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FK Partizan

Fudbalski klub Partizan (Serbian Cyrillic: Фудбалски клуб Партизан, IPA: [fûdbalskiː klûːb partǐzaːn]; English: Partizan Football Club), sometimes known as Partizan Belgrade in English, is a Serbian professional football club based in Belgrade. It forms a major part of the Partizan multi-sport club.[2] The club plays in the Serbian SuperLiga and has spent its entire history in the top tier of Yugoslav and Serbian football, winning a total of 46 official trophies,[3] finishing in the Yugoslav league all-time table as second. Its home ground is the Partizan Stadium in Belgrade, where the team have played since 1949.[4] Partizan holds records such as playing in the first European Champions Cup match on 4 September 1955,[5] as well as becoming the first Balkan and Eastern European football club to reach the European Champions Cup final, when it did so in 1966.[6] Partizan was the first Serbian club to compete in the group stage of the UEFA Champions League.

Partizan
Партизан
Full nameФудбалски клуб Партизан Београд / Fudbalski klub Partizan Beograd
Nickname(s)Парни ваљак / Parni valjak (The Steamroller)
Црно-бели / Crno-beli (The Black-Whites)
Гробари / Grobari (The Gravediggers)
Short namePAR, PTZ, PRT
Founded4 October 1945; 78 years ago (1945-10-04)
GroundPartizan Stadium
Capacity29,775[1]
PresidentVacant
Head coachIgor Duljaj
LeagueSerbian SuperLiga
2022–23Serbian SuperLiga, 4th of 16
WebsiteClub website
Current season

The club has a long-standing rivalry with Red Star Belgrade. Matches between these two clubs are known as the Eternal Derby ("Večiti derbi") and rate as one of the greatest cross-town clashes in the world.[7] Partizan also has many supporters in many of the former-Yugoslav republics and in the Serbian diaspora.[8][9]

Their popular nickname 'The Steamroller' (Parni valjak) was originally used in the press report after the 7–1 hammering of Red Star at the 13th Eternal Derby on 6 December 1953.[10] This nickname was later embedded in the lyrics of the club anthem.[11]

Partizan Youth Academy is one of the most renowned and export-oriented in Europe. CIES (University of Neuchâtel International Centre for Sports Studies) Football Observatory report of November 2015 ranks Partizan at the top place of training clubs out of the 31 European leagues surveyed.[12] CIES report of 2019 confirmed Partizan as the most productive training club in Europe, with 75 of their academy graduates currently playing across 31 European top divisions.[13]

History edit

Founders and origins edit

Partizan was founded on 4 October 1945 in Belgrade, as a football section of the Central House of the Yugoslav Army "Partizan",[14] and was named in honour of the Partisans,[15] the communist military formation who fought against fascism during World War II in Yugoslavia.[16] The club was formed and initially managed by the group of young high officers of the Yugoslav People's Army and veterans of the Spanish Civil War. Among them were Koča Popović, Peko Dapčević, Svetozar Vukmanović, Bogdan Vujošević, Mijalko Todorović, Otmar Kreačić, Božo Švarc and Ratko "Čoče" Vujović – elected the first president of the club.[17] Two days after its establishment, Partizan made its first step on the football scene, with the friendly match against selection of Zemun that ended 4–2. Silvester Šereš entered the record books as the first goal scorer in the history of Partizan,[18] while goalkeeper Franjo Glaser was simultaneously the first club manager.[19] Just three weeks later, Partizan went on the first of many international tours, travelling to Czechoslovakia where they beat the selection of Slovak Army with 3–1. At the time, just months after the World War II in Yugoslavia ended, no organized football competition was yet restored, so Partizan played only friendly games and tournaments both home and abroad. The club's first international engagement was a meeting against another army side, CSKA Moscow from what was then Soviet Union, on 6 December 1945 in Belgrade.[20]

 
Club legend Stjepan Bobek, voted Partizan's best player of all time in 1995.

Partizan's babies – the first European final (1958–1966) edit

 
1966 European Cup Final starting lineup coached by Abdulah Gegić

By the mid-1950s, the first big Partizan generation was well over its peak. Only two titles and four cups in its first 15 years of existence were not enough for a club of Partizan's stature, ambition and popularity. In 1958, the club left way behind 13 years of playing in blue-red kits and adopted the now famous black and white colors. The change in the club's image and appearance was followed by radical changes in the playing squad. The number of young players, offspring of Partizan's own youth ranks known as Partizanove bebe (The Partizan's babies), soon emerged into one of the best generations Europe's ever seen. The rise of the generation began with Milutin Šoškić, Fahrudin Jusufi, Jovan Miladinović, Velibor Vasović, Milan Galić, Ilija Mitić, Zvezdan Čebinac and Vladica Kovačević. Very soon, they were joined by Lazar Radović, Velimir Sombolac, Ljubomir Mihajlović and Mustafa Hasanagić, and finally Ivan Ćurković, Josip Pirmajer, Branko Rašović and Radoslav Bečejac. Managers Illés Spitz, Florijan Matekalo and Stjepan Bobek monitored and guided their development. The decision to rely mostly on talented youngsters scouted from all over the country quickly gave results – Partizan took three consecutive championship titles, in 1961,[21] 1962[22] and 1963,[23] the first title hat-trick in the Yugoslav First League. Efficient and attractive performances earned the club its popular nickname "Parni valjak" ("The Steamroller"). In 1964–65, the team added the fourth title in five years[24] (interrupted by city rival Red Star during the 1963–64 season). As early as the 1960s, a fierce and intense rivalry grew up between Partizan and Red Star.

 
Club legend Miloš Milutinović scored two goals in the first ever European Champion Clubs' Cup

The 1965–66 European Cup campaign was the crown of this generation's career. After eliminating French Nantes (2–0, 2–2) and German champion Werder Bremen (3–0, 1–0) in the first two rounds, Partizan were drawn against Sparta Prague in the quarter-finals. In the first leg, held in Prague, Partizan suffered a hard 4–1 defeat. Although they were not given any chances in the return leg in Belgrade, Partizan pulled off a convincing 5–0 win in front of 50,000 spectators,[25] and with aggregate score 6–4 qualified for the semifinals. The semi-finals would see Partizan taking part in an emotional tie that would bring Manchester United, in their first season back in the European Cup after the Munich air disaster, returning to the scene of their final game, at the JNA Stadium, before embarking on that fateful journey home (on the way home from a European Cup quarter-final victory against Red Star, which was played at JNA Stadium, the aircraft carrying the Manchester United players, officials and journalists crashed while attempting to take off after refuelling in Munich).Manchester United, led by George Best and Bobby Charlton, awaited finally them on the last step to the finals. Partizan won the first leg at JNA Stadium 2–0,[26] and resisted the heavy pressure on Old Trafford, conceding only once; with a 2–1 aggregate scoreline, they eliminated the English giants.[27] Partizan's babies achieved the greatest success in history of Partizan, a place in the 1966 European Cup Final against Real Madrid. The final game was played on 11 May at Heysel Stadium, Brussels. Until the 70th minute, Partizan was 1–0 up through a goal by Velibor Vasović, but ultimately lost to the Spaniards 2–1.[28] Partizan may have come close to a famous victory, but they had now missed their chance as the side was immediately broken up with their star players heading west. Still, Partizan became the first club from the Balkans and Eastern Europe to have played in a European Cup final.[29]

The brief return – the first European trophy (1976–1982) edit

On 11 July 1976, in Ljubljana, Partizan played the last game of the season against Olimpija and needed a win to clinch the title ahead of rivals Hajduk Split. In the last second before the final whistle, Nenad Bjeković scored the winning goal and Partizan won 0–1. The seventh championship trophy was finally won,[30] after full decade of waiting, by the new generation of players, such as Momčilo Vukotić, Bjeković, Rešad Kunovac, Ilija Zavišić, Refik Kozić, Ivan Golac, Radmilo Ivančević, Boško Đorđević, Nenad Stojković. Partizan then won its eighth title in 1977–78,[31] enforced with Nikica Klinčarski, Petar Borota, Slobodan Santrač, Aleksandar Trifunović, Xhevat Prekazi and Pavle Grubješić. That same year, Partizan won its first European trophy, the Mitropa Cup. The Black & Whites finished first in Group A, ahead of Perugia and Zbrojovka Brno and defeated Hungarian side Honvéd in the finals, 1–0. Its manager was Ante Mladinić. Unexpectedly, the following 1978–79 season turned out to be the worst in Partizan history: they finished 15th in the league, barely avoiding relegation with a 4–2 victory against Budućnost in the last fixture. The new crisis was serious, which reflected in the results next season, when Partizan finished 13th. It took a two more seasons, but Partizan eventually recovered.

Memorable years (1982–1991) edit

 
The untimely death of star player Dragan Mance in a 1985 traffic collision made him into a club legend.

When Momčilo Vukotić, Nenad Stojković and Nikica Klinčarski were joined by Ljubomir Radanović, Zvonko Živković, Zoran Dimitrijević and Dragan Mance, another great generation was formed. Partizan became champion for 1982–83 season, in large part due to extraordinary performances of a young Dragan Mance.[32] He helped Partizan win the league by scoring 15 goals, and immediately became a fan favourite. He also led the club in their 1984–85 UEFA Cup second round tie against Queens Park Rangers, one of the most memorable matches in the club's history. QPR won the first leg 6–2, but Partizan advanced after a 4–0 return victory.[33] A goal which Mance scored against the English side is considered one of the most remarkable goals in the history of Partizan. That match was voted 70th among the Top 100 greatest matches in the history of football in a poll organized by Eurosport in September 2009.[34] On 3 September 1985, the players tragically lost their teammate and the fans lost their idol – Mance died in a car crash on Novi Sad-Belgrade highway.[35] He was only 22 years old, and at the peak of his popularity. Even today, Mance is considered to be the greatest club legend by the fans of Partizan. In his honour, the street next to the club's stadium in Belgrade has carried his name since 2011.[36]

In 1985–86, Partizan won the title with a 4–0 win over Željezničar due to better goal difference than second-placed Red Star.[37] However, Yugoslav FA President Slavko Šajber decided that the entire last round of fixtures had to be replayed after accusations that certain results had been fixed. Partizan refused to replay its match, after which the game was awarded 3–0 to Željezničar, and the title was given to Red Star, who thus got to play in 1986–87 European Cup. Because of these events, 12 clubs started the next 1986–87 season with a deduction of six points, Partizan among them. Vardar, who had not been deducted six points, won the title and subsequently participated in 1987–88 European Cup. However, after a sequence of appeals and lawsuits which eventually led to Yugoslav Constitutional Court, the original final table of 1985–86, with Partizan as champions, was officially recognized in mid-1987. Also, the points deduction from 1986–87 season was annulled and the title was given to Partizan, who headed the table without the deduction. These controversial events prevented the generation of Milko Đurovski, Fahrudin Omerović, Zvonko Varga, Vladimir Vermezović, Admir Smajić, Goran Stevanović, Nebojša Vučićević, Miloš Đelmaš, Srečko Katanec, Fadil Vokrri and Bajro Župić from showing their full potential in Europe.

Partizan spent the final years in Yugoslavia undergoing significant organizational changes. In 1989, former goalkeeper Ivan Ćurković became club president while Mirko Marjanović became the president of Partizan's executive board. Most important, Partizan players in these final years were Predrag Mijatović, Slaviša Jokanović, Predrag Spasić, Dragoljub and Branko Brnović, Budimir Vujačić, Vujadin Stanojković, Darko Milanič and Džoni Novak. However, this great generation was overshadowed by their crosstown rival Red Star and its rampage through domestic league, Europe and the world. Partizan only won the 1989 national cup, 32 years after the last victory in that competition. The last trophy won before the breakup of Yugoslavia was the 1989 Yugoslav Super Cup, the first and the only one organized. Also in the same season 1988/89, Partizan won the prestigious international tournament Uhrencup, which is played every year in Switzerland and to this day. That year, Partizan took three trophies which is a club record in one season. In 1987, Partizan signed Chinese national team players Jia Xiuquan and Liu Haiguang and they entered history as they, along Xie Yuxin and Gu Guangming, were the first Chinese footballers ever to have played in Europe.[38]

Dark decade and domestic success (1990s) edit

 
Former Partizan striker Predrag Mijatović.

