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Croatian Football Federation

The Croatian Football Federation (Croatian: Hrvatski nogometni savez, HNS) is the national governing body of football in Croatia. It was originally formed in 1912 and is based in the capital city of Zagreb. The organisation is a member of both FIFA and UEFA, and is responsible for overseeing all aspects of the game of football in Croatia. The current president of HNS is Marijan Kustić.[3]

Croatian Football Federation
UEFA
Founded13 June 1912; 111 years ago (13 June 1912)
HeadquartersZagreb
FIFA affiliation17 July 1941
(as Independent State of Croatia)[1]
3 July 1992
(as Croatia)[2]
UEFA affiliation16 June 1993
PresidentMarijan Kustić
Websitehns-cff.hr

The HNS sanctions all competitive football matches in Croatia, beginning with the HNL on down to 3. NL, as well as the Croatian Cup, while low-tiered leagues are sanctioned by inter-county and county associations. It is also responsible for appointing the management of the men's, women's and youth national football teams.[4] As of 2009, the HNS had 118,316 registered players (650 of them professionals) and a total of 1,732 registered association football and futsal clubs.[5]

History edit

Early years (1912–1945) edit

The organisation traces its roots to the Croatian Sports Federation (Hrvatski športski savez), which was founded on 8 October 1909 in Zagreb, at the time when Croatia was part of Austria-Hungary. The federation organised all sports in the country and its first president was Hinko Würth, the chairman of HAŠK football club. Present-day HNS considers its foundation date to be 13 June 1912, when the football section of the Croatian Sports Federation was established, and its head, Milovan Zoričić, as its first president.[6]

After World War I and the dissolution of Austria-Hungary, representatives from Građanski, HAŠK, Hajduk Split and Concordia football clubs met in Zagreb on 14 April 1919 and founded the Football Association of Yugoslavia (Jugoslavenski nogometni savez), as a successor of the Croatian Sports Federation's football section, and appointed Hinko Würth as its president.[6] The organization then became the chief governing body of football in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and launched the Yugoslav First League, the first country-wide national competition held initially in a cup format. Five other regional sub-federations were also created (based in Belgrade, Ljubljana, Sarajevo, Split and Subotica), each organizing their own regional tournament with winners qualifying for the national championship.

In 1929, following disagreements between the Zagreb and Belgrade sub-federations, the Football Association of Yugoslavia was dissolved. It was then re-established in May 1930 in Belgrade, this time with the Serbian-language name Fudbalski savez Jugoslavije. The Belgrade-based association then continued organizing the national league until 1939, when the Banovina of Croatia was created as an administrative region within Kingdom of Yugoslavia. On 6 August 1939 the Croatian Football Federation (Hrvatski nogometni savez or HNS) was established as a football governing body in the newly created province,[6] and Croatian and Slovenian clubs soon began leaving the Yugoslav League to join the HNS-run Croatian-Slovenian Football League in protest of the alleged centralization of sports around Belgrade. The split was eventually rectified with the promise of an increase in the number of Croatian and Slovenian clubs in the league, and because of this a shortened ten-round league was played in the 1939–40 Yugoslav First League season. In 1940 HNS also played a part in organizing the first ever Croatia national football team matches which played four international friendlies between April and December 1940. However the federation was not yet recognized by FIFA as Croatia was at the time still a province of Yugoslavia.

In April 1941 Kingdom of Yugoslavia was invaded by Axis Powers and was effectively dissolved. However, the Croatian Football Federation continued to run a competition called the Croatian national football league in the territory of Independent State of Croatia (NDH), a fascist puppet state which enjoyed relative peace during World War II, and which included most of present-day countries of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. On 17 July 1941 HNS was admitted to FIFA as the top level federation of NDH, and the national team representing NDH played fourteen international matches in the period from 1941 to 1944.[2]

HNS in Yugoslavia (1945–1990) edit

Following the end of World War II, Croatia became a part of SFR Yugoslavia and the Belgrade-based Football Association of Yugoslavia took over as the main football-governing body in the country. Also, the new communist government issued a decree in 1945 which effectively dissolved all football clubs which were active during the war as a form of punishment for their participation in the fascist-run football championship. Among others, Zagreb-based powerhouses Concordia, HAŠK and Građanski all ceased to exist, their property was nationalised, and several other clubs, most notably Dinamo Zagreb, were formed to take their place. On the other hand, Hajduk Split was spared as their players had escaped from their Italian-occupied home city of Split during World War II and joined Yugoslav Partisans in 1944. For this reason, Hajduk Split is the only major Croatian club which can claim continuity since its foundation in 1911.

