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Bora Milutinović

Velibor "Bora" Milutinović (Serbian Cyrillic: Велибор Бора Милутиновић; born 7 September 1944) is a Serbian former professional footballer and manager.

Bora Milutinović
Milutinovic in 2012
Personal information
Full name Velibor Milutinović
Date of birth (1944-09-07) 7 September 1944 (age 78)
Place of birth Bajina Bašta, Yugoslavia
Height 1.77 m (5 ft 9+12 in)
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
1954–1958 Bor
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1958–1960 OFK Beograd 15 (2)
1960–1966 Partizan 40 (3)
1965–1966OFK Beograd (loan) 12 (3)
1966–1967 Winterthur 20 (1)
1967–1969 Monaco 42 (3)
1969–1971 Nice 37 (0)
1971–1972 Rouen 11 (0)
1972–1976 UNAM 93 (12)
Total 270 (24)
Managerial career
1977–1983 UNAM
1983–1986 Mexico
1987 San Lorenzo
1987 Udinese
1988 Veracruz
1988–1989 Tecos UAG
1990 Costa Rica
1991–1995 United States
1995–1997 Mexico
1997–1998 Nigeria
1998–1999 MetroStars
2000–2002 China
2003–2004 Honduras
2004–2005 Al Sadd
2006–2007 Jamaica
2009 Iraq
2014 Shaanxi Wuzhou (sporting director)
2018 China (advisor)
Honours
Representing  United States (as manager)
Winner CONCACAF Gold Cup 1991
Runner-up CONCACAF Gold Cup 1993
Men's Soccer
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

He has managed at five editions of the FIFA World Cup, tied for the record alongside Brazilian manager Carlos Alberto Parreira, but did so in five consecutive World Cups with different teams: Mexico (1986), Costa Rica (1990), the United States (1994), Nigeria (1998), and China (2002). He is also the first manager to take four teams beyond the first round – all but China – earning the nickname of Miracle Worker,[1] first given to him by Alan Rothenberg, then president of the United States Soccer Federation.[2] In total Milutinović has managed eight national football teams.

Managing career

World Cup national teams

Mexico (1983–86)

Milutinović led Mexico to the quarter-finals at the 1986 FIFA World Cup, its highest finish. Mexico fell in the quarter-finals to West Germany on penalty kicks.

Costa Rica (1990)

Milutinović took over Costa Rica just before the 1990 FIFA World Cup and got Costa Rica into the second round. In 1990, Milutinović was hired as head coach of Costa Rica just 90 days before the World Cup. He cut the captain and other starters. Costa Rica managed to beat Scotland and Sweden and lost to Brazil, 1–0, before losing 4–1 to Czechoslovakia in the second round.[3]

United States (1991–95)

Hank Steinbrecher, general secretary of the U.S. Soccer Federation, conducted the job interviews for the U.S. national team head coach position. American coaches had not proved their worth on the international stage, as the United States had lost all three games in the 1990 World Cup finals under Bob Gansler. When the USSF's search began in 1991, the emphasis was not so much on experience, but on finding a coach who could squeeze the last drop of potential out of a lightly regarded team, and Milutinović's name came up again and again.[4] He had coached first Mexico, then Costa Rica to surprising World Cup success.

Milutinović left no doubts about who ran the team, cutting two U.S. players, Peter Vermes and Desmond Armstrong, board members of the national federation, from his World Cup team. Milutinović further cut Bruce Murray, the all-time leading U.S. goal scorer. When Alexi Lalas first showed up at training camp, Milutinović told him to get a haircut or get off the team.[3]

Milutinović coached the U.S. national team at the 1994 FIFA World Cup, hosted in the United States, where the team notched its first win in the World Cup since 1950 and progressed to the knockout round of the tournament for the first time since the 1930s. This was hailed as a success for a country with little soccer experience.