After the death of President Josip Broz Tito in 1980, ethnic tension grew in Yugoslavia, with the follow, that in the early 1990s the Yugoslav state began to fall apart, and the civil war broke out. At the end of May in 1992, the United Nations Security Council imposed sanctions against the country, which led to political isolation, economic decline and hyperinflation of the Yugoslav dinar, and finally dislodged Yugoslav football from the international scene. The disintegration of Yugoslavia, the Yugoslav wars from 1991 to 1995, the resulting difficulties, as well as the sanctions had hit all Yugoslav clubs hard. After the breakup of SFR Yugoslavia in 1991, a new Yugoslavia was formed out from Serbia and Montenegro and was named FR Yugoslavia. Notwithstanding, Partizan won during the war two titles in a row, in 1993 and 1994. The next two championships Partizan won came in 1996 and 1997, but after only few years of peace, the Yugoslav clubs stood again before difficult times. Between 1998 and 1999, peace was broken again because the situation in Kosovo worsened with continued clashes between Yugoslav security forces and the Kosovo Liberation Army. The confrontations led to the Kosovo War and finally to the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, which started four days after the 112th Red Star–Partizan derby, and this without a UN Mandate.[39] The bombing campaign was criticized, especially for the number of civilian casualties that resulted from the bombing.[40] By this time, Partizan won in 1999 a further championship title, again during a war.

During these turbulent 1990s, the club won also several national cups, this in 1992, 1994 and 1998. The key man for these trophies was Ljubiša Tumbaković, who became the most successful manager in Partizan's history. In 1997, Partizan was reintroduced to European competitions following the lift of the UEFA ban on clubs from FR Yugoslavia, but while the national team continued where they had stopped in the spring of 1992, the clubs had all their results erased and were treated as the beginners in the European competitions. The decision met with incomprehension among the club officials of the Yugoslav clubs. That decision will have long-term catastrophic consequences for Partizan – instead of enjoying the merits of its own many-year work, they would get harder opponents from the start and the competition would start already in July. This decade has been marked by numerous team changes and the circle of selling the best players to richer European clubs after just a couple of seasons of first-team football and replacing them with fresh young talents. Many players are credited with the successes of the nineties, such as Predrag Mijatović, Slaviša Jokanović, Savo Milošević, Albert Nađ, Dragan Ćirić, Zoran Mirković, Saša Ćurčić, Branko Brnović, Goran Pandurović, Dražen Bolić, Niša Saveljić, Damir Čakar, Budimir Vujačić, Ivan Tomić, Gjorgji Hristov, Đorđe Tomić, Ivica Kralj, Mateja Kežman and many others.

The new beginning (2000–2007) edit

The new millennium has arrived, but the goals remain the same. In the last 12 years, Partizan has won eight national championships, four cups and managed to qualify two times for the UEFA Champions League and five times for the UEFA Europa League. Led by Ljubiša Tumbaković, the club won two championship titles in a row, in 2001–02[41] and 2002–03.[42] In Europe, Partizan did not have much success in those seasons, though the next one would become its best season in Europe after 1965–66, where it reached the 1966 European Cup final.

The club's management took the 2003 season very seriously, appointing as its new coach the former World Player of the Year Lothar Matthäus, and brought some top and experienced players like Taribo West from 1.FC Kaiserslautern, Ljubinko Drulović from Benfica and Tomasz Rząsa from Feyenoord. For the first time in its history, the club played in the UEFA Champions League after eliminating Bobby Robson's Newcastle United. In Belgrade, Partizan lost by 0–1, but in rematch at St James' Park, they won by Ivica Iliev's goal in regular time and reached the group stages after a penalty shoot-out.[43] Later on, Partizan was drawn in a tough group with Real Madrid (the previous year's Champions League semi-finalist), Porto (the winner of the 2002–03 UEFA Cup and the eventual winner of the competition) and Marseille (the eventual runners-up of the 2003–04 UEFA Cup).[44] The Partizan Stadium was a tough ground for the opposition and the team did not lose a home game, playing out a 0–0 draw with Real Madrid's famous Galácticos, which included players such as Zinedine Zidane, Ronaldo, Luís Figo, Roberto Carlos, Raúl and David Beckham; a 1–1 draw with Porto, led by coach José Mourinho; and Marseille, with its superstars Fabien Barthez and Didier Drogba, while playing some inspired football in the away match in Madrid (0–1), Marseille (0–3) and Porto (1–2). They are the first Serbian team to qualify for the main draw of this elite European club competition since its inception in 1992.

Playing in Europe was reflected in the championship, and Partizan lost the title. New coach Vladimir Vermezović taken the charge of a team and he superiority won the championship in 2005. Also, he became the only coach who has managed to take the team to the knockout stage of a European competition since new format. That happened in the 2004–05 UEFA Cup, where Partizan reached the round-of-16. Later on, he was eliminated by CSKA Moscow, the eventual winner of the competition. Poor results in domestic and international competitions in 2006 prompted the club's officials to look for a new head coach. First, Jürgen Röber was brought in, then later Miodrag Ješić, though neither succeeded in winning the domestic title. Although Partizan has managed to qualify for the 2006–07 UEFA Cup group stage,[45] that season was viewed as a failure.

Contemporary history (2007–2020) edit

Former Partizan player Slaviša Jokanović were appointed as Partizan's new head coach,[46] with the club also adding a new sport director in Ivan Tomić. The club strengthened its squad with some foreigners like Juca,[47] Almami Moreira and Lamine Diarra. The 2007–08[48] and 2008–09 season[49] will remain as one of the most successful in club's domestic history. In 2008–09, the club successfully defended their league and cup double from the 2007–08 season, the first time this occurred its history. But in Europe, Partizan suffered a real shock: UEFA expelled Partizan from the 2007–08 UEFA Cup season and fined the club €30,056 due to crowd trouble at their away qualifying match against Zrinjski Mostar,[50] which forced the match to be interrupted for ten minutes. UEFA judged travelling Partizan fans to have been the culprits of the trouble,[51] but Partizan were allowed to play the return leg while the appeal was being processed.[52] Partizan's appeal, however, was rejected and Zrinjski Mostar qualified for the next round, although Partizan beat them by an aggregate score of 11–1. Next season, the club enforced its squad with Brazilian striker Cléo;[53] Partizan demolished Welsh champions Rhyl with a score of 8–0 (12–0 on aggregate) on 21 July 2009.[54] This score is their largest ever winning margin in European competitions. After relegation from the Champions League, Partizan qualified two times in a row for the second tier of UEFA competition. The Black & Whites played in the 2008 UEFA Cup[55] and 2009 Europa League[56] group stage but as the same in 2007, the club did not advance any further. Unfortunately, even though a good European season was behind them, the club ended the season trophyless.

 
Arsenal – Partizan

After Jokanović, the club decided to give a chance to the young coach and former Partizan footballer Aleksandar Stanojević.[57] He became the youngest head coach in the history of Partizan. Stanojević took over the club in very difficult period and managed to win the championship in 2010,[58] although Partizan was 10 points behind from the 1st placed Red Star Belgrade. In the 2011, the club won the double.[59] In UEFA competitions, Partizan qualified for the 2010–11 UEFA Champions League after beating Anderlecht for the second time. At the Partizan Stadium the result was 2–2. In Brussels at the Constant Vanden Stock Stadium result was also 2–2. The key man was Cléo, who scored two goals against the Belgians. After penalty drama, Partizan reached again the UEFA Champions League group stage.[60] Now, the draw for the group phase decided that Partizan will play in group H, alongside Arsenal, Shakhtar Donetsk (the winner of the 2008–09 UEFA Cup) and Sporting Braga (the eventual runner-up of the 2010–11 UEFA Europa League).[61] On the matchday 1, Partizan lost against Shakhtar on Donbass Arena in Donetsk (0–1). Next game Partizan played against Arsenal at Partizan Stadium and lost 1–3 after they played inspired football with a 10-man team in the last 30 minutes of the match. In two matches against Sporting Braga, Partizan failed to score and they lost both games (0–2 in Braga; 0–1 in Belgrade). The last two rounds in the group have also brought inspired football, but unfortunately it wasn't enough so Shakhtar Donetsk and The Gunners defeated Partizan once again, 0–3 in Belgrade and 1–3 at the Emirates Stadium.

In the following season, the elimination during the 2012 Europa League qualifying stage, didn't affect the club in national championship, but after the half-season, Stanojević was released. Partizan then signed former Chelsea manager Avram Grant,[62] who was able to preserve the lead from the half-season. He led Partizan to their fifth consecutive league title but lost three times against fierce rivals Red Star.[63] Grant resigned[63] and former Partizan manager Vladimir Vermezović returned to Belgrade in May 2012. Partizan did not qualify for the 2012–13 UEFA Champions League, but did gain a place in the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League group stage. Because of poor results in the second part of national championship, Vermezović was dismissed and replaced by Vuk Rašović.[64] Following the victory in the eternal derby and in pre-last round, Rašović secured a sixth consecutive title, a total of 25th in history of the club.[65] As a champion of the Serbian SuperLiga for 2012–13 season, Partizan managed to equalize a national record by the number of championship titles won.[65]

In summer of 2013, Partizan eliminated Shirak (1–1, away goal) and lost against Ludogorets Razgrad (1–3 on aggregate). In play-off round for 2013–14 UEFA Europa League, Partizan played with Thun. Partizan beat Thun 1–0 in Belgrade, but lost 0–3 in Thun and failed to get in Europa League.[66] Without a single trophy and group stage of some European competition, the season was the worst in last ten years.

After a year of absence from the European scene, Partizan entered at the 2014–15 UEFA Europa League by beating Neftchi total score 5–3 (3–2 at home and 1–2 away).[67] Partizan is after the draw, placed in Group C with Tottenham Hotspur, Beşiktaş and Asteras Tripoli.[68] Partizan began the Europa League in excellent form and remained undefeated against the English giant Tottenham, but in the next four games, the club were defeated. The 2014–15 season was a successful for Partizan, winning the Serbian championship and securing passage to the group stage of the Europa League.

After falling out of the play–off for the Champions League in the summer of 2015, Partizan has directly entered the 2015–16 UEFA Europa League. The club was placed in Group L alongside Athletic Bilbao, AZ Alkmaar and FC Augsburg.[69] Partizan made three victories in group stage (3–2 at home[70] and 2–1 in away[71] against AZ and 3–1 in Augsburg against same team[72]), but he failed to get in Round of 32.[73] Partizan failed to defend the title, but won Serbian Cup after five years, without conceding goal. Partizan is first team who managed to win the Serbian Cup without conceding goal in history.[74]

A few days after the sixth double in club history (on the 2016–17 season), coach Nikolić left the club and signed with Hungarian club Videoton.[75] A couple days after Nikolić's departure, Miroslav Đukić returned to Partizan.[76] In the second qualifying round for the 2017-18 UEFA Champions League, Partizan eliminated Budućnost Podgorica (2–0 on aggregate), but in the third round they were eliminated by Olympiacos (3–5 on aggregate). In the play-off round for 2017–18 UEFA Europa League, Partizan played against Videoton and ex coach Marko Nikolić. After a 0–0 draw in Belgrade, Partizan defeated Videoton 4–0 in Felcsút and reached the group stage,[77] where they were drawn in UEFA Europa League's Group B alongside Dynamo Kyiv, Young Boys and Skënderbeu Korçë.[78] Partizan drawn 1–1 with Young Boys in the first match of Group B. Partizan later played against Dynamo Kyiv; after leading 2–0 at half-time, they lost 3–2. The next two Partizan matches were against Skënderbeu Korçë; in Korçë, they drew 0–0, and then won 2–0 in Belgrade. Partizan then beat Young Boys 2–1 at home, and secured a place on the knock-out stage. In the last match of the group, Partizan lost 4–1 to Dynamo Kyiv in Kyiv, although they were already qualified. Partizan ranked second in the group with eight points (two more than Young Boys and five less than Dynamo Kyiv). In the round of 32, Partizan played against Viktoria Plzeň;[79] in Belgrade, they took the lead, but then conceded a late goal, which came from an offside position, thus ending the match with a 1–1 draw. In Plzeň, Viktoria won 2–0, and Partizan were eliminated from UEFA Europa League at the round of 32. The result was 3–1 for Viktoria on aggregate.

At the start of 2019–20 season squad was strengthened with Israeli international Bibras Natcho, Japanese international Takuma Asano and talented Nigerian striker Umar Sadiq. In July and August 2019, Partizan secured their ninth participation in the group stage of UEFA Europa League.[80] Under Savo Milošević's leadership, Partizan knocked out Connah's Quay Nomads F.C. (1–0 and 3–0),[81] Yeni Malatyaspor (3–1 and 0–1)[82] and Molde FK[83](2–1 and 1–1) in the qualifiers. On 30 August, Partizan was drawn on Group L of the 2019-20 UEFA Europa League alongside Manchester United, FC Astana and AZ Alkmaar.[84] On 19 September, Partizan opened the group stage campaign with a 2–2 home draw against AZ.[85] Due to UEFA sanctions, this game was played behind closed doors with only U15s allowed to attend – official attendance at the game was 22,564.[86] Partizan beat Astana (2–1 away) on matchday 2, but lost the two following games against Manchester United (0–1 in Belgrade and 3–0 in Manchester). They still managed to draw in Alkmaar against AZ (2–2) and beat Astana 4–1 at home on the last two games of the group. However, this was not enough to get through as they finished third in the group just one point behind AZ. In the SuperLiga, Partizan won second place with 14 points less than Red Star. In the Serbian Cup, Partizan defeated Red Star in the semi-finals with a score of 1–0 after the 58-th minute goal by Bibras Natcho.[87] In the final at the Čair Stadium in Niš, they met Vojvodina. After the regular time, it was 2–2, as Partizan equalized in the last moments of the match with a spectacular goal by Strahinja Pavlović. However, Vojvodina was better after the penalty shootout with 4–2, so after a long time, Partizan finished the season without a trophy.