In the period from 1945 to 1990 the Belgrade-based Yugoslav Football Federation was in charge of football in the entire country, while Zagreb was turned into its major regional hub and administrative branch. In this period Croatian clubs competed within the Yugoslav league system and Croatian players were eligible for the Yugoslavia national football team. In the following decades Dinamo Zagreb and Hajduk Split became two of the Yugoslav Big Four (along with Belgrade-based Partizan and Red Star), a quartet of clubs which significantly dominated football in communist Yugoslavia. Dinamo and Hajduk won a combined total of 11 Yugoslav First League titles and 16 Yugoslav Cup. In addition, Croatian club Rijeka won 2 Yugoslav Cup titles. Dinamo Zagreb also won the 1966–67 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, which made them the first Yugoslav side to win a continental competition, and were the only Yugoslav club with European silverware until Red Star's 1990–91 European Cup win 24 years later.

Modern era (1990–present) edit

When the breakup of Yugoslavia began to unfold in the early 1990s, the political situation was reflected on football pitches. On 13 May 1990 an infamous riot occurred at Maksimir in Zagreb and interrupted the Dinamo Zagreb – Red Star league fixture. On 3 June 1990 the pre-scheduled Yugoslavia–Netherlands friendly was held at the same stadium, and some 20,000 Croatian fans booed the Yugoslav national anthem and cheered for the Dutch team instead. On 26 September 1990 Hajduk Split fans staged a violent pitch invasion at Poljud during a league fixture against Partizan. On 17 October 1990 the first match of the newly established Croatia national football team was held, a friendly against the United States, and following the end of the 1990–91 season Croatian clubs decided to abandon Yugoslav competitions.

After Croatia had officially declared independence on 8 October 1991, the Croatian Football Federation sought international recognition, and was finally re-admitted to FIFA on 3 July 1992 and to UEFA on 17 June 1993.[2][5]

In February 1992 the inaugural season of the Croatian top league Prva HNL kicked off, and in March 1992 the first edition of the Croatian Cup was launched.

In late 2010, the Federation held an election for its President, with Vlatko Marković opposed by Igor Štimac. Marković won by a single vote, and the assembly was marred with controversies.[7] Štimac later appealed, calling for another meeting of the Federation.[8] His supporters organized a new assembly and elected him the new President despite the opposing faction's boycott, leading to an impasse.[9]

In July 2012, the Federation held an election for its President, with Davor Šuker as the only candidate. All 46 delegates voted in favour of Suker's candidature.

Presidents edit

Notes
  • The first three presidents 1912–1919 were heads of football sections within the Croatian Sports Federation, the top sports governing body in Croatia, which was at the time a province within Austria-Hungary. Following World War I and the formation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia the organisation was re-established in Zagreb in 1919 as the Football Association of Yugoslavia and designed as a national-level governing body. Its seat was moved to Yugoslavia's capital Belgrade ten years later in 1929. Although city-level subfederations continued to exist in the 1920s and 1930s there was no separate regional organisation which would govern the sport in Croatia between 1919 and 1939, hence the 20-year gap.
  • In 1939 the Banovina of Croatia was created as an autonomous province within Yugoslavia, and a new provincial federation carrying the present-day football federation's name was established. Ivo Kraljević headed this body between 1939 and 1941.
  • Following the April 1941 invasion of Yugoslavia the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), an Axis-allied puppet state which included most of the territories of present-day Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, was established. The Zagreb-based football federation thus began to govern football in the entire territory of NDH and continued to organize national-level league championship during World War II. During this period NDH was admitted to FIFA and organised 14 international friendlies involving Croatia. Presidents between 1941 and 1945 headed the HNS during this era.
  • After 1945 and the establishment of the communist SFR Yugoslavia, the HNS again became one of its regional federations, charged with governing football in SR Croatia, which became one of Yugoslavia's six federal republics. Presidents from 1945–1990 headed the HNS in this period.
  • After Croatia proclaimed independence in 1991 and the breakup of Yugoslavia the HNS became the top football governing body of the newly independent nations. The country was internationally recognized by early 1992, and HNS was admitted to FIFA (again) in July 1992 and to UEFA in June 1993.
List of presidents (1912–1990)
List of presidents (1990–present)

