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Wikipedia

FK Sarajevo

Fudbalski klub Sarajevo (Cyrillic: Фудбалски клуб Сарајево; English: Sarajevo Football Club) is a professional football club based in Sarajevo, the capital city of Bosnia and Herzegovina and is one of the most successful clubs in the country.

FK Sarajevo
Full nameFudbalski klub Sarajevo
Nickname(s)Bordo-bijeli (The Maroon-Whites)
Divovi (The Giants)
Short nameFKS
Founded24 October 1946; 76 years ago (1946-10-24)
as FD Torpedo
GroundKoševo City Stadium
Capacity34,500
OwnerVincent Tan (60%)
Ismir Mirvić (30%)
Other (10%)
ChairmanIsmir Mirvić
ManagerMirza Varešanović
LeaguePremier League BH
2021–22Premier League BH, 4th
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Founded on 24 October 1946, FK Sarajevo was the most successful club from SR Bosnia and Herzegovina in the former SFR Yugoslavia, winning two Yugoslav First League titles, finishing runners-up on two other occasions and placing 6th in that competition's all-time table.[1]

Today, FK Sarajevo is one of the most prominent members of the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, where it has won five Bosnian championships, seven Bosnian Cups and one Bosnian Supercup. Furthermore, the club finished runners-up in the national championship another seven times. It is ranked first in the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina all-time table and is the country's most prominent representative in European competitions. FK Sarajevo is the most popular football club in the country, along with FK Željezničar, with whom it shares a strong rivalry that manifests itself in the Sarajevo derby, also known as the Eternal derby (Vječiti derbi).

The club plays its home matches at the Asim Ferhatović Hase Stadium, named after legendary club striker Asim Ferhatović. The stadium has a capacity of 34,500, and is the largest in the country.[2]

History

FK Sarajevo was the only major football club founded by the post-war Yugoslav authorities in the city of Sarajevo. The club entered the Yugoslav First League in the 1948–49 season, and eventually competed in all but two seasons in the top tier. After Bosnia and Herzegovina gained independence from Yugoslavia, FK Sarajevo became one of the country's biggest ambassadors, departing on a large world tour during the Bosnian War with the goal of gaining international support for the country's cause.[3]

Origins

FK Sarajevo was established on 24 October 1946 as the result of a merger between local Sarajevo football clubs Udarnik (Vanguard) and Sloboda (Liberty).[4] The club first appeared on the Yugoslav sports scene in 1946 under the name FD Torpedo that represented an homage to Torpedo Moscow. The first chairman of the newly founded club was Safet Džinović, while the positions of vice-chairmen were granted to Vojo Marković and Alojz Stanarević respectively. Furthermore, Josip Bulat was named manager.[5] The newly formed team, which inherited the results and league standings of Udarnik, was joined by selected players from both Udarnik and Sloboda. Namely, Hodžić, Vlajičić, Šarenkapa, Pauković, Fizović, Konjević, Radović, Viđen and Mustagrudić from the former, and Mantula, Glavočević, Tošić, Pecelj, Novo, Strinić, Đ. Lovrić and Alajbegović from the latter. The team played its first match on 3 November 1946. Another historical assembly was held on 5 October 1947 when it was decided, on the proposal of then editor of the popular daily newspaper Oslobođenje, Mirko Ostojić, that the club name would be changed to FD Sarajevo later SDM Sarajevo, before it was finally changed to the current name in 1949. In September 1948 FD Sarajevo was joined by Yugoslav footballing legend Miroslav Brozović, who brought in a largely needed level of experience to the new team. The Mostar native previously wore the black and white jersey of FK Partizan, as well as captaining the Yugoslav national team. Brozović was offered the position of player-manager which he accepted, turning his attentions to promoting the team to the Yugoslav First League.[6] FK Sarajevo first entered the top-flight Yugoslav First League after eliminating Belgrade club Sloga. They drew the first match 3:3 in Novi Sad, but then won the second match 5:1 in Sarajevo. The team were relegated after their first season in the First League, but were promoted back to the top-tier in 1950. From then on FK Sarajevo played in every season of the First League apart from 1957 to 1958. The club's first taste of European competitions began during the 1960s when it took part in the 1960 Mitropa Cup[7] and the 1961–63 Balkans Cup,[8] while the first serious European competition the club took part in was the 1962–63 Intertoto Cup.[9]