The USSF fired Milutinović on 14 April 1995, saying it wanted someone who could be both coach and administrator. Milutinović reportedly wanted no part of the administrative duties.[5]

Nigeria (1997–98)

Milutinović coached the Nigerian team at the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France.[6] Nigeria won its group, notching a notable 3–2 upset win over Spain, and reached the knockout rounds. This was the fourth team that Milutinović had taken to the knockout rounds of the World Cup, a coaching record.[7]

China (2000–02)

Under Milutinović's coaching, for the first time ever, the Chinese national football team qualified to be among the 32 finalists for the World Cup in 2002. He was hailed as a hero in China, ending a 44-year drought, and was popularly known as Milu.[8] However, unlike his previous forays, Milutinović could not take the Chinese team past the first round due to their inexperience at the world stage.

Other national teams

Honduras (2003–04)

In the summer of 2003, Milutinović was in serious negotiations to finally take over the national team at his native Serbia. Despite heavy, month-long persuasion from Serbian football officials, Milutinović turned down the offer and soon signed on to the Honduras national team. He led the team to the first round of CONCACAF qualifiers before resigning on 30 June 2004. He cited "the prevailing bad atmosphere, created by comments made by the country's managers, officials and press" as the reason for his leaving during World Cup qualifying.

Jamaica (2006–07)

On 16 November 2006, Milutinović was announced as head coach of Jamaica. On 9 November 2007, following a string of six consecutive friendly defeats, he was fired by the Jamaican FA.

Iraq (2009)

Milutinović led the Iraq national football team in group play in the 2009 FIFA Confederations Cup for two draws and one loss, failing to reach the knockout stage.

Club teams

Milutinović's managerial career at club level has seen more mixed success. His longest managerial spell for a single club was his tenure with UNAM of Mexico from 1977 to 1983. Several of his Pumas players ended up playing for Mexico at the 1986 World Cup.

Since then, he has managed briefly for several club teams. He managed Udinese Calcio of the Italian Serie B for nine matches in 1987. He then managed the MetroStars of Major League Soccer to the worst record in league history in 1999. He also had a brief stint in the Qatar Stars League with Al-Sadd in the 2004–05 season.

Managerial statistics

Year(s) Nat Team[a] G W D L Win % GF GA
1977–1983   UNAM 218 96 59 63 44 406 299
1983-1986, 1995-1997   Mexico 104 52 32 20 50 ? ?
1987   San Lorenzo de Almagro 8 4 4 0 50 8 2
1987   Udinese Calcio ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
1988   Veracruz ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
1988–1989   Tecos UAG ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
1990–1991   Costa Rica 9 3 0 6 33.3 7 13
1991–1995   United States 93 30 31 35 31.3 116 110
1997–1998   Nigeria 11 3 2 6 27.3 10 22
1998–1999   NY/NJ MetroStars 33 5 3 25 15.2 ? ?
2000–2002   China 46 20 11 15 43.5 75 50
2003–2004   Honduras 10 2 4 4 20 12 14
2004–2005   Al-Sadd ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
2006–2007   Jamaica 6 1 1 4 16.7 5 14
2009   Iraq 4[b] 0 3 1[b] 0 1 2
  1. ^ Includes national teams.
  2. ^ a b Qatar vs. Iraq not considered as a FIFA International match since Iraq made 13 Substitutions, Iraq lost the match 0–1.

Personal life

 
The Milutinović brothers (left to right): Milorad, Miloš and Bora

Milutinović comes from a footballing family; he and his two brothers Miloš and Milorad played together for Partizan.

His father was killed in World War II, his mother by tuberculosis soon after the war. He said he does not remember either of his parents. He was raised by an aunt, and raised playing football.[9]

Milutinović is married to a Mexican and currently resides in Qatar. Aside from his native Serbo-Croatian, he is fluent in English, Spanish, Italian and French.

