Luka Modrić hints at future decision as unaffiliated $MODRIC meme tokens pop up on Solana

14 hours ago 2



Luka Modrić, arguably the greatest Croatian footballer ever to lace up boots, has dropped the kind of teaser that sends both sports media and crypto speculators into overdrive. “It’s not the time to talk about that now,” the midfielder said about his future. “You will know soon.”

From the pitch to the blockchain

Modrić left Real Madrid on May 22, 2025, closing the book on a 13-season run. Multiple Champions League titles, individual awards including the Ballon d’Or, and the kind of midfield vision that made highlight reels feel inadequate.

Since his departure from Madrid, reports have linked him to AC Milan, though the bigger story for crypto audiences is a different kind of partnership entirely. On April 9, 2026, Modrić was announced as a global brand ambassador for CoinW, the crypto exchange.

Real Madrid president Florentino Pérez has also reportedly expressed interest in offering Modrić a post-playing role at the club. Reports from June 2026 indicate Modrić is leaning toward calling it quits after the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which would coincide with his 41st birthday in September of that year.

The $MODRIC token situation

Several Solana-based meme coins have already appeared under the $MODRIC ticker. None of them are affiliated with the player. None of them carry any official endorsement. And all of them have market caps generally sitting below $100K.

This pattern has become almost formulaic in the meme token space. A celebrity says something ambiguous, token creators rush to Solana’s low-fee infrastructure, pump.fun or a similar launchpad spits out a coin, and early buyers hope for a momentum trade before liquidity evaporates. The $MODRIC tokens are following this playbook precisely.

The lack of any connection to Modrić himself means there’s no fundamental floor, no utility, no roadmap. Modrić hasn’t endorsed these tokens. He likely doesn’t know they exist. Yet retail traders are buying them anyway, because the name recognition alone is enough to generate speculative interest.

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