Champions of Yugoslavia - Bosnian breakthrough

Up until Sarajevo's Yugoslav First League title, no club from other republics within the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (other than SR Serbia and SR Croatia) has ever won this competition. The big four of SFRJ football dominated the league and Bosnian breakthrough finally came thanks to FK Sarajevo during the 1966–67 season. With Sarajevo winning the title they ended a run of eight consecutive seasons of winners from SR Serbia (record).

The 1960s: First championship

Mate, I can't play for money while having others tell me how to play the game. I'm grateful, they were fair and didn't make an issue out of it. I told them I can only play for Sarajevo

Asim Ferhatović, in an interview, after returning from a short stint with Fenerbahçe[10]

A key player for Sarajevo in their early years was legendary striker Asim Ferhatović, nicknamed Hase, who played for the club from 1952 to 1967. In 1963–64, he was top scorer in the First League with nineteen goals,[11] while the club finished fourth. The following year the club finished second (to Partizan Belgrade).[12] Sarajevo won their first Yugoslav First League title in 1966–67, becoming the first national champions from Bosnia and Herzegovina.[12] Sarajevo started the historic season with Brozović at the helm of the coaching staff. The team had a dream start with back to back wins against FK Sutjeska Nikšić and their city rivals FK Željezničar. This was followed by a draw against the European Cup runners-up, FK Partizan, in which Sarajevo squandered an early lead. With seven points from their first three fixtures, Sarajevo was still not considered a title favorite, but that was to change after Brozović's boys returned from the Dalmatian coast with a win against Hajduk Split. Four days later Sarajevo beat NK Olimpija 2:1 at a sold out Koševo stadium. Hard earned wins against HNK Rijeka and Crvena Zvezda followed, and by the winter break Sarajevo had won 14 out of their first 20 league fixtures, finishing the year at pole position. The team opened the second part of the season away to Dinamo Zagreb in the last sixteen of the Yugoslav Cup winning 1:0 courtesy of a Boško Antić stunner. In the quarterfinals Sarajevo got the better of FK Napredak, but eventually lost in the Cup final to Hajduk Split, played at the Stari plac stadium on 24 May.[13] The team was quickly back to winning ways, defeating Crvena Zvezda at the Rajko Mitić Stadium 3:1 with two goals by Antić and one by Prodanović. A week later OFK Beograd was defeated with the same margin, but a shock defeat to FK Vojvodina in Novi Sad brought Dinamo Zagreb on level points with three games to go. FK Vardar was defeated next thanks to a Musemić brace, while Dinamo dropped points in Rijeka. In the last league fixture of the season Sarajevo hosted NK Čelik in front of 30,000 spectators and went on to win 5:2, bringing home the club's first league title.

The Last 16 of the European Cup

The league triumph qualified Sarajevo to the 1967–68 European Cup (today's UEFA Champions League), where they played their first tie against Cypriots Olympiakos Nicosia, winning 5:3 on aggregate.[14] In the second round (one round short of the quarter-finals), Sarajevo was knocked out 2:1 on aggregate by eventual champions Manchester United of England, despite hosting a goalless draw in the first leg.[15] The first leg was played before an audience of 40,000 spectators and refereed by the Italian Francesco Francescon. The second leg played at Old Trafford ended in controversy after the ball went out of bounds prior to the hosts scoring their second goal. Notable Sarajevo players during this era included Boško Antić, Mirsad Fazlagić, Vahidin Musemić, Fahrudin Prljača and Boško Prodanović.