The third decade of the 21st century edit

The third decade, a new challenge Partizan debuted in the inaugural season of the newly formed competition UEFA Europa Conference League 2021–22. In Second qualifying round Partizan knocked out DAC Dunajská Streda (1–0 and 2–0).[88][89] The draw for the third qualifying round decided that Partizan would face Sochi. In the first leg played on Fisht Olympic Stadium result was 1–1, in the return leg in Belgrade the two sides once more played a draw this time it was 2–2. Because of the new rule that away goals no longer count after thirty minutes of extra time the match went into penalties which Partizan won 4–2.[90][91] The last opponent in the qualifying Play-off round was Portuguese Santa Clara, Partizan lost 2–1 in the first game in Ponta Delgada but won 2–0 at home and thus advanced to Group stage.[92][93] Partizan was placed in Group B together with Gent, Anorthosis Famagusta and Flora. The Serbian team finished second in the group with eight points and secured a place in knockout phase. After the draws in Nyon, Sparta Prague was chosen as Partizan's next opponent, this is the first meeting between the two clubs since 1966. In the first game played on February 17, 2022, Partizan won 1–0 at Stadion Letná with a goal by Queensy Menig. Fantastic ball by Saša Zdjelar. He employed Menig, who escaped the defense and brilliantly lobbed Dominik Holec for the lead. In the second leg a week later, Partizan won 2–1 with two goals by Ricardo. And after seventeen years, Partizan reached the Round of 16 in some UEFA competition.[94][95] In the round of 16, Partizan suffered a heavy defeat against Feyenoord 2–5 and 1–3, who ended up playing in the finals against Roma.[96][97] In the 2021–22 Serbian SuperLiga season, Partizan finished second to Red Star after leading for most of the season. As a result, Aleksandar Stanojević resigned after two seasons without winning the championship trophy.

Crest and colours edit

In October 1945, Partizan adopted as their first crest a blue disc with a yellow bordered red five-pointed star in the middle, which symbolized communism,[98] and contained the abbreviation JA (Jugoslovenska Armija, The Yugoslav Army) inside it. Later on, the central circle became white with a red five-pointed star in it. It was surrounded by a larger blue circle in which the words "the Yugoslav Army" were written, while both circles were bordered by a yellow circle with a green wreath over it. At the bottom of the emblem was a shield with red and white lines, and on the top were five torches, each representing one of the five nations of Yugoslavia (Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, Macedonians and Montenegrins). This was a clear reference to the National Emblem of Yugoslavia.[99]

Crests
 
1945–1947

In the early 1950s, Partizan was separated from the Yugoslav Army and for the first time the team's name was written in the Cyrillic and Latin alphabets. The inscription of the Yugoslav Army was removed from the crest, along with the green wreath, and was replaced by the words Sportsko Društvo (Sports association). Partizan used this emblem until 1958, although it changed its equipment colors of blue and red to black and white a year before. The crest was also changed to be completely black and white, and Sportsko Društvo was amended into Jugoslovensko Sportsko Društvo (Yugoslav Sports Association), while the five red torches and the five-pointed star remained.[99] It was slightly redesigned after 1963 by adding a sixth torch to reflect the change of the official state emblem, which now included six torches representing six Yugoslav republics,[98] instead of the previous five representing the nations. The crest remained unchanged until the breakup of Yugoslavia.

 
Partizan's home shirt for the 2011–12 campaign.

By 1992, with Yugoslavia fragmenting, instead of "Jugoslovensko Sportsko Društvo", the word "Fudbalski klub" ("football club") were inserted and this crest remains in use to this day. The author of the crest was academic painter Branko Šotra.[99] In the 2007–08 season, Partizan won its 20th national championship and added two stars above their crest, symbolizing the 20 titles won.[99][100] However, there is an alternative crest, which Partizan supporters call the "shovel" but it is never used in official matches.[99]

I'm responsible because Partizan adopted black and white colors. I suggested change of shirts on behalf of the whole team, to club's general secretary Artur Takač. It all happened while we were on tour in South America, and when we played a friendly match against Juventus in 1957. We got as gift two sets of their jerseys, as they were delighted with our game. All the players were thrilled with the quality and color of the new uniforms, and they asked me to wear them all the time, which happened at the end, and Partizan's colors has remained black and white to this day.

Stjepan Bobek, in an informal interview with the Belgrade media.[101]

For most of its history, Partizan has played in black and white striped jerseys, but during its earliest days it used entirely dark red, blue or white jerseys.[102] In 1950, Partizan briefly had an all-white shirt with a blue diagonal stripe, besides an all blue shirt.[102] From 1952, the first red-blue striped and quartered jerseys appeared.[102] In 1957, the club was on tour in South America and after a friendly game with Juventus, a president of the Italian club, Umberto Agnelli, donated the club two sets of black and white jerseys.[101] Since then, Partizan has played mainly in black and white striped shirts,[102] with black or white shorts and socks.[103] But there were exceptions, like in 1974, when they wore a black and white hooped shirt, and 1982, when they have played in a plain white jerseys with a thick black stripe across them.[102] In 1990, the red and blue jersey returned after more than 30 years, in an away match against Hibernians during the UEFA Cup campaign. All this time, the away shirts have been mostly either all white or occasionally red-blue striped, but in recent years an all-black strip is usually used.[102]

Stadium and training ground edit

The stadium's name is Partizan Stadium, although it was known as JNA Stadium (Serbian: Стадион Југословенске народне армије, romanizedStadion JNA (Stadion Jugoslovenske narodne armije), "Stadium of the Yugoslav People's Army") for most of its history, and even today, a lot of football fans in all countries of the former-Yugoslavia call it by its old name. Partizan supporters sometimes call it "Fudbalski hram" (The Temple of Football).[104]

The stadium is situated in the Savski Venac municipality, in central Belgrade. Designed by architect Mihailo Janković, the ground was built on the site of BSK Stadium.[105] It was officially opened on Day of Yugoslav People's Army on 22 December 1951.[106] The first match ever played was between Yugoslavia and France on 9 October 1949.[4] The stadium had a capacity of 55,000 until it was renovated in 1998 following UEFA security regulations.[4] This led to the conversion of the stadium into an all-seater reducing the capacity to 32.710,[1] currently the second largest stadium in Serbia, behind the Red Star Stadium.[104]

The ground has also been used for a variety of other sport events since 1949. It was used from the mid-fifties until 1987 as the final point of yearly festivities called the Youth Day.[107] Also, it was the host of the 1962 European Athletics Championships, a place for various concerts and it hosted many times the Yugoslav Cup and Serbian Cup final.[108][109]

 
A panorama of Partizan Stadium from the north stand.

Partizan youth school and affiliates edit

The Partizan youth school, called Youth School Belin – Lazarević – Nadoveza, was founded in the 1950s and named after former Partizan players Bruno Belin, Čedomir Lazarević and Branko Nadoveza.[110] The club is well known for its dedicated work with youngsters.[110] Its training philosophy is not only the development of football players, but also to care of their growth and personality forming, while also teaching the sporting spirit.[110] There are around 400 youngsters classified by age categories.[110] There are six age groups, four compete at the level of the Football Association of Serbia, the U17, U16, U15 and U14, while the U13 and U12 compete at the level of the Football Association of Belgrade.[110] Below U12 level there are no official competitions, but players do play in tournaments and friendly matches.[110]

Partizan is the club with the most league titles and cup wins in youth competition in Serbia.[110] The youth teams also participate in numerous tournaments around Europe and also organize an U17 international tournament with participation of some of the top European clubs.[110] Partizan also organizes football camps for children in Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovenia, Australia[110][111] and the United States.[111][112] Many of the best youth-academy players move directly to the Partizan senior side, or to the affiliate club Teleoptik Zemun.[110]

All of Partizan's youth categories train at the Partizan sports complex named SC Partizan-Teleoptik, along with Partizan's seniors and the players of Teleoptik.[113] Partizan has won several awards for its youth work, including "Best European Youth Work" in 2006,[114] and the club's youth school has been declared the second-best in Europe after that of Ajax.[115] Partizan's academy has produced numerous professional football players or Yugoslav and Serbian internationals. Notable players from the recent past include Saša Ilić, Savo Milošević, Danko Lazović, Stefan Babović, Miralem Sulejmani, Stevan Jovetić, Adem Ljajić, Matija Nastasić, Lazar Marković, Miloš Jojić, Andrija Živković, Nikola Milenković, Aleksandar Mitrović, Strahinja Pavlović and Dušan Vlahović.

Two Partizan youth academy graduates (Dušan Vlahović and Strahinja Pavlović) are featured in UEFA.com 'Fifty for the Future' selection in 2020.[116]

Recently, players born after year 2000 like Filip Stevanović, Marko Milovanović and Samed Baždar (who made it into the Guardian's 'Next Generation 2021' shortlist')[117] are showing class for their age and having great potential.

Supporters edit

 
Grobari celebrating Partizan's 27th league title won in 2017

According to a 2008 domestic poll, Partizan is the second popular football club in Serbia, behind Red Star Belgrade.[118] Although fewer, focus groups show that Partizan fans are considered to be more devoted to their club.[119] The club has a large fanbase in Montenegro,[120] Bosnia and Herzegovina (especially in the Serb entity of Republika Srpska). They also have many supporters in all other former-Yugoslav republics like North Macedonia,[8] Slovenia,[121] and among the Serbian diaspora, especially in Germany,[122] Austria,[122] Switzerland,[121] Sweden,[122] Canada, Malta, the United States and Australia.

The organized supporters of Partizan are called Grobari ("The Gravediggers" or "Undertakers"),[123] which were formed in 1970 and situated mainly on the south stand of the Partizan Stadium; therefore, they are also known as Grobari Jug ("The Undertakers South").[122] Even some ordinary Partizan fans often refer to themselves as Grobari. The nickname itself was given by their sporting rivals Delije of Red Star, referring to the club's mostly black colours which were similar to the official uniforms of cemetery undertakers.[123] The other theory is that the name comes from a misinterpretation of the name of the street on which Partizan's stadium is located – "Humska" ("humka" roughly translates as "grave" or "entombment"),[122] when actually the street was named after Serbian medieval land of Hum, nowadays part of Herzegovina and South Dalmatia. The Grobari support all clubs in the Partizan Sports Association and in the course of time they have become recognizable by their noisy and constant cheering as well as their devotion and loyalty to the club.[124] The basis of their cheering is referred in the Serbian fan scene as the principle of "srce, ruke, glas" (heart, hands, voice) or "glas i dlan" (voice and palms),[124] along with songs in distinctive style.[124] The Grobari as a whole maintain a close friendship with the organized supporters of PAOK, CSKA Moscow and CSKA Sofia,[125][126] which started originally because of the two supporters' common Orthodox faith and similar founding backgrounds. It has been suggested that "many ultras took part in the armed conflicts and carry their scars today, translating the tribal nature of the Yugoslav wars to their clubs and ultras groups".[127]

Grobari have also a traditional friendship with Juventude Leonina, the main ultras group of Portuguese side Sporting Clube de Portugal.[128] The direction boards of both clubs have also good relations which was kept ever since the 1955–56 European Cup edition, which on 4 September 1955, in Lisbon's Estádio Nacional, put head-a-head the two teams in what was considered the opening whistle of the UEFA European club competitions. The game finished with a 3–3 draw, with Sporting later losing in Belgrade in the second hand by 5–2, however the club boards of both teams regularly meet from time to time to mark the occasion of this historic event.

