It was no coincidence that Petar Musa became involved in football. The fact that his mother, Jagoda, was a member of the Croatian women’s national team is often overlooked in player biographies but merits more consideration. Parents who have participated in international competitions don’t simply give their kids a ball and expect them to figure it out. They are aware of the demands of the activity, the true costs of good development, and the distinctions between a child who likes football and one who might take it seriously. Early on, Jagoda Musa recognized it and was instrumental in guiding her son on the proper path.
His father, Šeljko, is from the western Herzegovina town of Široki Brijeg, which has a very concentrated football culture for its size. The local team, NK Široki Brijeg, has produced and developed players who have gone on to compete in various European leagues, and the surrounding area as a whole takes football seriously, much like some communities do, where it is a true communal institution rather than a recreational sport. Petar has a family history spanning two nations and two footballing cultures thanks to Léeljko’s Bosnian Croat heritage.
Musa was born in Croatia in March 1998 and grew up with that dual inheritance: a mother who had participated in international competitions, a father whose native area took football for granted, and a nation that has continuously produced more professional players per capita than practically anywhere in the world. Croatia, a country of less than four million people, has supplied players to elite clubs throughout Europe for decades, participated in several World Cups, and made it to the finals in 2018. Musa’s development was influenced by his upbringing in that setting and having parents who were intimately familiar with the game.
He advanced through Croatian football before joining FC Dallas in Major League Soccer. The foundation was there from the beginning, but the path wasn’t easy—most striker careers aren’t. It is important to comprehend his mother’s impact in particular as both a biographical backdrop and a practical shape. When a former international player watches their child train and grow, they can offer the kind of detailed, well-informed feedback that no coach can quite match. This is because the assessment is combined with information about the child’s personality outside of training, how they handle pressure, and where their confidence truly lies.
It’s important to note that Petar has a connection to a region of the world where football has been used for more than just amusement for generations because to Šeljko’s roots in Široki Brijeg. Part of the reason the Balkans generate such a large number of football players is that the sport is profoundly ingrained in local identities, especially in smaller towns where professional football success is a significant source of social mobility and group pride. Although this cultural weight has no direct bearing on technical proficiency, it fosters an atmosphere in which the importance of advancement is not questioned but rather taken for granted.

Following in his mother’s footsteps, Petar Musa represents Croatia internationally on the women’s side of the same federation. That family thread—two generations, two genders, and one national emblem—is quite fascinating. It remains to be seen if Musa will define his international career in the same manner as numerous Croatian strikers before him. However, the foundation was painstakingly laid, the roots are obvious, and those who laid it knew exactly what they were constructing.