Shortly after winning its first Yugoslav league title FK Sarajevo endured a period of general stagnation.[16] The team entered the 1967/68 season as strong title favorites, but the campaign turned out to be a complete disaster. The maroon-whites, managed by former player Franjo Lovrić, did not manage to enter the championship race in hopes of defending the title, finishing mere 7th.[17] The club management quickly named Munib Saračević manager for the 1968/69 season, but this move also turned out to be fruitless. The team concluded the disappointing campaign 11th in the league standings. In the 1971 January transfer window six members of the championship winning generation, including Boško Prodanović, Anđelko Tešan and Fahrudin Prljača, left the club while three more followed in July of the same year, including star player Boško Antić. The next season brought hope with the team going into the winter break clinching first spot, but only managing to finish 7th at the end of season. The 1973/74 season brought in a handful of new players, including the likes of future club legend Želimir Vidović and former Red Star Belgrade and Bayern Munich striker Dušan Jovanović. Furthermore, that same year 18-year-old Safet Sušić joined the club from Krivaja Zavidovići, and would go on to be one of the main catalysts for the club's second major spell at the top of Yugoslav football in the coming years.[18] It is important to note that all FK Sarajevo was able to muster in the first eleven seasons after taking home the title in 1967 was one 6th place league finish, two 7th place league finishes and a 1/4 final finish in the Yugoslav Cup in 1976/77.[16] In that same year the club barely retained its place in the top-tier with a two-point advantage over relegated Napredak Kruševac. The 1978/79 season though, brought a breath of fresh air for Sarajevo fans, with the team finishing 4th behind Hajduk Split, Dinamo Zagreb and Red Star Belgrade, and in doing so signalled things to come.[17]

The 1980s: Second championship

 
Safet Sušić represented the club for nearly a decade before moving to PSG. He managed Bosnia and Herzegovina at the 2014 FIFA World Cup.

Sarajevo had a second successful spell between 1978 and 1985, led by the attacking duo Predrag Pašić – Safet Sušić, which established itself among the most prolific tandems in Yugoslav and Bosnian football history. Predrag Pašić nicknamed "Paja" was a winger or striker and had emerged through the club's youth ranks, eventually going on to play for Sarajevo up until his move to VfB Stuttgart after the title winning season in 1985. On the other hand, Sušić nicknamed "Pape" played the positions of playmaker and attacking midfielder, and wore the maroon-white jersey from 1973 to 1982, when he moved to Paris Saint-Germain F.C. In 1978–79, Sušić scored 15 goals and was named Player of the Season as Sarajevo finished fourth. The following year, Sušić's 17 goals helped retain his Player of the Year title, but he was also joint top scorer in the league.[11]