Honours

Player

UNAM

Manager

UNAM

United States

Mexico

References

  1. ^ "Five in a row for the miracle worker". BBC News. 15 April 2002. from the original on 28 October 2002. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  2. ^ Profile: Bora Milutinovic 10 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine soccertimes.com
  3. ^ a b Philly.com, A Soccer Coach Who Has To Win Is The U.s.'s Bora Milutinovic Good? The World Cup Will Tell, 5 June 1994, http://articles.philly.com/1994-06-05/sports/25834619_1_bora-milutinovic-world-cup-serbian-born-coach
  4. ^ Los Angeles Times, WORLD CUP '94: 35 DAYS AND COUNTING : Bora! Bora! Bora? : Milutinovic Enjoyed World Cup Success With Mexico and Costa Rica, but the United States Might Be His Biggest Challenge, 13 May 1994, http://articles.latimes.com/1994-05-13/sports/sp-57331_1_world-cup
  5. ^ Philly.com, World Cup-winning Coach Is Fired, Eyed By U.S. Team, 3 June 1995, http://articles.philly.com/1995-06-03/sports/25688992_1_carlos-alberto-parreira-brendan-malone-back-to-back-nba-titles
  6. ^ Pierson, Mark (18 December 1997). "Milutinovic confirmed as Nigeria coach for France 98". The Independent. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  7. ^ The Augusta Chronicle, Nigeria advances in World Cup, 20 June 1998, http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/1998/06/20/oth_231379.shtml
  8. ^ Penner, Mike (4 June 2002). "Another Bora-Fest". Los Angeles Times. p. D10. Retrieved 6 July 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  9. ^ Jensen, Mike (5 June 1994). "A Soccer Coach Who Has To Win Is The U.s.'s Bora Milutinovic Good? The World Cup Will Tell". Philadelphia Daily News. Retrieved 21 March 2011.

External links

  • Bora Milutinović's match-by-match record with various countries (rsssf.com)
  • Bora Milutinović – Liga MX stats at MedioTiempo.com () (in Spanish)
  • Barreaud, Marc (1998). Dictionnaire des footballeurs étrangers du championnat professionnel français (1932–1997). L'Harmattan, Paris. ISBN 2-7384-6608-7.