Celebrity supporters edit

Rivalries edit

 
Red Star – Partizan match

Partizan's biggest rivalry is with Red Star Belgrade.[129] The matches between these rivals have been labeled as the Eternal derby (Serbian: Вечити дерби, Večiti derbi) or Belgrade derby.[129] The rivalry started immediately after the creation of the two clubs. Red Star was founded for Yugoslav youth and Partizan as the football section of the Yugoslav People's Army.[129] The rivalry is also intensified by the fact that both clubs have their stadiums situated only a few hundred metres apart.[129] The Eternal derby is particularly noted for the passion of both supporters groups. The stands of both teams feature fireworks, coloured confetti, flags, rolls of paper, torches, smoke, drums, giant posters and choreographies, used to create visual grandeur and apply psychological pressure on the visiting teams, hence the slogan, "Welcome to Hellgrade".[130] Some fans also use trumpets, similar to the supporters in South America. This creates for the region a typical and distinctive Balkan Brass Band atmosphere. Both sets of supporters sing passionate songs against their rivals, and the stadiums are known to bounce with the simultaneous jumping of the fans.

The duel is regarded by Bleacher Report as one of the greatest football rivalries in the world.[131] Along with the Old Firm, the Rome derby and the Istanbul derby, the Belgrade derby is known as one of the most intense rivalries in European football.[132] The largest attendance at a derby match was about 100,000 spectators (90,142 with paid tickets) on 7 November 1976 at the Red Star Stadium.[133] The biggest win was 7–1 for Partizan on 6 December 1953 at the Partizan Stadium[133][134] but the club with the most victories is Red Star.

During the Yugoslav era between 1945 and 1991, Partizan maintained a rivalry with other members of the so called "big four". Along with Partizan and Red Star, the "big four" included Dinamo Zagreb and Hajduk Split. Results in the table include domestic championship and cup games Partizan played against other members of the Yugoslav "big four" up to and including the season 1990–91:[135]

Against Wins Draws Defeats Goal
difference
Red Star 47 56 67 199:234
Dinamo Zagreb 40 23 37 153:156
Hajduk Split 45 23 25 157:110
Total 132 102 129 509:500

Other rivalries include regional rivalry with Vojvodina with whom they contest the Derby of Serbia, minor derby with neighbouring Zemun,[136] and Belgrade derbies with Rad and OFK Belgrade.

Seasons edit

Partizan in European football edit

Partizan's best European performance was in the 1965–66 season, when they reached the Final of the European Cup/Champions League.

UEFA Team ranking edit

Updated 9 December 2021.[137]

Rank Team Points
62   Qarabağ 24.000
63   Real Sociedad 24.000
64   Maccabi Tel Aviv 23.500
65   Partizan 23.500
66   Malmö 23.500
67   1899 Hoffenheim 23.000
68   Sheriff Tiraspol 22.500

Honours edit

Overall, Partizan have won 46 official titles including 27 national championships, 16 national cups, 1 national supercup, 1 national champions league and 1 Mitropa Cup.

Domestic competitions (45) edit

League – 27 edit

Cups – 16 edit

Super cups – 1 edit

National Champions League – 1 edit

  • Yugoslav Summer Champions League
    • Winners (1): 1969

International competitions (1) edit

Friendly tournaments (12) edit

  • Kvarnerska Rivijera (4): 1959, 1965, 1966, 1991
  • Trofeo Mohamed V (1): 1963
  • Torneo Pentagonal Internacional de la Ciudad de México (1): 1970
  • Torneo Pentagonal Internacional de la Ciudad de Bogotá (1): 1971
  • Trofeo Colombino de fútbol (1): 1976
  • Lunar New Year Cup (1): 1984
  • 40th Anniversary FK Partizan (1): 1985
  • Uhrencup (1): 1989
  • Blue Stars/FIFA Youth Cup (1): 2007

Club records edit

Partizan's record-holder by number of appearances is player Saša Ilić. He played 874 games in two turns, from 1996 and 2005 and from 2010 till 2019.[138] The goal-scoring record-holder is striker Stjepan Bobek, with 425 goals.[139] Over 150 footballers from Partizan have played for the Yugoslav and Serbian national football teams.[140] Stjepan Bobek held the Yugoslavian national team record with 38 goals,[141] with second place being shared by Savo Milošević, Milan Galić and Blagoje Marjanović, who scored 37 goals each.[141] Aleksandar Mitrović holds the Serbian national team record with 52 goals as of late 2021, this means four out of five national team top goalscorers have been Partizan players.

Partizan are record-holders of the Yugoslav First League in terms of points acquired during a campaign, with 107, and are the only league-winning team to have gone undefeated during one season (in 2005 and 2010). Partizan became the first champion of Yugoslavia in 1947, the first Yugoslav Cup winner, also in 1947, and therefore also the first double winner in the country. They won three consecutive championship titles, in 1961, 1962 and 1963, the first title hat-trick in the history of the Yugoslav First League.[142] Partizan won the most national championships since the dissolution of Yugoslavia, becoming champions 13 times. They are the only Serbian club ever, since the first nationwide domestic football competition in 1923, to win six consecutive national titles, a feat they achieved between 2007 and 2013.[143]

The club holds records such as playing in the first European Champions Cup match in 1955,[144] becoming the first Balkan and Eastern European club to play in the European Champions Cup final in 1966,[6] and becoming the first club from Serbia to take part in the UEFA Champions League group stages in 2003.[145] The club's greatest victory in European competitions was 8–0 against Welsh champions Rhyl in qualifying for the 2009–10 UEFA Champions League.[54]

Players edit

Current squad edit

As of 19 September 2023[146][147]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
19 MF   MNE Aleksandar Šćekić
20 FW   SRB Andrija Pavlović
23 FW   SRB Nemanja Nikolić
25 DF   BEL Nathan de Medina
26 DF   SRB Aleksandar Filipović
29 MF   NOR Ghayas Zahid
38 FW   SRB Janko Jevremović
40 MF   SRB Kristijan Belić
41 GK   SRB Vanja Radulaški
43 FW   SRB Nemanja Trifunović
44 FW   SRB Bogdan Mirčetić
45 MF   SRB Mateja Stjepanović
55 MF   SRB Danilo Pantić
85 GK   SRB Nemanja Stevanović
90 FW   SRB Mihajlo Petković

Players with multiple nationalities edit

Other players under contract edit

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
87 FW   SRB Nikola Lakčević

Out on loan edit

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
50 FW   MNE Marko Brnović (on loan at   Rudar Pljevlja)
GK   MNE Krsto Ljubanović (on loan at   Teleoptik)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   SRB Đorđe Petrović (on loan at   Teleoptik)

Notable domestic players edit

To appear in this section a player must have played at least 80 matches for the club or made at least one international appearance.

Flags indicate the national teams the players played for. Players that played for two different national teams have the flags of both national teams.[148]

Notable foreign players edit

To appear in this section a player must have played at least 30 matches for the club or made at least one international appearance.

Flags indicate the national teams the players played for. Players that played for two different national teams have the flags of both national teams.