Competitions edit

It organizes the following competitions:

Men's football
Women's football
Youth football
  • 1. HNL Academy; First league for academy sides, with three age categories for boys: Under 19 (Juniori), Under 17 (Kadeti) and Under 15 (Pioniri), and two for girls Under 17 (Kadetkinje) and Under 15 (Pionirke).
Futsal
  • 1. HMNL (or Prva HMNL): First league
  • 2. HMNL (or Druga HMNL): Second league
  • 1. HMNLŽ (or Prva HMNLŽ): First women's league
Beach Soccer

National teams edit

The Croatian Football Federation also organises national football teams representing Croatia at all age levels:

Men's
Women's
Futsal
Beach soccer
  • Croatia beach soccer national team (currently managed by Emanuel Melon)

References edit

  1. ^ "History - Croatian Football Federation". hns-cff.hr. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  2. ^ a b c . FIFA.com. 20 January 2009. Archived from the original on June 17, 2007. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  3. ^ a b Index Sport (29 July 2021). "Smijenjen je Davor Šuker. Marijan Kustić novi predsjednik HNS-a". Index.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 29 July 2021.
  4. ^ Patković, Nikola (19 March 2014). "Davor Šuker potvrdio da se ukida udruga prvoligaša: 'HNL je naša odgovornost!'" [Davor Šuker confirmed that the association of first league clubs is being abolished: 'HNL is our responsibility!']. Sportske novosti (in Croatian). Retrieved 18 July 2022.
  5. ^ a b "About the Croatian Football Federation - Facts and Figures". Croatian Football Federation. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  6. ^ a b c "About the Croatian Football Federation". Croatian Football Federation. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  7. ^ Boris Bilas (2010-12-17). [Štimac loses, show is over: Marković stays at the helm of the HNS]. Nacional (in Croatian). Archived from the original on 6 June 2012. Retrieved 2011-02-20.
  8. ^ "Bitka za HNS - Štimac predao 23 potpisa za izvanrednu skupštinu". Večernji list (in Croatian). 2011-01-19. Retrieved 2011-02-20.
  9. ^ . Poslovni dnevnik (in Croatian). 2011-02-20. Archived from the original on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2011-02-20.
  10. ^ "Preminuo Ivan Kolić" (in Croatian). Croatian Football Federation. 24 July 2007. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  11. ^ a b . Croatian Radiotelevision (in Croatian). 18 December 1998. Archived from the original on 1 September 2014. Retrieved 6 July 2010.
  12. ^ a b c d e Abramović, Zlatko (20 December 1998). "Koliko će trajati Vlatko Marković?". Vjesnik (in Croatian). Archived from the original on 19 August 2002. Retrieved 6 July 2010.
  13. ^ "Šuker jednoglasno preuzeo vlast". Index.hr. Retrieved 5 July 2012.
  14. ^ . jutarnji.hr. Archived from the original on 20 December 2014. Retrieved 17 March 2018.