bora, milutinović, velibor, bora, milutinović, serbian, cyrillic, Велибор, Бора, Милутиновић, born, september, 1944, serbian, former, professional, footballer, manager, milutinovic, 2012personal, informationfull, namevelibor, milutinovićdate, birth, 1944, sept. Velibor Bora Milutinovic Serbian Cyrillic Velibor Bora Milutinoviћ born 7 September 1944 is a Serbian former professional footballer and manager Bora MilutinovicMilutinovic in 2012Personal informationFull nameVelibor MilutinovicDate of birth 1944 09 07 7 September 1944 age 78 Place of birthBajina Basta YugoslaviaHeight1 77 m 5 ft 9 1 2 in Position s MidfielderYouth career1954 1958BorSenior career YearsTeamApps Gls 1958 1960OFK Beograd15 2 1960 1966Partizan40 3 1965 1966 OFK Beograd loan 12 3 1966 1967Winterthur20 1 1967 1969Monaco42 3 1969 1971Nice37 0 1971 1972Rouen11 0 1972 1976UNAM93 12 Total270 24 Managerial career1977 1983UNAM1983 1986Mexico1987San Lorenzo1987Udinese1988Veracruz1988 1989Tecos UAG1990Costa Rica1991 1995United States1995 1997Mexico1997 1998Nigeria1998 1999MetroStars2000 2002China2003 2004Honduras2004 2005Al Sadd2006 2007Jamaica2009Iraq2014Shaanxi Wuzhou sporting director 2018China advisor Honours Representing United States as manager Winner CONCACAF Gold Cup 1991Runner up CONCACAF Gold Cup 1993Men s Soccer Club domestic league appearances and goalsHe has managed at five editions of the FIFA World Cup tied for the record alongside Brazilian manager Carlos Alberto Parreira but did so in five consecutive World Cups with different teams Mexico 1986 Costa Rica 1990 the United States 1994 Nigeria 1998 and China 2002 He is also the first manager to take four teams beyond the first round all but China earning the nickname of Miracle Worker 1 first given to him by Alan Rothenberg then president of the United States Soccer Federation 2 In total Milutinovic has managed eight national football teams Contents 1 Managing career 1 1 World Cup national teams 1 1 1 Mexico 1983 86 1 1 2 Costa Rica 1990 1 1 3 United States 1991 95 1 1 4 Nigeria 1997 98 1 1 5 China 2000 02 1 2 Other national teams 1 2 1 Honduras 2003 04 1 2 2 Jamaica 2006 07 1 2 3 Iraq 2009 1 3 Club teams 1 4 Managerial statistics 2 Personal life 3 Honours 3 1 Player 3 2 Manager 4 References 5 External linksManaging career EditWorld Cup national teams Edit Mexico 1983 86 Edit Milutinovic led Mexico to the quarter finals at the 1986 FIFA World Cup its highest finish Mexico fell in the quarter finals to West Germany on penalty kicks Costa Rica 1990 Edit Milutinovic took over Costa Rica just before the 1990 FIFA World Cup and got Costa Rica into the second round In 1990 Milutinovic was hired as head coach of Costa Rica just 90 days before the World Cup He cut the captain and other starters Costa Rica managed to beat Scotland and Sweden and lost to Brazil 1 0 before losing 4 1 to Czechoslovakia in the second round 3 United States 1991 95 Edit Hank Steinbrecher general secretary of the U S Soccer Federation conducted the job interviews for the U S national team head coach position American coaches had not proved their worth on the international stage as the United States had lost all three games in the 1990 World Cup finals under Bob Gansler When the USSF s search began in 1991 the emphasis was not so much on experience but on finding a coach who could squeeze the last drop of potential out of a lightly regarded team and Milutinovic s name came up again and again 4 He had coached first Mexico then Costa Rica to surprising World Cup success Milutinovic left no doubts about who ran the team cutting two U S players Peter Vermes and Desmond Armstrong board members of the national federation from his World Cup team Milutinovic further cut Bruce Murray the all time leading U S goal scorer When Alexi Lalas first showed up at training camp Milutinovic told him to get a haircut or get off the team 3 Milutinovic coached the U S national team at the 1994 FIFA World Cup hosted in the United States where the team notched its first win in the World Cup since 1950 and progressed to the knockout round of the tournament for the first time since the 1930s This was hailed as a success for a country with little soccer experience The USSF fired Milutinovic on 14 April 1995 saying it wanted someone who could be both coach and administrator Milutinovic reportedly wanted no part of the administrative duties 5 Nigeria 1997 98 Edit Milutinovic coached the Nigerian team at the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France 6 Nigeria won its group notching a notable 3 2 upset win over Spain and reached the knockout rounds This was the fourth team that Milutinovic had taken to the knockout rounds of the World Cup a coaching record 7 China 2000 02 Edit Under Milutinovic s coaching for the first time ever the Chinese national football team qualified to be among the 32 finalists for the World Cup in 2002 He was hailed as a hero in China ending a 44 year drought and was popularly known as Milu 8 However unlike his previous forays Milutinovic could not take the Chinese