partizan, other, uses, disambiguation, parent, multi, sport, club, partizan, fudbalski, klub, partizan, serbian, cyrillic, Фудбалски, клуб, Партизан, fûdbalskiː, klûːb, partǐzaːn, english, partizan, football, club, sometimes, known, partizan, belgrade, english. For other uses see FK Partizan disambiguation For the parent multi sport club see JSD Partizan Fudbalski klub Partizan Serbian Cyrillic Fudbalski klub Partizan IPA fudbalskiː kluːb partǐzaːn English Partizan Football Club sometimes known as Partizan Belgrade in English is a Serbian professional football club based in Belgrade It forms a major part of the Partizan multi sport club 2 The club plays in the Serbian SuperLiga and has spent its entire history in the top tier of Yugoslav and Serbian football winning a total of 46 official trophies 3 finishing in the Yugoslav league all time table as second Its home ground is the Partizan Stadium in Belgrade where the team have played since 1949 4 Partizan holds records such as playing in the first European Champions Cup match on 4 September 1955 5 as well as becoming the first Balkan and Eastern European football club to reach the European Champions Cup final when it did so in 1966 6 Partizan was the first Serbian club to compete in the group stage of the UEFA Champions League Partizan PartizanFull nameFudbalski klub Partizan Beograd Fudbalski klub Partizan BeogradNickname s Parni vaљak Parni valjak The Steamroller Crno beli Crno beli The Black Whites Grobari Grobari The Gravediggers Short namePAR PTZ PRTFounded4 October 1945 78 years ago 1945 10 04 GroundPartizan StadiumCapacity29 775 1 PresidentVacantHead coachIgor DuljajLeagueSerbian SuperLiga2022 23Serbian SuperLiga 4th of 16WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonThe club has a long standing rivalry with Red Star Belgrade Matches between these two clubs are known as the Eternal Derby Veciti derbi and rate as one of the greatest cross town clashes in the world 7 Partizan also has many supporters in many of the former Yugoslav republics and in the Serbian diaspora 8 9 Their popular nickname The Steamroller Parni valjak was originally used in the press report after the 7 1 hammering of Red Star at the 13th Eternal Derby on 6 December 1953 10 This nickname was later embedded in the lyrics of the club anthem 11 Partizan Youth Academy is one of the most renowned and export oriented in Europe CIES University of Neuchatel International Centre for Sports Studies Football Observatory report of November 2015 ranks Partizan at the top place of training clubs out of the 31 European leagues surveyed 12 CIES report of 2019 confirmed Partizan as the most productive training club in Europe with 75 of their academy graduates currently playing across 31 European top divisions 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founders and origins 1 2 Partizan s babies the first European final 1958 1966 1 3 The brief return the first European trophy 1976 1982 1 4 Memorable years 1982 1991 1 5 Dark decade and domestic success 1990s 1 6 The new beginning 2000 2007 1 7 Contemporary history 2007 2020 1 8 The third decade of the 21st century 2 Crest and colours 3 Stadium and training ground 4 Partizan youth school and affiliates 5 Supporters 6 Celebrity supporters 7 Rivalries 8 Seasons 9 Partizan in European football 9 1 UEFA Team ranking 10 Honours 10 1 Domestic competitions 45 10 1 1 League 27 10 1 2 Cups 16 10 1 3 Super cups 1 10 1 4 National Champions League 1 10 2 International competitions 1 10 3 Friendly tournaments 12 11 Club records 12 Players 12 1 Current squad 12 2 Players with multiple nationalities 12 3 Other players under contract 12 4 Out on loan 12 5 Notable domestic players 12 6 Notable foreign players 13 Affiliated clubs 14 Club management and technical staff 14 1 Managerial history 14 2 Club presidents 15 Ownership and finances 15 1 Shirt sponsors and manufacturers 16 See also 17 References 18 External linksHistory editFounders and origins edit Main article History of FK Partizan Partizan was founded on 4 October 1945 in Belgrade as a football section of the Central House of the Yugoslav Army Partizan 14 and was named in honour of the Partisans 15 the communist military formation who fought against fascism during World War II in Yugoslavia 16 The club was formed and initially managed by the group of young high officers of the Yugoslav People s Army and veterans of the Spanish Civil War Among them were Koca Popovic Peko Dapcevic Svetozar Vukmanovic Bogdan Vujosevic Mijalko Todorovic Otmar Kreacic Bozo Svarc and Ratko Coce Vujovic elected the first president of the club 17 Two days after its establishment Partizan made its first step on the football scene with the friendly match against selection of Zemun that ended 4 2 Silvester Seres entered the record books as the first goal scorer in the history of Partizan 18 while goalkeeper Franjo Glaser was simultaneously the first club manager 19 Just three weeks later Partizan went on the first of many international tours travelling to Czechoslovakia where they beat the selection of Slovak Army with 3 1 At the time just months after the World War II in Yugoslavia ended no organized football competition was yet restored so Partizan played only friendly games and tournaments both home and abroad The club s first international engagement was a meeting against another army side CSKA Moscow from what was then Soviet Union on 6 December 1945 in Belgrade 20 nbsp Club legend Stjepan Bobek voted Partizan s best player of all time in 1995 Partizan s babies the first European final 1958 1966 edit nbsp 1966 European Cup Final starting lineup coached by Abdulah GegicBy the mid 1950s the first big Partizan generation was well over its peak Only two titles and four cups in its first 15 years of existence were not enough for a club of Partizan s stature ambition and popularity In 1958 the club left way behind 13 years of playing in blue red kits and adopted the now famous black and white colors The change in the club s image and appearance was followed by radical changes in the playing squad The number of young players offspring of Partizan s own youth ranks known as Partizanove bebe The Partizan s babies soon emerged into one of the best generations Europe s ever seen The rise of the generation began with Milutin Soskic Fahrudin Jusufi Jovan Miladinovic Velibor Vasovic Milan Galic Ilija Mitic Zvezdan Cebinac and Vladica Kovacevic Very soon they were joined by Lazar Radovic Velimir Sombolac Ljubomir Mihajlovic and Mustafa Hasanagic and finally Ivan Curkovic Josip Pirmajer Branko Rasovic and Radoslav Becejac Managers Illes Spitz Florijan Matekalo and Stjepan Bobek monitored and guided their development The decision to rely mostly on talented youngsters scouted from all over the country quickly gave results Partizan took three consecutive championship titles in 1961 21 1962 22 and 1963 23 the first title hat trick in the Yugoslav First League Efficient and attractive performances earned the club its popular nickname Parni valjak The Steamroller In 1964 65 the team added the fourth title in five years 24 interrupted by city rival Red Star during the 1963 64 season As early as the 1960s a fierce and intense rivalry grew up between Partizan and Red Star nbsp Club legend Milos Milutinovic scored two goals in the first ever European Champion Clubs CupThe 1965 66 European Cup campaign was the crown of this generation s career After eliminating French Nantes 2 0 2 2 and German champion Werder Bremen 3 0 1 0 in the first two rounds Partizan were drawn against Sparta Prague in the quarter finals In the first leg held in Prague Partizan suffered a hard 4 1 defeat Although they were not given any chances in the return leg in Belgrade Partizan pulled off a convincing 5 0 win in front of 50 000 spectators 25 and with aggregate score 6 4 qualified for the semifinals The semi finals would see Partizan taking part in an emotional tie that would bring Manchester United in their first season back in the European Cup after the Munich air disaster returning to the scene of their final game at the JNA Stadium before embarking on that fateful journey home on the way home from a European Cup quarter final victory against Red Star which was played at JNA Stadium the aircraft carrying the Manchester United players officials and journalists crashed while attempting to take off after refuelling in Munich Manchester United led by George Best and Bobby Charlton awaited finally them on the last step to the finals Partizan won the first leg at JNA Stadium 2 0 26 and resisted the heavy pressure on Old Trafford conceding only once with a 2 1 aggregate scoreline they eliminated the English giants 27 Partizan s babies achieved the greatest success in history of Partizan a place in the 1966 European Cup Final against Real Madrid The final game was played on 11 May at Heysel Stadium Brussels Until the 70th minute Partizan was 1 0 up through a goal by Velibor Vasovic but ultimately lost to the Spaniards 2 1 28 Partizan may have come close to a famous victory but they had now missed their chance as the side was immediately broken up with their star players heading west Still Partizan became the first club from the Balkans and Eastern Europe to have played in a European Cup final 29 The brief return the first European trophy 1976 1982 edit On 11 July 1976 in Ljubljana Partizan played the last game of the season against Olimpija and needed a win to clinch the title ahead of rivals Hajduk Split In the last second before the final whistle Nenad Bjekovic scored the winning goal and Partizan won 0 1 The seventh championship trophy was finally won 30 after full decade of waiting by the new generation of players such as Momcilo Vukotic Bjekovic Resad Kunovac Ilija Zavisic Refik Kozic Ivan Golac Radmilo Ivancevic Bosko Đorđevic Nenad Stojkovic Partizan then won its eighth title in 1977 78 31 enforced with Nikica Klincarski Petar Borota Slobodan Santrac Aleksandar Trifunovic Xhevat Prekazi and Pavle Grubjesic That same year Partizan won its first European trophy the Mitropa Cup The Black amp Whites finished first in Group A ahead of Perugia and Zbrojovka Brno and defeated Hungarian side Honved in the finals 1 0 Its manager was Ante Mladinic Unexpectedly the following 1978 79 season turned out to be the worst in Partizan history they finished 15th in the league barely avoiding relegation with a 4 2 victory against Buducnost in the last fixture The new crisis was serious which reflected in the results next season when Partizan finished 13th It took a two more seasons but Partizan eventually recovered Memorable years 1982 1991 edit nbsp The untimely death of star player Dragan Mance in a 1985 traffic collision made him into a club legend When Momcilo Vukotic Nenad Stojkovic and Nikica Klincarski were joined by Ljubomir Radanovic Zvonko Zivkovic Zoran Dimitrijevic and Dragan Mance another great generation was formed Partizan became champion for 1982 83 season in large part due to extraordinary performances of a young Dragan Mance 32 He helped Partizan win the league by scoring 15 goals and immediately became a fan favourite He also led the club in their 1984 85 UEFA Cup second round tie against Queens Park Rangers one of the most memorable matches in the club s history QPR won the first leg 6 2 but Partizan advanced after a 4 0 return victory 33 A goal which Mance scored against the English side is considered one of the most remarkable goals in the history of Partizan That match was voted 70th among the Top 100 greatest matches in the history of football in a poll organized by Eurosport in September 2009 34 On 3 September 1985 the players tragically lost their teammate and the fans lost their idol Mance died in a car crash on Novi Sad Belgrade highway 35 He was only 22 years old and at the peak of his popularity Even today Mance is considered to be the greatest club legend by the fans of Partizan In his honour the street next to the club s stadium in Belgrade has carried his name since 2011 36 In 1985 86 Partizan won the title with a 4 0 win over Zeljeznicar due to better goal difference than second placed Red Star 37 However Yugoslav FA President Slavko Sajber decided that the entire last round of fixtures had to be replayed after accusations that certain results had been fixed Partizan refused to replay its match after which the game was awarded 3 0 to Zeljeznicar and the title was given to Red Star who thus got to play in 1986 87 European Cup Because of these events 12 clubs started the next 1986 87 season with a deduction of six points Partizan among them Vardar who had not been deducted six points won the title and subsequently participated in 1987 88 European Cup However after a sequence of appeals and lawsuits which eventually led to Yugoslav Constitutional Court the original final table of 1985 86 with Partizan as champions was officially recognized in mid 1987 Also the points deduction from 1986 87 season was annulled and the title was given to Partizan who headed the table without the deduction These controversial events prevented the generation of Milko Đurovski Fahrudin Omerovic Zvonko Varga Vladimir Vermezovic Admir Smajic Goran Stevanovic Nebojsa Vucicevic Milos Đelmas Srecko Katanec Fadil Vokrri and Bajro Zupic from showing their full potential in Europe Partizan spent the final years in Yugoslavia undergoing significant organizational changes In 1989 former goalkeeper Ivan Curkovic became club president while Mirko Marjanovic became the president of Partizan s executive board Most important Partizan players in these final years were Predrag Mijatovic Slavisa Jokanovic Predrag Spasic Dragoljub and Branko Brnovic Budimir Vujacic Vujadin Stanojkovic Darko Milanic and Dzoni Novak However this great generation was overshadowed by their crosstown rival Red Star and its rampage through domestic league Europe and the world Partizan only won the 1989 national cup 32 years after the last victory in that competition The last trophy won before the breakup of Yugoslavia was the 1989 Yugoslav Super Cup the first and the only one organized Also in the same season 1988 89 Partizan won the prestigious international tournament Uhrencup which is played every year in Switzerland and to this day That year Partizan took three trophies which is a club record in one season In 1987 Partizan signed Chinese national team players Jia Xiuquan and Liu Haiguang and they entered history as they along Xie Yuxin and Gu Guangming were the first Chinese footballers ever to have played in Europe 38 Dark decade and domestic success 1990s edit nbsp Former Partizan striker Predrag Mijatovic After the death of President Josip Broz Tito in 1980 ethnic tension grew in Yugoslavia with the follow that in the early 1990s the Yugoslav state began to fall apart and the civil war