On 4 May 1980, during the 23rd round of 1979–80 Yugoslav First League at Koševo Stadium during the game between Sarajevo and Osijek the news broke out of death of the Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito. The game was locked at 1–1. Later a song by local band Zabranjeno Pušenje dedicated a part of the song "Nedelja kad je otisao hase" to that sad event. The club came runner-up that season, seven points behind Red Star Belgrade,[19] therefore qualifying for the 1980–81 UEFA Cup. Sarajevo was knocked out in the first round by German powerhouse Hamburger SV, that won 7:5 on aggregate.[20] Sarajevo returned to the UEFA Cup in 1982–83 (having finished fourth during the 1981–82 Yugoslav First League), beating Bulgaria's Slavia Sofia 6:4 in the first round[21] and Romanian club FC Corvinul Hunedoara 8:4 in the second, thanks to a 4:0 home win in the second leg.[22] In the third round (last 16), Sarajevo lost their first leg 6:1 to Belgian club RSC Anderlecht, and despite winning the second leg 1:0, were eliminated by the eventual champions.[23] Sarajevo also reached the Yugoslav Cup final that season, losing 3:2 to Dinamo Zagreb in Belgrade.[24] Sarajevo won their second championship title in 1984–85, finishing four points ahead of runners-up Hajduk Split.[25] The new championship season didn't start in spectacular fashion for Sarajevo, but as the season continued the team kept gaining momentum and grasped first spot on way to the winter break.[26]Boško Antić's boys didn't start the second part of the season on a positive note, winning only two points out of their first three fixtures.[26] Their main rival Hajduk Split also started the second part of the season on the wrong foot, winning just one out of their first three matches, which kept Sarajevo above by one point. Antić's team went on to beat Sloboda and draw Dinamo Zagreb and Željezničar, before travelling to Split for the crucial game against Hajduk. A packed Poljud stadium witnessed a 0:0 draw that ensured Sarajevo's one point advantage over the Croatian side. The title race eventually came down to just the maroon-whites and the Dalmatian side, with hard won victories on both sides. Three games until the finish Hajduk secured a comfortable route over Rijeka, while Sarajevo had a much more difficult time in Novi Sad against Vojvodina; the hosts broke the deadlock after just two minutes of play. Luckily for the huge number of travelling fans, Boško Antić's men were able to equalize ten minutes from the break through a Jakovljević effort, and to eventually snatch the win seven minutes from time courtesy of a phenomenal volley from the edge of the box by Slaviša Vukićević.[26] The maroon-whites now needed five points from their three last fixtures to clinch the title. A routine 3:0 victory over Iskra was followed by a tough match against Vardar in Skopje that ended in a 2:2 draw, after the hosts went up 2:0 just before half time.[26] It all came down to the final league game against Red Star Belgrade, played at a sold out Koševo stadium, where the maroon-whites needed just a point to mathematically clinch the title. Musemić broke the deadlock in the 23. minute and Jakovljević doubled Sarajevo's lead with fifteen minutes to go. The visitors were able to pull one back through Boško Gjurovski in the 85th minute, but it was too little too late.[25] The celebrations began, Sarajevo had won its second Yugoslav league title.[27] The triumph qualified the club for the first round of the 1985–86 European Cup, where they shockingly lost both legs to Finnish side Kuusysi Lahti.[28] This result is still considered Sarajevo's worst in major European competitions. The championship winning generation included the likes of Husref Musemić, Faruk Hadžibegić, Davor Jozić, Dragan Jakovljević, Miloš Đurković, Predrag Pašić, Mirza Kapetanović, Slaviša Vukićević, Zijad Švrakić, Senad Merdanović and Mehmed Janjoš.[29]

Final years in Yugoslavia
 
Former Sarajevo midfielder Vladimir Petković has been manager of Switzerland since 2014.

FK Sarajevo entered a turbulent period after clinching its second Yugoslav league title. Three major members of the championship winning squad left the team in the summer of 1985. Star striker Husref Musemić joined Red Star Belgrade. Faruk Hadžibegić moved to Spanish side Real Betis. Team captain Predrag Pašić moved to VfB Stuttgart in the Bundesliga.[30] The club management, in search of replacements, turned its sights to young players from lower-tier sides, bringing in Bernard Barnjak, Vladimir Petković and Zoran Ljubičić. Even though the team started the season on a high note, it finished a disappointing 15th at the end of the 1985/86 season, avoiding relegation by virtue of a superior goal-difference compared to relegated OFK Beograd. The following season again culminated in a lowly finish, as new manager Denijel Pirić led the team to a disappointing 13th place in the league standings.[17] Further departures followed at the end of the season as Miloš Đurković joined Beşiktaş, Muhidin Teskeredžić made the move to Sturm Graz, Davor Jozić joined Serie A side A.C. Cesena, Zijad Švrakić transferred to Adana Demirspor and Branko Bošnjak joined NK Olimpija.[30] The following two seasons again brought mediocre league finishes as the maroon-whites concluded the respective campaigns on 13th and 14th spots, barely avoiding relegation on both occasions.[17] As with previous seasons, a handful of players left the club during the summer transfer window, with Slaviša Vukićević moving to Créteil, goalkeeper Enver Lugušić joining Konyaspor and Dragan Jakovljević moving to FC Nantes. On a positive note, the 1989/90 season brought the return of fan favorite Husref Musemić, who had spent the previous season playing for Scottish side Hearts. His nine goals in 26 appearances did little to improve league results, as the team again concluded the campaign on 13th spot, along with an early exit in the Yugoslav Cup after a defeat to Macedonian third division minnows, FK Sileks.[17] The 1990/91 season saw Fuad Muzurović again being named manager after a ten-year absence. Furthermore, Soviet goalkeeper Aleksei Prudnikov was brought in from Velež Mostar, thus becoming the first foreign player in the history of the club. The team was able to conclude the season on 11th spot, defeating Red Star Belgrade in a crucial, hallmark game, only days after the Belgrade outfit won the European Cup.[30] The 1991/92 season was marked by the disintegration of Yugoslavia, and was subsequently abandoned by Slovenian, Croatian and Bosnian sides.[31] Football was abruptly halted in Bosnia and Herzegovina for the duration of the war that would last for four years. Notable FK Sarajevo players in the pre-war period were Miloš Nedić, Dragan Jakovljević, Boban Božović, Dane Kuprešanin and Dejan Raičković.