External links edit

croatian, football, federation, croatian, hrvatski, nogometni, savez, national, governing, body, football, croatia, originally, formed, 1912, based, capital, city, zagreb, organisation, member, both, fifa, uefa, responsible, overseeing, aspects, game, football. The Croatian Football Federation Croatian Hrvatski nogometni savez HNS is the national governing body of football in Croatia It was originally formed in 1912 and is based in the capital city of Zagreb The organisation is a member of both FIFA and UEFA and is responsible for overseeing all aspects of the game of football in Croatia The current president of HNS is Marijan Kustic 3 Croatian Football FederationUEFAFounded13 June 1912 111 years ago 13 June 1912 HeadquartersZagrebFIFA affiliation17 July 1941 as Independent State of Croatia 1 3 July 1992 as Croatia 2 UEFA affiliation16 June 1993PresidentMarijan KusticWebsitehns cff hrThe HNS sanctions all competitive football matches in Croatia beginning with the HNL on down to 3 NL as well as the Croatian Cup while low tiered leagues are sanctioned by inter county and county associations It is also responsible for appointing the management of the men s women s and youth national football teams 4 As of 2009 the HNS had 118 316 registered players 650 of them professionals and a total of 1 732 registered association football and futsal clubs 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1912 1945 1 2 HNS in Yugoslavia 1945 1990 1 3 Modern era 1990 present 2 Presidents 3 Competitions 4 National teams 5 References 6 External linksHistory editSee also Football in Croatia Early years 1912 1945 edit The organisation traces its roots to the Croatian Sports Federation Hrvatski sportski savez which was founded on 8 October 1909 in Zagreb at the time when Croatia was part of Austria Hungary The federation organised all sports in the country and its first president was Hinko Wurth the chairman of HASK football club Present day HNS considers its foundation date to be 13 June 1912 when the football section of the Croatian Sports Federation was established and its head Milovan Zoricic as its first president 6 After World War I and the dissolution of Austria Hungary representatives from Građanski HASK Hajduk Split and Concordia football clubs met in Zagreb on 14 April 1919 and founded the Football Association of Yugoslavia Jugoslavenski nogometni savez as a successor of the Croatian Sports Federation s football section and appointed Hinko Wurth as its president 6 The organization then became the chief governing body of football in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and launched the Yugoslav First League the first country wide national competition held initially in a cup format Five other regional sub federations were also created based in Belgrade Ljubljana Sarajevo Split and Subotica each organizing their own regional tournament with winners qualifying for the national championship In 1929 following disagreements between the Zagreb and Belgrade sub federations the Football Association of Yugoslavia was dissolved It was then re established in May 1930 in Belgrade this time with the Serbian language name Fudbalski savez Jugoslavije The Belgrade based association then continued organizing the national league until 1939 when the Banovina of Croatia was created as an administrative region within Kingdom of Yugoslavia On 6 August 1939 the Croatian Football Federation Hrvatski nogometni savez or HNS was established as a football governing body in the newly created province 6 and Croatian and Slovenian clubs soon began leaving the Yugoslav League to join the HNS run Croatian Slovenian Football League in protest of the alleged centralization of sports around Belgrade The split was eventually rectified with the promise of an increase in the number of Croatian and Slovenian clubs in the league and because of this a shortened ten round league was played in the 1939 40 Yugoslav First League season In 1940 HNS also played a part in organizing the first ever Croatia national football team matches which played four international friendlies between April and December 1940 However the federation was not yet recognized by FIFA as Croatia was at the time still a province of Yugoslavia In April 1941 Kingdom of Yugoslavia was invaded by Axis Powers and was effectively dissolved However the Croatian Football Federation continued to run a competition called the Croatian national football league in the territory of Independent State of Croatia NDH a fascist puppet state which enjoyed relative peace during World War II and which included most of present day countries of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina On 17 July 1941 HNS was admitted to FIFA as the top level federation of NDH and the national team representing NDH played fourteen international matches in the period from 1941 to 1944 2 HNS in Yugoslavia 1945 1990 edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2015 template removal help Following the end of World War II Croatia became a part of SFR Yugoslavia and the Belgrade based Football Association of Yugoslavia took over as the main football governing body in the country Also the new communist government issued a decree in 1945 which effectively dissolved all football clubs which were active during the war as a form of punishment for their participation in the fascist run football championship