broke out At the end of May in 1992 the United Nations Security Council imposed sanctions against the country which led to political isolation economic decline and hyperinflation of the Yugoslav dinar and finally dislodged Yugoslav football from the international scene The disintegration of Yugoslavia the Yugoslav wars from 1991 to 1995 the resulting difficulties as well as the sanctions had hit all Yugoslav clubs hard After the breakup of SFR Yugoslavia in 1991 a new Yugoslavia was formed out from Serbia and Montenegro and was named FR Yugoslavia Notwithstanding Partizan won during the war two titles in a row in 1993 and 1994 The next two championships Partizan won came in 1996 and 1997 but after only few years of peace the Yugoslav clubs stood again before difficult times Between 1998 and 1999 peace was broken again because the situation in Kosovo worsened with continued clashes between Yugoslav security forces and the Kosovo Liberation Army The confrontations led to the Kosovo War and finally to the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia which started four days after the 112th Red Star Partizan derby and this without a UN Mandate 39 The bombing campaign was criticized especially for the number of civilian casualties that resulted from the bombing 40 By this time Partizan won in 1999 a further championship title again during a war During these turbulent 1990s the club won also several national cups this in 1992 1994 and 1998 The key man for these trophies was Ljubisa Tumbakovic who became the most successful manager in Partizan s history In 1997 Partizan was reintroduced to European competitions following the lift of the UEFA ban on clubs from FR Yugoslavia but while the national team continued where they had stopped in the spring of 1992 the clubs had all their results erased and were treated as the beginners in the European competitions The decision met with incomprehension among the club officials of the Yugoslav clubs That decision will have long term catastrophic consequences for Partizan instead of enjoying the merits of its own many year work they would get harder opponents from the start and the competition would start already in July This decade has been marked by numerous team changes and the circle of selling the best players to richer European clubs after just a couple of seasons of first team football and replacing them with fresh young talents Many players are credited with the successes of the nineties such as Predrag Mijatovic Slavisa Jokanovic Savo Milosevic Albert Nađ Dragan Ciric Zoran Mirkovic Sasa Curcic Branko Brnovic Goran Pandurovic Drazen Bolic Nisa Saveljic Damir Cakar Budimir Vujacic Ivan Tomic Gjorgji Hristov Đorđe Tomic Ivica Kralj Mateja Kezman and many others The new beginning 2000 2007 edit The new millennium has arrived but the goals remain the same In the last 12 years Partizan has won eight national championships four cups and managed to qualify two times for the UEFA Champions League and five times for the UEFA Europa League Led by Ljubisa Tumbakovic the club won two championship titles in a row in 2001 02 41 and 2002 03 42 In Europe Partizan did not have much success in those seasons though the next one would become its best season in Europe after 1965 66 where it reached the 1966 European Cup final The club s management took the 2003 season very seriously appointing as its new coach the former World Player of the Year Lothar Matthaus and brought some top and experienced players like Taribo West from 1 FC Kaiserslautern Ljubinko Drulovic from Benfica and Tomasz Rzasa from Feyenoord For the first time in its history the club played in the UEFA Champions League after eliminating Bobby Robson s Newcastle United In Belgrade Partizan lost by 0 1 but in rematch at St James Park they won by Ivica Iliev s goal in regular time and reached the group stages after a penalty shoot out 43 Later on Partizan was drawn in a tough group with Real Madrid the previous year s Champions League semi finalist Porto the winner of the 2002 03 UEFA Cup and the eventual winner of the competition and Marseille the eventual runners up of the 2003 04 UEFA Cup 44 The Partizan Stadium was a tough ground for the opposition and the team did not lose a home game playing out a 0 0 draw with Real Madrid s famous Galacticos which included players such as Zinedine Zidane Ronaldo Luis Figo Roberto Carlos Raul and David Beckham a 1 1 draw with Porto led by coach Jose Mourinho and Marseille with its superstars Fabien Barthez and Didier Drogba while playing some inspired football in the away match in Madrid 0 1 Marseille 0 3 and Porto 1 2 They are the first Serbian team to qualify for the main draw of this elite European club competition since its inception in 1992 Playing in Europe was reflected in the championship and Partizan lost the title New coach Vladimir Vermezovic taken the charge of a team and he superiority won the championship in 2005 Also he became the only coach who has managed to take the team to the knockout stage of a European competition since new format That happened in the 2004 05 UEFA Cup where Partizan reached the round of 16 Later on he was eliminated by CSKA Moscow the eventual winner of the competition Poor results in domestic and international competitions in 2006 prompted the club s officials to look for a new head coach First Jurgen Rober was brought in then later Miodrag Jesic though neither succeeded in winning the domestic title Although Partizan has managed to qualify for the 2006 07 UEFA Cup group stage 45 that season was viewed as a failure Contemporary history 2007 2020 edit Former Partizan player Slavisa Jokanovic were appointed as Partizan s new head coach 46 with the club also adding a new sport director in Ivan Tomic The club strengthened its squad with some foreigners like Juca 47 Almami Moreira and Lamine Diarra The 2007 08 48 and 2008 09 season 49 will remain as one of the most successful in club s domestic history In 2008 09 the club successfully defended their league and cup double from the 2007 08 season the first time this occurred its history But in Europe Partizan suffered a real shock UEFA expelled Partizan from the 2007 08 UEFA Cup season and fined the club 30 056 due to crowd trouble at their away qualifying match against Zrinjski Mostar 50 which forced the match to be interrupted for ten minutes UEFA judged travelling Partizan fans to have been the culprits of the trouble 51 but Partizan were allowed to play the return leg while the appeal was being processed 52 Partizan s appeal however was rejected and Zrinjski Mostar qualified for the next round although Partizan beat them by an aggregate score of 11 1 Next season the club enforced its squad with Brazilian striker Cleo 53 Partizan demolished Welsh champions Rhyl with a score of 8 0 12 0 on aggregate on 21 July 2009 54 This score is their largest ever winning margin in European competitions After relegation from the Champions League Partizan qualified two times in a row for the second tier of UEFA competition The Black amp Whites played in the 2008 UEFA Cup 55 and 2009 Europa League 56 group stage but as the same in 2007 the club did not advance any further Unfortunately even though a good European season was behind them the club ended the season trophyless nbsp nbsp Stojkovic nbsp Jovanovic nbsp Krstajic nbsp Savic nbsp Lazevski nbsp Petrovic nbsp Medo nbsp Moreira nbsp Babovic nbsp Ilic nbsp CleoPartizan s starting XI under coach Stanojevic in their UEFA Champions League group stage match with Arsenal on 8 December 2010 nbsp Arsenal PartizanAfter Jokanovic the club decided to give a chance to the young coach and former Partizan footballer Aleksandar Stanojevic 57 He became the youngest head coach in the history of Partizan Stanojevic took over the club in very difficult period and managed to win the championship in 2010 58 although Partizan was 10 points behind from the 1st placed Red Star Belgrade In the 2011 the club won the double 59 In UEFA competitions Partizan qualified for the 2010 11 UEFA Champions League after beating Anderlecht for the second time At the Partizan Stadium the result was 2 2 In Brussels at the Constant Vanden Stock Stadium result was also 2 2 The key man was Cleo who scored two goals against the Belgians After penalty drama Partizan reached again the UEFA Champions League group stage 60 Now the draw for the group phase decided that Partizan will play in group H alongside Arsenal Shakhtar Donetsk the winner of the 2008 09 UEFA Cup and Sporting Braga the eventual runner up of the 2010 11 UEFA Europa League 61 On the matchday 1 Partizan lost against Shakhtar on Donbass Arena in Donetsk 0 1 Next game Partizan played against Arsenal at Partizan Stadium and lost 1 3 after they played inspired football with a 10 man team in the last 30 minutes of the match In two matches against Sporting Braga Partizan failed to score and they lost both games 0 2 in Braga 0 1 in Belgrade The last two rounds in the group have also brought inspired football but unfortunately it wasn t enough so Shakhtar Donetsk and The Gunners defeated Partizan once again 0 3 in Belgrade and 1 3 at the Emirates Stadium In the following season the elimination during the 2012 Europa League qualifying stage didn t affect the club in national championship but after the half season Stanojevic was released Partizan then signed former Chelsea manager Avram Grant 62 who was able to preserve the lead from the half season He led Partizan to their fifth consecutive league title but lost three times against fierce rivals Red Star 63 Grant resigned 63 and former Partizan manager Vladimir Vermezovic returned to Belgrade in May 2012 Partizan did not qualify for the 2012 13 UEFA Champions League but did gain a place in the 2012 13 UEFA Europa League group stage Because of poor results in the second part of national championship Vermezovic was dismissed and replaced by Vuk Rasovic 64 Following the victory in the eternal derby and in pre last round Rasovic secured a sixth consecutive title a total of 25th in history of the club 65 As a champion of the Serbian SuperLiga for 2012 13 season Partizan managed to equalize a national record by the number of championship titles won 65 In summer of 2013 Partizan eliminated Shirak 1 1 away goal and lost against Ludogorets Razgrad 1 3 on aggregate In play off round for 2013 14 UEFA Europa League Partizan played with Thun Partizan beat Thun 1 0 in Belgrade but lost 0 3 in Thun and failed to get in Europa League 66 Without a single trophy and group stage of some European competition the season was the worst in last ten years After a year of absence from the European scene Partizan entered at the 2014 15 UEFA Europa League by beating Neftchi total score 5 3 3 2 at home and 1 2 away 67 Partizan is after the draw placed in Group C with Tottenham Hotspur Besiktas and Asteras Tripoli 68 Partizan began the Europa League in excellent form and remained undefeated against the English giant Tottenham but in the next four games the club were defeated The 2014 15 season was a successful for Partizan winning the Serbian championship and securing passage to the group stage of the Europa League After falling out of the play off for the Champions League in the summer of 2015 Partizan has directly entered the 2015 16 UEFA Europa League The club was placed in Group L alongside Athletic Bilbao AZ Alkmaar and FC Augsburg 69 Partizan made three victories in group stage 3 2 at home 70 and 2 1 in away 71 against AZ and 3 1 in Augsburg against same team 72 but he failed to get in Round of 32 73 Partizan failed to defend the title but won Serbian Cup after five years without conceding goal Partizan is first team who managed to win the Serbian Cup without conceding goal in history 74 A few days after the sixth double in club history on the 2016 17 season coach Nikolic left the club and signed with Hungarian club Videoton 75 A couple days after Nikolic s departure Miroslav Đukic returned to Partizan 76 In the second qualifying round for the 2017 18 UEFA Champions League Partizan eliminated Buducnost Podgorica 2 0 on aggregate but in the third round they were eliminated by Olympiacos 3 5 on aggregate In the play off round for 2017 18 UEFA Europa League Partizan played against Videoton and ex coach Marko Nikolic After a 0 0 draw in Belgrade Partizan defeated Videoton 4 0 in Felcsut and reached the group stage 77 where they were drawn in UEFA Europa League s Group B alongside Dynamo Kyiv Young Boys and Skenderbeu Korce 78 Partizan drawn 1 1 with Young Boys in the first match of Group B Partizan later played against Dynamo Kyiv after leading 2 0 at half time they lost 3 2 The next two Partizan matches were against Skenderbeu Korce in Korce they drew 0 0 and then won 2 0 in Belgrade Partizan then beat Young Boys 2 1 at home and secured a place on the knock out stage In the last match of the group Partizan lost 4 1 to Dynamo Kyiv in Kyiv although they were already qualified Partizan ranked second in the group with eight points two more than Young Boys and five less than Dynamo Kyiv In the round of 32 Partizan played against Viktoria Plzen 79 in Belgrade they took the lead but then conceded a late goal which came from an offside position thus ending the match with a 1 1 draw In Plzen Viktoria won 2 0 and Partizan were eliminated from UEFA Europa League at the round of 32 The result was 3 1 for Viktoria on aggregate At the start of 2019 20 season squad was strengthened with Israeli international Bibras Natcho Japanese international Takuma Asano and talented Nigerian striker Umar Sadiq In July and August 2019 Partizan secured their ninth participation in the group stage of UEFA Europa League 80 Under Savo Milosevic s leadership Partizan knocked out Connah s Quay Nomads F C 1 0 and 3 0 81 Yeni Malatyaspor 3 1 and 0 1 82 and Molde FK 83 2 1 and 1 1 in the qualifiers On 30 August Partizan was drawn on Group L of the 2019 20 UEFA Europa League alongside Manchester United FC Astana and AZ Alkmaar 84 On 19 September Partizan opened the group stage campaign with a 2 2 home draw against AZ 85 Due to UEFA sanctions this game was played behind closed doors with only U15s allowed to attend official attendance at the game was 22 564 86 Partizan beat Astana 2 1 away on matchday 2 but lost the two following games against Manchester United 0 1 in Belgrade and 3 0 in Manchester They still managed to draw in Alkmaar against AZ 2 2 and beat Astana 4 1 at home on the last two games of the group However this was not enough to get through as they finished third in the group just one point behind AZ In the SuperLiga Partizan won second place with 14 points less than Red Star In the Serbian Cup Partizan defeated Red Star in the semi finals with a score of 1 0 after the 58 th minute goal by Bibras Natcho 87 In the final at the