Recent years

Since the Bosnian independence, the club has won 11 domestic titles, 5 of which were Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina honors. In addition the club reached play-off stage/final qualifying round for European competitions on 4 occasions, once for UCL (vs Dynamo Kyiv) and three for UEL (vs CFR Cluj, Borussia Mönchengladbach and Celtic).

War and independence

The Bosnian War in the early 1990s shut down competitive football in the territory, and as a result FK Sarajevo became a touring club in 1993, under manager Fuad Muzurović, featuring players such as Elvir Baljić, Almir Turković, Senad Repuh and Mirza Varešanović, all future national team players for Bosnia and Herzegovina. Many of the club's supporters, including the infamous Horde Zla joined the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and fought in the war. FK Sarajevo played a number of friendly games during this time, such as the now-famous 4–1 victory over the local UN peacekeeping force in 1994, a 1–1 draw against Parma F.C. while on tour in Italy, and a 3–1 victory over the Iranian national team in Teheran.

In 1994–95, the first-ever Bosnia and Herzegovina championship was held. Sarajevo came first in their six-team league in Jablanica, and came runners-up in the final league stage in Zenica, behind local club Čelik.[32] Sarajevo again finished as runners-up to Čelik in 1996–97 (by two points),[33] but beat the Zenica-based club in the Cup final and Super Cup.[33] The Cup was retained the following year, and despite finishing third in the league, Sarajevo was runner-up due to play-offs. There was no play-off in 1998–99; the title was given to Sarajevo but it does not count.[34]

In 2004, Safet Sušić, who played at FK Sarajevo from 1973 to 1982, was voted Bosnia and Herzegovina's best player of the last 50 years at the UEFA Jubilee Awards.[35] Sarajevo were runners-up in the Bosnia and Herzegovina Premier League in 2006–07, but won their second title the following season, beating Zrinjski Mostar by three points.[36] Sarajevo have been a regular in Europa League qualification in the 21st century, but are yet to make the group stages. Off the back of their 2006–07 league title under manager Husref Musemić, Sarajevo played in the UEFA Champions League for the first time in its current format. They beat Maltese champions Marsaxlokk F.C. 6:0 away in their first game, eventually winning 9:1 on aggregate.[37] The second round saw Sarajevo defeat Belgians KRC Genk on away goals due to a 2:1 away win in the first leg,[38] although the club was knocked out in the play-offs for the competition's Group stage by Ukrainian champions Dynamo Kyiv who won 4:0 on aggregate.[39] The club made the play-offs round of the 2009–10 UEFA Europa League and faced CFR Cluj but lost 3–2 on aggregate. The team defeated Spartak Trnava and Helsingborg to get to the play-offs round.

