini, M. Balotelli (A. Di Natale 70), A. Cassano (S. Giovinco 83).

Croatia: S. Pletikosa, D. Srna, V. Corluka, G. Schildenfeld, I. Strinic, I. Rakitic, O. Vukojevic, L. Modric, I. Perisic (D. Pranjic 68), M. Mandzukic (N. Kranjcar 90), N. Jelavic (Eduardo 83).

Referee Howard Webb (England).

Attendance 40,000.

Croatia held Italy to a 1-1 draw in their Euro 2012 Group C clash at the Municipal Stadium in Poznan yesterday to boost their hopes of qualifying for the quarter-finals.

Italy totally dominated the first period and went in at the break a goal to the good through a sumptuous Andrea Pirlo free-kick.

But a defensive error allowed Mario Mandzukic to equalise in the final 20 minutes and keep Croatia at the top of the group on four points.

Italy will now need to beat Ireland in their final group game and hope that the result in Croatia’s game against Spain is kind to them if they are to progress.

The first half was one-way traffic and the Azzurri deserved more than the single goal they registered.

Having been such a disapp-ointment against Spain, Mario Balotelli seemed more awake and shot wide after a neat turn on three minutes, making the most of limited space in the box.

Claudio Marchisio rifled a shot over the bar while a Balotelli shot from the edge of the area was punched clear by goalkeeper Stipe Pletikosa.

Croatia were struggling to create anything of note but Nikica Jelavic was a shoelace away from turning in Darijo Srna’s cross at the near post.

Italy coach Cesare Prandelli had asked his team to get in behind the defence and Antonio Cassano did exactly that to meet Leonardo Bonucci’s flick over the top but he screwed his effort wide.

Pletikosa came to his side’s rescue on 37 minutes as he made a double save from Marchisio, who latched onto Cassano’s pass, turned a sliding Srna but then couldn’t find the finish to beat the goalkeeper, who spread himself ice hockey style to deny the Juventus midfielder.

Italy got the goal their dominance deserved two minutes later as Pirlo curled an exquisite free-kick over the wall and inside the post, although it seemed a generous award in the first place from English ref Howard Webb.

Cassano almost added a second before the break with a flicked header from Pirlo’s corner that went just over the bar.

Right on the stroke of half-time Croatia broke but Gianluigi Buffon comfortably stopped Mandzukic’s shot.

Croatia started a bit brighter in the second period and Modric got a shot away that Buffon again gathered comf-ortably before sending another over the bar.

Balotelli had a crack from distance that sailed over but then out of the blue, Croatia equalised.

Ivan Strinic sent over a cross from deep and Italy centre-back Giorgio Chiellini mistimed his jump allowing Mandzukic to bring the ball down and fire home off the near post from six yards.

Substitute Riccardo Monto-livo had a shot from distance for Italy that Pletikosa dealt with.

But it was the Croats who were pushing hardest for a winner in the dying stages, without creating clear-cut chances.

Prandelli bemoans missed chances

Italy coach Cesare Prandelli has questioned his players’ lack of a killer instinct in the wake of another 1-1 draw this time against Croatia.

The Azzurri dominated the opening 45 minutes, taking a 39th-minute lead through Andrea Pirlo.

Italy, however, lacked the same intensity after the break and conceded an equaliser from Mario Mandzukic on 72 minutes.

“When you're on top and playing well you have to kill off the game,” he said.

“We know that one cross or a deflection can cancel out everything you’ve done. You have to close out the game, we need to be more clinical and determined.”

Croatian coach Slaven Bilic said he felt his side are now in a great position to progress.

“It was a very good match, I don’t want to talk about the next match against Spain, we’ve got loads of time to analyse everything,” he said.

“But after two matches we’re in a good situation.”

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