Cair Stadium in Nis they met Vojvodina After the regular time it was 2 2 as Partizan equalized in the last moments of the match with a spectacular goal by Strahinja Pavlovic However Vojvodina was better after the penalty shootout with 4 2 so after a long time Partizan finished the season without a trophy The third decade of the 21st century edit The third decade a new challenge Partizan debuted in the inaugural season of the newly formed competition UEFA Europa Conference League 2021 22 In Second qualifying round Partizan knocked out DAC Dunajska Streda 1 0 and 2 0 88 89 The draw for the third qualifying round decided that Partizan would face Sochi In the first leg played on Fisht Olympic Stadium result was 1 1 in the return leg in Belgrade the two sides once more played a draw this time it was 2 2 Because of the new rule that away goals no longer count after thirty minutes of extra time the match went into penalties which Partizan won 4 2 90 91 The last opponent in the qualifying Play off round was Portuguese Santa Clara Partizan lost 2 1 in the first game in Ponta Delgada but won 2 0 at home and thus advanced to Group stage 92 93 Partizan was placed in Group B together with Gent Anorthosis Famagusta and Flora The Serbian team finished second in the group with eight points and secured a place in knockout phase After the draws in Nyon Sparta Prague was chosen as Partizan s next opponent this is the first meeting between the two clubs since 1966 In the first game played on February 17 2022 Partizan won 1 0 at Stadion Letna with a goal by Queensy Menig Fantastic ball by Sasa Zdjelar He employed Menig who escaped the defense and brilliantly lobbed Dominik Holec for the lead In the second leg a week later Partizan won 2 1 with two goals by Ricardo And after seventeen years Partizan reached the Round of 16 in some UEFA competition 94 95 In the round of 16 Partizan suffered a heavy defeat against Feyenoord 2 5 and 1 3 who ended up playing in the finals against Roma 96 97 In the 2021 22 Serbian SuperLiga season Partizan finished second to Red Star after leading for most of the season As a result Aleksandar Stanojevic resigned after two seasons without winning the championship trophy Crest and colours editIn October 1945 Partizan adopted as their first crest a blue disc with a yellow bordered red five pointed star in the middle which symbolized communism 98 and contained the abbreviation JA Jugoslovenska Armija The Yugoslav Army inside it Later on the central circle became white with a red five pointed star in it It was surrounded by a larger blue circle in which the words the Yugoslav Army were written while both circles were bordered by a yellow circle with a green wreath over it At the bottom of the emblem was a shield with red and white lines and on the top were five torches each representing one of the five nations of Yugoslavia Serbs Croats Slovenes Macedonians and Montenegrins This was a clear reference to the National Emblem of Yugoslavia 99 Crests nbsp 1945 1947In the early 1950s Partizan was separated from the Yugoslav Army and for the first time the team s name was written in the Cyrillic and Latin alphabets The inscription of the Yugoslav Army was removed from the crest along with the green wreath and was replaced by the words Sportsko Drustvo Sports association Partizan used this emblem until 1958 although it changed its equipment colors of blue and red to black and white a year before The crest was also changed to be completely black and white and Sportsko Drustvo was amended into Jugoslovensko Sportsko Drustvo Yugoslav Sports Association while the five red torches and the five pointed star remained 99 It was slightly redesigned after 1963 by adding a sixth torch to reflect the change of the official state emblem which now included six torches representing six Yugoslav republics 98 instead of the previous five representing the nations The crest remained unchanged until the breakup of Yugoslavia nbsp Partizan s home shirt for the 2011 12 campaign By 1992 with Yugoslavia fragmenting instead of Jugoslovensko Sportsko Drustvo the word Fudbalski klub football club were inserted and this crest remains in use to this day The author of the crest was academic painter Branko Sotra 99 In the 2007 08 season Partizan won its 20th national championship and added two stars above their crest symbolizing the 20 titles won 99 100 However there is an alternative crest which Partizan supporters call the shovel but it is never used in official matches 99 I m responsible because Partizan adopted black and white colors I suggested change of shirts on behalf of the whole team to club s general secretary Artur Takac It all happened while we were on tour in South America and when we played a friendly match against Juventus in 1957 We got as gift two sets of their jerseys as they were delighted with our game All the players were thrilled with the quality and color of the new uniforms and they asked me to wear them all the time which happened at the end and Partizan s colors has remained black and white to this day Stjepan Bobek in an informal interview with the Belgrade media 101 For most of its history Partizan has played in black and white striped jerseys but during its earliest days it used entirely dark red blue or white jerseys 102 In 1950 Partizan briefly had an all white shirt with a blue diagonal stripe besides an all blue shirt 102 From 1952 the first red blue striped and quartered jerseys appeared 102 In 1957 the club was on tour in South America and after a friendly game with Juventus a president of the Italian club Umberto Agnelli donated the club two sets of black and white jerseys 101 Since then Partizan has played mainly in black and white striped shirts 102 with black or white shorts and socks 103 But there were exceptions like in 1974 when they wore a black and white hooped shirt and 1982 when they have played in a plain white jerseys with a thick black stripe across them 102 In 1990 the red and blue jersey returned after more than 30 years in an away match against Hibernians during the UEFA Cup campaign All this time the away shirts have been mostly either all white or occasionally red blue striped but in recent years an all black strip is usually used 102 Stadium and training ground editMain articles Partizan Stadium and SC Partizan Teleoptik The stadium s name is Partizan Stadium although it was known as JNA Stadium Serbian Stadion Јugoslovenske narodne armiјe romanized Stadion JNA Stadion Jugoslovenske narodne armije Stadium of the Yugoslav People s Army for most of its history and even today a lot of football fans in all countries of the former Yugoslavia call it by its old name Partizan supporters sometimes call it Fudbalski hram The Temple of Football 104 The stadium is situated in the Savski Venac municipality in central Belgrade Designed by architect Mihailo Jankovic the ground was built on the site of BSK Stadium 105 It was officially opened on Day of Yugoslav People s Army on 22 December 1951 106 The first match ever played was between Yugoslavia and France on 9 October 1949 4 The stadium had a capacity of 55 000 until it was renovated in 1998 following UEFA security regulations 4 This led to the conversion of the stadium into an all seater reducing the capacity to 32 710 1 currently the second largest stadium in Serbia behind the Red Star Stadium 104 The ground has also been used for a variety of other sport events since 1949 It was used from the mid fifties until 1987 as the final point of yearly festivities called the Youth Day 107 Also it was the host of the 1962 European Athletics Championships a place for various concerts and it hosted many times the Yugoslav Cup and Serbian Cup final 108 109 nbsp A panorama of Partizan Stadium from the north stand Partizan youth school and affiliates editMain articles FK Partizan Academy and FK Teleoptik The Partizan youth school called Youth School Belin Lazarevic Nadoveza was founded in the 1950s and named after former Partizan players Bruno Belin Cedomir Lazarevic and Branko Nadoveza 110 The club is well known for its dedicated work with youngsters 110 Its training philosophy is not only the development of football players but also to care of their growth and personality forming while also teaching the sporting spirit 110 There are around 400 youngsters classified by age categories 110 There are six age groups four compete at the level of the Football Association of Serbia the U17 U16 U15 and U14 while the U13 and U12 compete at the level of the Football Association of Belgrade 110 Below U12 level there are no official competitions but players do play in tournaments and friendly matches 110 Partizan is the club with the most league titles and cup wins in youth competition in Serbia 110 The youth teams also participate in numerous tournaments around Europe and also organize an U17 international tournament with participation of some of the top European clubs 110 Partizan also organizes football camps for children in Serbia Montenegro Bosnia and Herzegovina Slovenia Australia 110 111 and the United States 111 112 Many of the best youth academy players move directly to the Partizan senior side or to the affiliate club Teleoptik Zemun 110 All of Partizan s youth categories train at the Partizan sports complex named SC Partizan Teleoptik along with Partizan s seniors and the players of Teleoptik 113 Partizan has won several awards for its youth work including Best European Youth Work in 2006 114 and the club s youth school has been declared the second best in Europe after that of Ajax 115 Partizan s academy has produced numerous professional football players or Yugoslav and Serbian internationals Notable players from the recent past include Sasa Ilic Savo Milosevic Danko Lazovic Stefan Babovic Miralem Sulejmani Stevan Jovetic Adem Ljajic Matija Nastasic Lazar Markovic Milos Jojic Andrija Zivkovic Nikola Milenkovic Aleksandar Mitrovic Strahinja Pavlovic and Dusan Vlahovic Two Partizan youth academy graduates Dusan Vlahovic and Strahinja Pavlovic are featured in UEFA com Fifty for the Future selection in 2020 116 Recently players born after year 2000 like Filip Stevanovic Marko Milovanovic and Samed Bazdar who made it into the Guardian s Next Generation 2021 shortlist 117 are showing class for their age and having great potential Supporters editMain article Grobari nbsp Grobari celebrating Partizan s 27th league title won in 2017According to a 2008 domestic poll Partizan is the second popular football club in Serbia behind Red Star Belgrade 118 Although fewer focus groups show that Partizan fans are considered to be more devoted to their club 119 The club has a large fanbase in Montenegro 120 Bosnia and Herzegovina especially in the Serb entity of Republika Srpska They also have many supporters in all other former Yugoslav republics like North Macedonia 8 Slovenia 121 and among the Serbian diaspora especially in Germany 122 Austria 122 Switzerland 121 Sweden 122 Canada Malta the United States and Australia The organized supporters of Partizan are called Grobari The Gravediggers or Undertakers 123 which were formed in 1970 and situated mainly on the south stand of the Partizan Stadium therefore they are also known as Grobari Jug The Undertakers South 122 Even some ordinary Partizan fans often refer to themselves as Grobari The nickname itself was given by their sporting rivals Delije of Red Star referring to the club s mostly black colours which were similar to the official uniforms of cemetery undertakers 123 The other theory is that the name comes from a misinterpretation of the name of the street on which Partizan s stadium is located Humska humka roughly translates as grave or entombment 122 when actually the street was named after Serbian medieval land of Hum nowadays part of Herzegovina and South Dalmatia The Grobari support all clubs in the Partizan Sports Association and in the course of time they have become recognizable by their noisy and constant cheering as well as their devotion and loyalty to the club 124 The basis of their cheering is referred in the Serbian fan scene as the principle of srce ruke glas heart hands voice or glas i dlan voice and palms 124 along with songs in distinctive style 124 The Grobari as a whole maintain a close friendship with the organized supporters of PAOK CSKA Moscow and CSKA Sofia 125 126 which started originally because of the two supporters common Orthodox faith and similar founding backgrounds It has been suggested that many ultras took part in the armed conflicts and carry their scars today translating the tribal nature of the Yugoslav wars to their clubs and ultras groups 127 Grobari have also a traditional friendship with Juventude Leonina the main ultras group of Portuguese side Sporting Clube de Portugal 128 The direction boards of both clubs have also good relations which was kept ever since the 1955 56 European Cup edition which on 4 September 1955 in Lisbon s Estadio Nacional put head a head the two teams in what was considered the opening whistle of the UEFA European club competitions The game finished with a 3 3 draw with Sporting later losing in Belgrade in the second hand by 5 2 however the club boards of both teams regularly meet from time to time to mark the occasion of this historic event Celebrity supporters editJosip Broz Tito Yugoslav revolutionary military leader and statesman Boris Tadic Serbian politician who served as the president of Serbia from 2004 to 2012 Tomislav Nikolic Former politician who served as the president of Serbia from 2012 to 2017 Rasim Ljajic Serbian politician Ivica Dacic Serbian politician Branko Ruzic Serbian politician Ratko Mladic former military officer Dusko Radovic Writer journalist aphorist and a poet Dobrica Eric Writer and poet Dusan Kovacevic Playwright scriptwriter film director and academic Filip David writer and screenwriter Svetislav Basara writer and columnist Peter Handke Novelist playwright translator poet film director and screenwriter Emir Kusturica Film director screenwriter actor producer and musician Goran Bregovic Musician songwriter and composer Dragan Bjelogrlic Actor director and producer Srđan Dragojevic Film director and screenwriter Darko Bajic Film director Rade Serbedzija Actor director and musician Lazar Ristovski Retired actor director producer and writer Sergej Trifunovic Actor comedian singer politician and citizen activist Branislav Lecic Actor director academic writer politician Bora Todorovic Actor Srđan Todorovic Actor and musician Zoran Radmilovic Actor Mija Aleksic Actor Tanja Boskovic Actress Vanja Bulic Journalist and author Tesa Tesanovic Journalist and TV host Eddy Grant Singer songwriter and multi instrumentalist Marija Serifovic Singer Zeljko Joksimovic Vocalist composer songwriter multi instrumentalist and