Vincent Tan era - a financial injection

 
Vincent Tan is worth an estimated  US$1.6 billion (2014).[40]

Vincent Tan, a Malaysian businessman and the owner of the Championship club Cardiff City, bought FK Sarajevo in late 2013 pledging to invest $2 million into the club.[41] Under the deal, Cardiff will cooperate with FK Sarajevo, exchanging players and taking part in a football academy, yet to be established, which Tan has said would lure new talents. Under Tan's management the club brought in quality players with the likes of Miloš Stojčev, Džemal Berberović and Nemanja Bilbija who helped the club win the 2013–14 Bosnian Cup, their first silverware since winning the Premier League in 2006–07.[42] Prior to the Cup triumph, Robert Jarni was brought in as the new manager of the club in December 2013 by Tan, but was quickly dismissed only 4 months into his tenure (on 7 April 2014, while the team was still in the semi-finals of the Bosnian Cup) due to the team failing to keep its chances of winning the domestic league title alive during later stages of the 2013–14 season.[43] FK Sarajevo played a friendly match against Tan's Cardiff City FC U21 winning 4–1.[44] In 2014–15 UEFA Europa League, FK Sarajevo eliminated FK Haugesund and Atromitos to qualify for the play-off round, where it lost to German side Borussia Mönchengladbach. On 17 July 2014, Tan presented pledges of assistance of €255,000 each to two hospitals in Doboj and Maglaj during the halftime break of the UEFA Europa League qualifying match between Sarajevo and Norwegian club Haugesund at the Olympic Stadium in Sarajevo. The money raised would be used to purchase and donate much-needed medical equipment for the two hospitals.[45][46] In June 2014, Tan made a personal donation of €114,000, while the people of Malaysia raised a total of €169,000 toward Bosnia's flood relief fund.[47] In May 2014, the heaviest rains and floods in 120 years hit Bosnia and the surrounding region. The worst affected areas were the towns of Doboj and Maglaj, which were cut off from the rest of the country when floods deluged all major roads. Damage from landslides and floods was estimated to run into hundreds of millions of euros and twenty-four people lost their lives. The cost of the disaster, an official said, could exceed that of the Bosnian War.[48] On 5 August 2014, Sarajevo signed a cooperation agreement with third-tier Bosnian club NK Bosna Visoko, by which Sarajevo will loan its talented youngsters to the Visoko-based side and will have first-buy rights on all of Bosna players. The agreement was signed by Adis Hajlovac and Mirza Laletović on behalf of Bosna, and Abdulah Ibraković on behalf of Sarajevo.[49] The agreement de facto names Bosna the club's farm team. On 26 September 2014, manager Dženan Uščuplić was relieved of his duties as first team manager and was transferred back to the youth academy.[50] On 30 September 2014, former Barcelona, Real Sociedad and Bosnia and Herzegovina national team striker Meho Kodro was appointed manager.[51] On 24 February 2015, Sarajevo signed a three and a half-year general sponsorship agreement with Turkish Airlines which has been labeled the most lucrative in Bosnian professional sports history.[52][53] On 21 April, after poor league results, the club sacked Kodro and once again named Dženan Uščuplić manager until the end of the season.[54] On 30 May the team defeated Sloboda Tuzla in the season's last fixture, thus winning the league title after an eight-year drought.[55][56] The next season was a turbulent one for the club. After Uščuplić left his post, former Partizan and CSKA Sofia manager Miodrag Ješić took over the helm,[57] only to be sacked after a string of disappointing results, with Almir Hurtić leading the side to a disappointing 4th-place finish in the league.[58] On 29 August 2016, after another string of bad results at the start of the 2016–17 season, Hurtić was sacked and Mehmed Janjoš was named manager.[59]

Club's domestic revival

Since March 2019, FK Sarajevo is run by Vietnamese businessman Nguyễn Hoài Nam and the PVF Investment and Trading, JSC (Promotion Fund of Vietnamese Football Talents F.C.).[60][61][62]

The club has won back to back titles in Bosnia under managers Husref Musemić and Vinko Marinović; both 2018–19 and 2019–20 seasons of the Bosnian Premier League and a 2018–19 Bosnian Cup triumph as well.