Among others Zagreb based powerhouses Concordia HASK and Građanski all ceased to exist their property was nationalised and several other clubs most notably Dinamo Zagreb were formed to take their place On the other hand Hajduk Split was spared as their players had escaped from their Italian occupied home city of Split during World War II and joined Yugoslav Partisans in 1944 For this reason Hajduk Split is the only major Croatian club which can claim continuity since its foundation in 1911 In the period from 1945 to 1990 the Belgrade based Yugoslav Football Federation was in charge of football in the entire country while Zagreb was turned into its major regional hub and administrative branch In this period Croatian clubs competed within the Yugoslav league system and Croatian players were eligible for the Yugoslavia national football team In the following decades Dinamo Zagreb and Hajduk Split became two of the Yugoslav Big Four along with Belgrade based Partizan and Red Star a quartet of clubs which significantly dominated football in communist Yugoslavia Dinamo and Hajduk won a combined total of 11 Yugoslav First League titles and 16 Yugoslav Cup In addition Croatian club Rijeka won 2 Yugoslav Cup titles Dinamo Zagreb also won the 1966 67 Inter Cities Fairs Cup which made them the first Yugoslav side to win a continental competition and were the only Yugoslav club with European silverware until Red Star s 1990 91 European Cup win 24 years later Modern era 1990 present edit When the breakup of Yugoslavia began to unfold in the early 1990s the political situation was reflected on football pitches On 13 May 1990 an infamous riot occurred at Maksimir in Zagreb and interrupted the Dinamo Zagreb Red Star league fixture On 3 June 1990 the pre scheduled Yugoslavia Netherlands friendly was held at the same stadium and some 20 000 Croatian fans booed the Yugoslav national anthem and cheered for the Dutch team instead On 26 September 1990 Hajduk Split fans staged a violent pitch invasion at Poljud during a league fixture against Partizan On 17 October 1990 the first match of the newly established Croatia national football team was held a friendly against the United States and following the end of the 1990 91 season Croatian clubs decided to abandon Yugoslav competitions After Croatia had officially declared independence on 8 October 1991 the Croatian Football Federation sought international recognition and was finally re admitted to FIFA on 3 July 1992 and to UEFA on 17 June 1993 2 5 In February 1992 the inaugural season of the Croatian top league Prva HNL kicked off and in March 1992 the first edition of the Croatian Cup was launched In late 2010 the Federation held an election for its President with Vlatko Markovic opposed by Igor Stimac Markovic won by a single vote and the assembly was marred with controversies 7 Stimac later appealed calling for another meeting of the Federation 8 His supporters organized a new assembly and elected him the new President despite the opposing faction s boycott leading to an impasse 9 In July 2012 the Federation held an election for its President with Davor Suker as the only candidate All 46 delegates voted in favour of Suker s candidature Presidents editNotesThe first three presidents 1912 1919 were heads of football sections within the Croatian Sports Federation the top sports governing body in Croatia which was at the time a province within Austria Hungary Following World War I and the formation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia the organisation was re established in Zagreb in 1919 as the Football Association of Yugoslavia and designed as a national level governing body Its seat was moved to Yugoslavia s capital Belgrade ten years later in 1929 Although city level subfederations continued to exist in the 1920s and 1930s there was no separate regional organisation which would govern the sport in Croatia between 1919 and 1939 hence the 20 year gap In 1939 the Banovina of Croatia was created as an autonomous province within Yugoslavia and a new provincial federation carrying the present day football federation s name was established Ivo Kraljevic headed this body between 1939 and 1941 Following the April 1941 invasion of Yugoslavia the Independent State of Croatia NDH an Axis allied puppet state which included most of the territories of present day Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina was established The Zagreb based football federation thus began to govern football in the entire territory of NDH and continued to organize national level league championship during World War II During this period NDH was admitted to FIFA and organised 14 international friendlies involving Croatia Presidents between 1941 and 1945 headed the HNS during this era After 1945 and the establishment of the communist SFR Yugoslavia the HNS again became one of its regional federations charged with governing football in SR Croatia which became one of Yugoslavia s six federal republics Presidents from 1945 1990 headed the HNS in this period After Croatia proclaimed independence in 1991 and the breakup of Yugoslavia the HNS became the top football governing body of the newly independent nations The country was internationally recognized by early 1992 and HNS was admitted to FIFA again in July 1992 and to UEFA in June 1993 List of presidents 1912 1990 Milovan Zoricic 1912 1914 Vladimir Ocic 