producer Nele Karajlic Musician composer comedian actor writer and television director Zoran Kostic Rock musician Dragoljub Đuricic Drummer Ana Stanic Pop singer songwriter composer Niggor Hip hop and electronic artist Ajs Nigrutin Rapper and voice actor Sajsi MC Rapper and songwriter Rasta Rapper songwriter and producer Voyage Rapper and actor Slobodan Ninkovic Actor Petar Strugar Actor and presenter Marko Zivic Actor and comedian Zoran Cvijanovic Actor and producer Viktor Troicki Former professional tennis player Ana Schweinsteiger Former professional tennis player Bojan Velickovic mixed martial artist and sambist currently competing in the Welterweight division Kristijan Golubovic MMA fighter television personality and former criminal Marko Bulat Pop folk singer and musician Ljubomir Bandovic Actor Mihailo Janketic Actor of theater film and television Tihomir Stanic Actor Katarina Radivojevic Actress Maja Mandzuka Actress Marija Karan Actress Jelena Gavrilovic Actress and singer Goca Trzan Singer actress and television personality Emina Jahovic Singer songwriter actress and businesswoman Neda Ukraden Folk singer Nada Topcagic Folk singerRivalries editMain article Eternal derby Serbia See also Derby of Serbia nbsp Red Star Partizan matchPartizan s biggest rivalry is with Red Star Belgrade 129 The matches between these rivals have been labeled as the Eternal derby Serbian Vechiti derbi Veciti derbi or Belgrade derby 129 The rivalry started immediately after the creation of the two clubs Red Star was founded for Yugoslav youth and Partizan as the football section of the Yugoslav People s Army 129 The rivalry is also intensified by the fact that both clubs have their stadiums situated only a few hundred metres apart 129 The Eternal derby is particularly noted for the passion of both supporters groups The stands of both teams feature fireworks coloured confetti flags rolls of paper torches smoke drums giant posters and choreographies used to create visual grandeur and apply psychological pressure on the visiting teams hence the slogan Welcome to Hellgrade 130 Some fans also use trumpets similar to the supporters in South America This creates for the region a typical and distinctive Balkan Brass Band atmosphere Both sets of supporters sing passionate songs against their rivals and the stadiums are known to bounce with the simultaneous jumping of the fans The duel is regarded by Bleacher Report as one of the greatest football rivalries in the world 131 Along with the Old Firm the Rome derby and the Istanbul derby the Belgrade derby is known as one of the most intense rivalries in European football 132 The largest attendance at a derby match was about 100 000 spectators 90 142 with paid tickets on 7 November 1976 at the Red Star Stadium 133 The biggest win was 7 1 for Partizan on 6 December 1953 at the Partizan Stadium 133 134 but the club with the most victories is Red Star During the Yugoslav era between 1945 and 1991 Partizan maintained a rivalry with other members of the so called big four Along with Partizan and Red Star the big four included Dinamo Zagreb and Hajduk Split Results in the table include domestic championship and cup games Partizan played against other members of the Yugoslav big four up to and including the season 1990 91 135 Against Wins Draws Defeats GoaldifferenceRed Star 47 56 67 199 234Dinamo Zagreb 40 23 37 153 156Hajduk Split 45 23 25 157 110Total 132 102 129 509 500Other rivalries include regional rivalry with Vojvodina with whom they contest the Derby of Serbia minor derby with neighbouring Zemun 136 and Belgrade derbies with Rad and OFK Belgrade Seasons editSee also List of FK Partizan seasonsPartizan in European football editMain article FK Partizan in European football Partizan s best European performance was in the 1965 66 season when they reached the Final of the European Cup Champions League UEFA Team ranking edit See also UEFA coefficient Updated 9 December 2021 137 Rank Team Points62 nbsp Qarabag 24 00063 nbsp Real Sociedad 24 00064 nbsp Maccabi Tel Aviv 23 50065 nbsp Partizan 23 50066 nbsp Malmo 23 50067 nbsp 1899 Hoffenheim 23 00068 nbsp Sheriff Tiraspol 22 500Honours editOverall Partizan have won 46 official titles including 27 national championships 16 national cups 1 national supercup 1 national champions league and 1 Mitropa Cup Domestic competitions 45 edit League 27 edit Yugoslav First League Winners 11 1946 47 1948 49 1960 61 1961 62 1962 63 1964 65 1975 76 1977 78 1982 83 1985 86 1986 87 Serbia and Montenegro First League record Winners 8 1992 93 1993 94 1995 96 1996 97 1998 99 2001 02 2002 03 2004 05 Serbian SuperLiga Winners 8 2007 08 2008 09 2009 10 2010 11 2011 12 2012 13 2014 15 2016 17Cups 16 edit Yugoslav Cup Winners 6 1946 47 1951 52 1953 54 1956 57 1988 89 1991 92 Serbia and Montenegro Cup Winners 3 1993 94 1997 98 2000 01 Serbian Cup record Winners 7 2007 08 2008 09 2010 11 2015 16 2016 17 2017 18 2018 19Super cups 1 edit Yugoslav Super Cup Winners 1 1989National Champions League 1 edit Yugoslav Summer Champions League Winners 1 1969International competitions 1 edit Mitropa Cup Winners 1 1978 European Cup UEFA Champions League Runners up 1 1965 1966Friendly tournaments 12 edit Kvarnerska Rivijera 4 1959 1965 1966 1991 Trofeo Mohamed V 1 1963 Torneo Pentagonal Internacional de la Ciudad de Mexico 1 1970 Torneo Pentagonal Internacional de la Ciudad de Bogota 1 1971 Trofeo Colombino de futbol 1 1976 Lunar New Year Cup 1 1984 40th Anniversary FK Partizan 1 1985 Uhrencup 1 1989 Blue Stars FIFA Youth Cup 1 2007Club records editMain article List of FK Partizan records and statistics Partizan s record holder by number of appearances is player Sasa Ilic He played 874 games in two turns from 1996 and 2005 and from 2010 till 2019 138 The goal scoring record holder is striker Stjepan Bobek with 425 goals 139 Over 150 footballers from Partizan have played for the Yugoslav and Serbian national football teams 140 Stjepan Bobek held the Yugoslavian national team record with 38 goals 141 with second place being shared by Savo Milosevic Milan Galic and Blagoje Marjanovic who scored 37 goals each 141 Aleksandar Mitrovic holds the Serbian national team record with 52 goals as of late 2021 this means four out of five national team top goalscorers have been Partizan players Partizan are record holders of the Yugoslav First League in terms of points acquired during a campaign with 107 and are the only league winning team to have gone undefeated during one season in 2005 and 2010 Partizan became the first champion of Yugoslavia in 1947 the first Yugoslav Cup winner also in 1947 and therefore also the first double winner in the country They won three consecutive championship titles in 1961 1962 and 1963 the first title hat trick in the history of the Yugoslav First League 142 Partizan won the most national championships since the dissolution of Yugoslavia becoming champions 13 times They are the only Serbian club ever since the first nationwide domestic football competition in 1923 to win six consecutive national titles a feat they achieved between 2007 and 2013 143 The club holds records such as playing in the first European Champions Cup match in 1955 144 becoming the first Balkan and Eastern European club to play in the European Champions Cup final in 1966 6 and becoming the first club from Serbia to take part in the UEFA Champions League group stages in 2003 145 The club s greatest victory in European competitions was 8 0 against Welsh champions Rhyl in qualifying for the 2009 10 UEFA Champions League 54 Players editCurrent squad edit As of 19 September 2023 146 147 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK nbsp SRB Aleksandar Jovanovic2 DF nbsp SRB Aranđel Stojkovic3 DF nbsp SRB Mihajlo Ilic4 DF nbsp BIH Sinisa Sanicanin5 DF nbsp SRB Nikola Antic6 DF nbsp SRB Svetozar Markovic Captain 7 FW nbsp CUW Xander Severina8 MF nbsp SEN Franck Kanoute9 FW nbsp NED Queensy Menig10 MF nbsp ISR Bibras Natcho Vice captain 11 FW nbsp BRA Matheus Saldanha12 DF nbsp SRB Zlatan Sehovic14 FW nbsp SRB Samed Bazdar15 FW nbsp COD Aldo Kalulu17 DF nbsp SRB Marko Zivkovic No Pos Nation Player19 MF nbsp MNE Aleksandar Scekic20 FW nbsp SRB Andrija Pavlovic23 FW nbsp SRB Nemanja Nikolic25 DF nbsp BEL Nathan de Medina26 DF nbsp SRB Aleksandar Filipovic29 MF nbsp NOR Ghayas Zahid38 FW nbsp SRB Janko Jevremovic40 MF nbsp SRB Kristijan Belic41 GK nbsp SRB Vanja Radulaski43 FW nbsp SRB Nemanja Trifunovic44 FW nbsp SRB Bogdan Mircetic45 MF nbsp SRB Mateja Stjepanovic55 MF nbsp SRB Danilo Pantic85 GK nbsp SRB Nemanja Stevanovic90 FW nbsp SRB Mihajlo PetkovicPlayers with multiple nationalities edit nbsp nbsp Kristijan Belic nbsp nbsp Svetozar Markovic nbsp nbsp Aleksandar Scekic nbsp nbsp Aleksandar Jovanovic nbsp nbsp Sinisa Sanicanin nbsp nbsp Bibras Natcho nbsp nbsp Queensy Menig nbsp nbsp Xander Severina nbsp nbsp Aldo Kalulu nbsp nbsp Ghayas Zahid nbsp nbsp Nathan de Medina Other players under contract edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player87 FW nbsp SRB Nikola LakcevicOut on loan edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player50 FW nbsp MNE Marko Brnovic on loan at nbsp Rudar Pljevlja GK nbsp MNE Krsto Ljubanovic on loan at nbsp Teleoptik No Pos Nation Player MF nbsp SRB Đorđe Petrovic on loan at nbsp Teleoptik Notable domestic players edit Main article List of FK Partizan players To appear in this section a player must have played at least 80 matches for the club or made at least one international appearance Flags indicate the national teams the players played for Players that played for two different national teams have the flags of both national teams 148 nbsp Radomir Antic nbsp Aleksandar Atanackovic nbsp Stefan Babovic nbsp Mane Bajic nbsp Zoran Batrovic nbsp Radoslav Becejac nbsp Bruno Belin nbsp Nenad Bjekovic nbsp Stjepan Bobek nbsp Milos Bogunovic nbsp Miroslav Bogosavac nbsp Drazen Bolic nbsp Petar Borota nbsp Miroslav Boskovic nbsp Darko Brasanac nbsp nbsp Branko Brnovic nbsp Dragoljub Brnovic nbsp Nenad Brnovic nbsp nbsp Miroslav Brozovic nbsp nbsp Zlatko Cajkovski nbsp Damir Cakar nbsp Vlado Capljic nbsp Srđan Cebinac nbsp Zvezdan Cebinac nbsp Ratko Colic nbsp Dragan Ciric nbsp Milivoje Cirkovic nbsp Sasa Curcic nbsp Ivan Curkovic nbsp Milan Damjanovic nbsp Aleksandar Davidov nbsp Bozidar Drenovac nbsp Ljubinko Drulovic nbsp nbsp Igor Duljaj nbsp Milos Đelmas nbsp Borivoje Đorđevic nbsp Nenad Đorđevic nbsp Svemir Đorđic nbsp Vladislav Đukic nbsp nbsp Milko Đurovski nbsp Ljubomir Fejsa nbsp Vladimir Firm nbsp Milan Galic nbsp Franjo Glazer nbsp Ivan Golac nbsp Mustafa Hasanagic nbsp Jusuf Hatunic nbsp Antun Herceg nbsp Edvard Hocevar nbsp Idriz Hosic nbsp Brana Ilic nbsp Radisa Ilic nbsp nbsp Sasa Ilic nbsp Ivica Iliev nbsp Đorđe Ivanovic nbsp Vladimir Ivic nbsp Lajos Jakovetic nbsp Miodrag Jesic nbsp Marko Jevtovic nbsp Jovan Jezerkic nbsp Stanoje Jocic nbsp Milos Jojic nbsp nbsp Slavisa Jokanovic nbsp Miodrag Jovanovic nbsp Nemanja Jovic nbsp Fahrudin Jusufi nbsp Tomislav Kaloperovic nbsp nbsp Srecko Katanec nbsp Ilija Katic nbsp Mateja Kezman nbsp Nikica Klincarski nbsp Bozidar Kolakovic nbsp Vladica Kovacevic nbsp Refik Kozic nbsp Ivica Kralj nbsp nbsp Mladen Krstajic nbsp nbsp Danko Lazovic nbsp Marko Lomic nbsp Milan Lukac nbsp Sasa Lukic nbsp Adem Ljajic nbsp Dragan Mance nbsp Nikola Malbasa nbsp Lazar Markovic nbsp Svetozar Markovic nbsp Florijan Matekalo nbsp Branislav Mihajlovic nbsp Ljubomir Mihajlovic nbsp Prvoslav Mihajlovic nbsp nbsp Predrag Mijatovic nbsp Jovan Miladinovic nbsp nbsp Darko Milanic nbsp Nikola Milenkovic nbsp Nemanja G Miletic nbsp Nemanja R Miletic nbsp Goran Milojevic nbsp nbsp Savo Milosevic nbsp Milovan Milovic nbsp Aleksandar Mitrovic nbsp Bora Milutinovic nbsp Milos Milutinovic nbsp Aleksandar Miljkovic nbsp Zoran Mirkovic nbsp Albert Nađ nbsp Nikola Ninkovic nbsp nbsp Dzoni Novak nbsp Ivan Obradovic nbsp Bojan Ostojic nbsp Ognjen Ozegovic nbsp nbsp Dejan Ognjanovic nbsp nbsp Fahrudin Omerovic nbsp Bela Palfi nbsp Goran Pandurovic nbsp Danilo Pantic nbsp Milinko Pantic nbsp Blagoje Paunovic nbsp Veljko Paunovic nbsp Gordan Petric nbsp Strahinja Pavlovic nbsp Radosav Petrovic nbsp Vlada Pejovic nbsp Josip Pirmajer nbsp Aleksandar Popovic nbsp Dzevad Prekazi nbsp Radovan Radakovic nbsp Ljubomir Radanovic nbsp Lazar Radovic nbsp Miroslav Radovic nbsp Miodrag Radovic nbsp Branko Rasovic nbsp Vuk Rasovic nbsp nbsp Nemanja Rnic nbsp Antonio Rukavina nbsp Slobodan Santrac nbsp Nisa Saveljic nbsp Bozidar Sencar nbsp nbsp Kiril Simonovski nbsp nbsp Admir Smajic nbsp Milan Smiljanic nbsp Velimir Sombolac nbsp Predrag Spasic nbsp Vojislav Stankovic nbsp nbsp Vujadin Stanojkovic nbsp Alen Stevanovic nbsp Goran Stevanovic nbsp Filip Stevanovic nbsp Slavko Stojanovic nbsp Ranko Stojic nbsp Nenad Stojkovic nbsp Vladimir Stojkovic nbsp Miralem Sulejmani nbsp Đorđe Svetlicic nbsp Bojan Saranov nbsp nbsp Slađan Scepovic nbsp Marko Scepovic nbsp Stefan Scepovic nbsp Petar Skuletic nbsp Milutin Soskic nbsp Franjo Sostaric nbsp Đorđe Tomic nbsp Ivan Tomic nbsp Nemanja Tomic nbsp Zoran Tosic nbsp Aleksandar Trifunovic nbsp Goran Trobok nbsp Slobodan Urosevic nbsp Zvonko Varga nbsp Marko Valok nbsp Joakim Vislavski nbsp Velibor Vasovic nbsp Vladimir Vermezovic nbsp Fadilj Vokri nbsp Dusan Vlahovic nbsp nbsp Vladimir Volkov nbsp nbsp Budimir Vujacic nbsp nbsp Simon Vukcevic nbsp Milan Vukelic nbsp Zvonimir Vukic nbsp Todor Veselinovic nbsp Momcilo Vukotic nbsp Miroslav Vulicevic nbsp Ilija Zavisic nbsp Sasa Zdjelar nbsp Branko Zebec nbsp Miodrag Zivaljevic nbsp Andrija Zivkovic nbsp Zvonko Zivkovic Notable foreign players edit To appear in this section a player must have played at least 30 matches for the club or made at least one international appearance Flags indicate the national teams the players played for Players that played for two different national teams have the flags of both national teams nbsp Branimir Bajic nbsp Darko Maletic nbsp Nenad Miskovic nbsp Goran Zakaric nbsp Sinisa Sanicanin nbsp Cleo nbsp Juca nbsp Leonardo nbsp Everton Luiz nbsp Ivan Bandalovski nbsp Valeri Bojinov nbsp Ivan Ivanov nbsp Predrag Pazin nbsp Filip Holender nbsp Macky Bagnack nbsp Pierre Boya nbsp Eric Djemba Djemba nbsp Aboubakar Oumarou nbsp Leandre Tawamba nbsp Andres Colorado nbsp Ricardo Gomes nbsp Patrick Andrade nbsp David Manga nbsp Liu Haiguang nbsp Jia Xiuquan nbsp Dominic Adiyiah nbsp Prince Tagoe nbsp Seydouba Soumah nbsp Fousseni Diabate nbsp Hamidou Traore nbsp Almami Moreira nbsp Ilija Mitic nbsp Scoop Stanisic nbsp Bibras Natcho nbsp Takuma Asano nbsp Mohamed El Monir nbsp Mohamed Zubya nbsp Marjan Gerasimovski nbsp Gjorgji Hristov nbsp Aleksandar Lazevski nbsp Milan Stojanoski nbsp Viktor Trenevski span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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