Crest and colours

 
 
 
 
 
The club's original kit in traditional maroon

The club's traditional colours are maroon and white, while in recent years black, gray and gold have also been represented as alternative club colours. As the story goes, the club's founders wanted to create a visual distinction between the new side and all other Yugoslav clubs of the time. They chose maroon as the club's feature colour and in doing so preserved the identity of defunct club Šparta that operated in the city of Sarajevo during the early years of the Kingdom of SHS.[63] The club colors were used as a reference during the formation of USD Bosna, a sporting society that included former Euroleague winner KK Bosna Royal, by the society's founders – all supporters of the club. FK Sarajevo's nickname is based on club colours, which have become a major pop culture reference in the city. The first official club crest depicted a red, five pointed communist star with golden borders containing a golden silhouette of a footballer. Further more, a blue gear-like circular frame, representing socialist industrialization, contained the club name.[64] In the early 1950s the club crest was changed for the first time. It namely received a badge-like form and was split vertically into two sides of which the outer held the club name and aforementioned communist star, while the inner contained a football with the club's foundation year under it. In the early 1970s the club crest was restylized, keeping the previous motifs that can still be found on today's club crest. The color yellow was added to the restylized crest's borders at this time, giving it a fresher look. On the 30th anniversary of the club's founding in 1976, the club crest was again slightly altered. With the end of the Bosnian War in 1996 the club crest was once again slightly altered by the replacement of the ideologically-motivated communist star with a Bosnian Fleur-de-lis and a slight stylization of the crest's design, including the lettering font, which in subsequent years became one of the club's biggest trademarks.[64] The adding of Fleur-de-lis motifs to their crests was a common practice by Bosnian football clubs in the first few years after the war. The Fleur-de-lis was eventually removed altogether from the club crest in 2009, which today lacks any ideological or national symbolism.[65] Instead, the club readily emphasizes the two pre-war crests as part of its heritage, often selling souvenirs that are embroidered with them.[66] The Bosnian Fleur-de-lis was once again restored as a temporary club motif during the 2013–14 season, when it was included in the third kit design.[67]

Crests
         
1946–1947 1947–1958 1958–1992 1995–2001 2001–2009 2009–present

Stadium and training grounds

FK Sarajevo play at the Asim Ferhatović Hase Stadium, formerly known as the Koševo Stadium. It is owned by the City of Sarajevo but is leased to the club on a long term basis. The club runs and operates the stadium and has sole commercial and developmental rights to the olympic complex until at least 2051, with the possibility of a further 15 year extension.[68] The current seating capacity is 34,500. The stadium was opened in 1947 and named after the Sarajevo neighbourhood of Koševo, where it is located.[69] The stadium was literally buried into a local hill thus merging with its natural surroundings. In 1950 a pitch and a tartan track were also added. The first international football match at the stadium was played between Yugoslavia and Turkey, in 1954.

In 1966, the stadium hosted the Balkan Games and was again renovated for the occasion.[70] A new administration building was built, as were new locker rooms and a restaurant. A modern scoreboard and new lighting were also provided. In 1984, the stadium was reconstructed for the 1984 Winter Olympics that were held in Sarajevo, and is therefore often unofficially called The Olympic Stadium.[71] It is important to note that on 7 February 1984, the Asim H. Ferhatović stadium hosted the opening ceremony of the games, and seated roughly 50,000. The West stand held 18,500 seating places at the time.[72]

In 2004 the stadium's official name was changed to Asim H. Ferhatović, in memory of legendary FK Sarajevo striker Asim Ferhatović, who died after a heart attack in 1987.[73] In 1998, three years after the end of the Bosnian War, the stadium was renovated for a fourth time. The seating capacity of the stadium was reduced to 34,500 and new seats were added.[74] The ground has held matches for Sarajevo and their local rival FK Željezničar, including Europa League and Champions League fixtures. Furthermore, the stadium has hosted the national teams of Yugoslavia and Bosnia and Herzegovina on numerous occasions, as well as many notable athletic meetings.