1914 Milan Graf 1914 1919 Ivo Kraljevic 1939 1941 Rudolf Hitrec 1941 1942 Vatroslav Petek 1942 1944 Rinaldo Culic 1944 1945 Mijo Hrsak 1945 1947 Lazo Vracaric 1947 1950 Boris Bakrac 1950 1953 Vlado Ranogajec 1953 1957 Mirko Oklobdzija 1957 1959 Pero Splivalo 1959 1965 Luka Bajakic 1965 1966 Bruno Knezevic 1966 1971 Ivan Kolic 1971 1976 10 Vlado Bogatec 1976 1978 Ljubo Spanjol 1978 1981 Zeljko Huber 1981 1982 Dusan Veselinovic 1982 1984 Milivoj Razov 1984 1985 Adam Susanj 1985 1986 Antun Cilic 1986 1988 Pasko Viđak 1988 1990 List of presidents 1990 present Mladen Vedris September 1990 July 1994 11 Damir Matovinovic acting 8 July 1994 10 March 1995 12 Đuro Brodarac 10 March 1995 8 June 1995 12 Nadan Vidosevic 8 June 1995 17 August 1996 12 Josip Soic 17 August 1996 2 June 1997 12 Branko Miksa 2 June 1997 5 October 1998 12 Vlatko Markovic 18 December 1998 5 July 2012 11 Davor Suker 5 July 2012 29 July 2021 13 14 Marijan Kustic 29 July 2021 present 3 Competitions editSee also Croatian football league system It organizes the following competitions Men s footballHNL First league 1 NL or Prva NL Second league 2 NL or Druga NL Third league 3 NL or Treca NL Fourth league Croatian Football Cup Croatian Football Super CupWomen s football1 HNLZ or Prva HNL za zene First Women s Division 2 HNLZ or Druga HNL za zene Second Women s Division Croatian Women s CupYouth football1 HNL Academy First league for academy sides with three age categories for boys Under 19 Juniori Under 17 Kadeti and Under 15 Pioniri and two for girls Under 17 Kadetkinje and Under 15 Pionirke Futsal1 HMNL or Prva HMNL First league 2 HMNL or Druga HMNL Second league 1 HMNLZ or Prva HMNLZ First women s leagueBeach Soccer1 HNLP or Prva HNLP National teams editThe Croatian Football Federation also organises national football teams representing Croatia at all age levels Men sCroatia national football team currently managed by Zlatko Dalic Croatia U21 national football team currently managed by Dragan Skocic Croatia U20 national football team currently managed by Ognjen Vukojevic Croatia U19 national football team currently managed by Josip Simunic Croatia U18 national football team currently managed by Josip Simunic Croatia U17 national football team currently managed by Tomislav Rukavina Croatia U16 national football team currently managed by Tomislav Rukavina Croatia U15 national football team currently managed by Sergej Milivojevic Women sCroatia women s national football team currently managed by Nenad Gracan Croatia women s U19 national football team currently managed by Bozidar Miletic Croatia women s U17 national football team currently managed by Stella Gotal Croatia women s U15 national football team currently managed by Bozidar Miletic FutsalCroatia national futsal team currently managed by Marinko Mavrovic Croatia U19 national futsal team currently managed by Duje Maretic Croatia women s national futsal team currently managed by Luka Marinovic Beach soccerCroatia beach soccer national team currently managed by Emanuel Melon References edit History Croatian Football Federation hns cff hr Retrieved 12 February 2018 a b c Goal Programme Croatian Football Federation 2006 FIFA com 20 January 2009 Archived from the original on June 17 2007 Retrieved 26 April 2010 a b Index Sport 29 July 2021 Smijenjen je Davor Suker Marijan Kustic novi predsjednik HNS a Index hr in Croatian Retrieved 29 July 2021 Patkovic Nikola 19 March 2014 Davor Suker potvrdio da se ukida udruga prvoligasa HNL je nasa odgovornost Davor Suker confirmed that the association of first league clubs is being abolished HNL is our responsibility Sportske novosti in Croatian Retrieved 18 July 2022 a b About the Croatian Football Federation Facts and Figures Croatian Football Federation Retrieved 26 April 2010 a b c About the Croatian Football Federation Croatian Football Federation Retrieved 26 April 2010 Boris Bilas 2010 12 17 Stimac izgubio cirkus gotov Markovic ostaje na celu HNS a Stimac loses show is over Markovic stays at the helm of the HNS Nacional in Croatian Archived from the original on 6 June 2012 Retrieved 2011 02 20 Bitka za HNS Stimac predao 23 potpisa za izvanrednu skupstinu Vecernji list in Croatian 2011 01 19 Retrieved 2011 02 20 Na izvanrednoj skupstini Stimac izabran za predsjednika HNS a Poslovni dnevnik in Croatian 2011 02 20 Archived from the original on 2011 07 21 Retrieved 2011 02 20 Preminuo Ivan Kolic in Croatian Croatian Football Federation 24 July 2007 Retrieved 17 May 2011 a b Vlatko Markovic novi je sesti po redu predsjednik Hrvatskog nogometnog saveza Croatian Radiotelevision in Croatian 18 December 1998 Archived from the original on 1 September 2014 Retrieved 6 July 2010 a b c d e Abramovic Zlatko 20 December 1998 Koliko ce trajati Vlatko Markovic Vjesnik in Croatian Archived from the original on 19 August 2002 Retrieved 6 July 2010 Suker jednoglasno preuzeo vlast Index hr Retrieved 5 July 2012 FOTO Davor Suker jednoglasno izabran za celnika HNS a Trudit cu se dostici uspjehe Vlatka Markovica jutarnji hr Archived from the original on 20 December 2014 Retrieved 17 March 2018 External links editOfficial website in Croatian and English Croatia at FIFA com Croatia at UEFA com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Croatian Football Federation amp oldid 1182631644, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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