team past the first round due to their inexperience at the world stage Other national teams Edit Honduras 2003 04 Edit In the summer of 2003 Milutinovic was in serious negotiations to finally take over the national team at his native Serbia Despite heavy month long persuasion from Serbian football officials Milutinovic turned down the offer and soon signed on to the Honduras national team He led the team to the first round of CONCACAF qualifiers before resigning on 30 June 2004 He cited the prevailing bad atmosphere created by comments made by the country s managers officials and press as the reason for his leaving during World Cup qualifying Jamaica 2006 07 Edit On 16 November 2006 Milutinovic was announced as head coach of Jamaica On 9 November 2007 following a string of six consecutive friendly defeats he was fired by the Jamaican FA Iraq 2009 Edit Milutinovic led the Iraq national football team in group play in the 2009 FIFA Confederations Cup for two draws and one loss failing to reach the knockout stage Club teams Edit Milutinovic s managerial career at club level has seen more mixed success His longest managerial spell for a single club was his tenure with UNAM of Mexico from 1977 to 1983 Several of his Pumas players ended up playing for Mexico at the 1986 World Cup Since then he has managed briefly for several club teams He managed Udinese Calcio of the Italian Serie B for nine matches in 1987 He then managed the MetroStars of Major League Soccer to the worst record in league history in 1999 He also had a brief stint in the Qatar Stars League with Al Sadd in the 2004 05 season Managerial statistics Edit Year s Nat Team a G W D L Win GF GA1977 1983 UNAM 218 96 59 63 44 406 2991983 1986 1995 1997 Mexico 104 52 32 20 50 1987 San Lorenzo de Almagro 8 4 4 0 50 8 21987 Udinese Calcio 1988 Veracruz 1988 1989 Tecos UAG 1990 1991 Costa Rica 9 3 0 6 33 3 7 131991 1995 United States 93 30 31 35 31 3 116 1101997 1998 Nigeria 11 3 2 6 27 3 10 221998 1999 NY NJ MetroStars 33 5 3 25 15 2 2000 2002 China 46 20 11 15 43 5 75 502003 2004 Honduras 10 2 4 4 20 12 142004 2005 Al Sadd 2006 2007 Jamaica 6 1 1 4 16 7 5 142009 Iraq 4 b 0 3 1 b 0 1 2 Includes national teams a b Qatar vs Iraq not considered as a FIFA International match since Iraq made 13 Substitutions Iraq lost the match 0 1 Personal life Edit The Milutinovic brothers left to right Milorad Milos and Bora Milutinovic comes from a footballing family he and his two brothers Milos and Milorad played together for Partizan His father was killed in World War II his mother by tuberculosis soon after the war He said he does not remember either of his parents He was raised by an aunt and raised playing football 9 Milutinovic is married to a Mexican and currently resides in Qatar Aside from his native Serbo Croatian he is fluent in English Spanish Italian and French Honours EditPlayer Edit UNAM Copa MX 1974 75 Campeon de Campeones 1975Manager Edit UNAM Liga MX 1980 81 CONCACAF Champions Cup 1980 1982 Copa Interamericana 1981United States Gold Cup 1991Mexico Gold Cup 1996References Edit Five in a row for the miracle worker BBC News 15 April 2002 Archived from the original on 28 October 2002 Retrieved 26 April 2010 Profile Bora Milutinovic Archived 10 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine soccertimes com a b Philly com A Soccer Coach Who Has To Win Is The U s s Bora Milutinovic Good The World Cup Will Tell 5 June 1994 http articles philly com 1994 06 05 sports 25834619 1 bora milutinovic world cup serbian born coach Los Angeles Times WORLD CUP 94 35 DAYS AND COUNTING Bora Bora Bora Milutinovic Enjoyed World Cup Success With Mexico and Costa Rica but the United States Might Be His Biggest Challenge 13 May 1994 http articles latimes com 1994 05 13 sports sp 57331 1 world cup Philly com World Cup winning Coach Is Fired Eyed By U S Team 3 June 1995 http articles philly com 1995 06 03 sports 25688992 1 carlos alberto parreira brendan malone back to back nba titles Pierson Mark 18 December 1997 Milutinovic confirmed as Nigeria coach for France 98 The Independent Retrieved 29 September 2014 The Augusta Chronicle Nigeria advances in World Cup 20 June 1998 http chronicle augusta com stories 1998 06 20 oth 231379 shtml Penner Mike 4 June 2002 Another Bora Fest Los Angeles Times p D10 Retrieved 6 July 2019 via Newspapers com Jensen Mike 5 June 1994 A Soccer Coach Who Has To Win Is The U s s Bora Milutinovic Good The World Cup Will Tell Philadelphia Daily News Retrieved 21 March 2011 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bora Milutinovic Bora Milutinovic s match by match record with various countries rsssf com Bora Milutinovic Liga MX stats at MedioTiempo com archive in Spanish Barreaud Marc 1998 Dictionnaire des footballeurs etrangers du championnat professionnel francais 1932 1997 L Harmattan Paris ISBN 2 7384 6608 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bora Milutinovic amp oldid 1138170957, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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