The stadium's highest attendance was recorded in a 1981–82 league match between FK Sarajevo and their city rival FK Željezničar. Allegedly, roughly 60.000 people attended the game. The stadium's largest post-war attendance was recorded in the 2002–2003 UEFA Champions League third qualifying round match between FK Željezničar and Newcastle United F.C. Allegedly, about 34,000 people attended the game.[75]

The club's current training ground, known as the Butmir Training Centre is located in the Ilidža municipality of the Sarajevo Canton. The complex was opened in October 2015 and comprises a 70,000 square meter (17 acre) surface, containing state of the art facilities.[76] It is also used by the club's youth school and women's team.[77][78] The main artificial turf pitch is named after club legend Želimir Vidović, who was killed during the Siege of Sarajevo while transporting wounded citizens to a nearby hospital.[79] A statue of Vidović was erected on the western grass knoll that encompasses the turf.[79]

Organization

Ownership and finances

FK Sarajevo is a registered Private company limited by guarantee and corporate personhood that, unlike football clubs that are registered as limited companies, does not issue shares by which individuals or corporations can buy majority or minority ownership. Instead, the club's members act as guarantors by buying non-ownership based management stakes in the form of contributions, earning in return managing and voting rights.[80] The guarantors give an undertaking to contribute a nominal amount in the event of the winding up of the company. It is often believed that such a company cannot distribute its profits to its members but, depending on the provisions of the articles, as is the case with FK Sarajevo, it very well may.[81] Managing rights imply the right to form and control the club assembly, steering committee and Supervisory Board, by which the largest contributor de jure takes full control of the club.[82] Furthermore, the fact that the largest contributor may negotiate profit provisions between himself and the club opens the possibility for large-scale financial investment that exceeds charitable and non-profit contributions that are usually the cornerstone of companies limited by guarantee.

Malaysian billionaire, investor and former Chairman of Berjaya Group, Vincent Tan, was the club's majority contributor and thus its sole operator. After gaining control of the club in December 2013 by contributing 2 million $, Tan negotiated an agreement between himself and the club, by which he will invest an undisclosed sum while also running the operational finances and policies of the club, in return gaining the right to profit as would be the case of the club being a limited company.[82] Furthermore, the formation of Public limited companies in the fields of real estate and tourism have been negotiated between the club and Tan, by which the companies will represent a joint venture by both parties, earning the club complete financial self-sustainability in the future.[82] After taking control of the club, Vincent Tan dissolved the long-standing steering committee and Supervisory Board, opting to create a five-member board of directors for the day-to-day running of the club. He appointed two of his Malaysian business associates, Ken Choo i Lim Meng Kwong, members of the board alongside three local members.[83][84] The club's annual operational expenditure and budget have been undisclosed since Tan gained control of the club.[85] In September 2015 the club paid off the last of its public and private debt, thus becoming one of the rare debt-free clubs in eastern Europe.[86]

In March 2019, it was announced that the ownership majority package was sold to Vietnamese businessman Nguyễn Hoài Nam and the PVF Investment and Trading, JSC (Promotion Fund of Vietnamese Football Talents F.C.).[61][62][60]

The club's general sponsor is Turkish Airlines, with whom it signed a lucrative four-year deal in 2015. It has been hailed as the most profitable sponsorship agreement in the history of Bosnian sports.[87] FK Sarajevo's kit has been manufactured by Erreà since 2021.[88] The club has a variety of other sponsors and official partners, which include Tourism Malaysia, Visit Vietnam, BH Telecom, Securitas, Škoda, Bosna Bank International, NLB Group, Hayat TV, Sarajevo Brewing Company and others.[89]

Management

Board of directors

As of 3 April 2022[90]

Current Members
  • Chairman:   Ismir Mirvić
  • Member:   Hajrudin Kapetanović
  • Member:   Nenad Podgorac

Club administration

As of 23 November 2022

Current staff
  • Chairman of the Board:   Ismir Mirvić
  • President of Assembly:     Valentin Ilievski
  • Director:   Ajla Alimanović
  • General secretary:   Mirza Hadžić
  • Finances:   Merisa Peco Čukurija
  • Marketing director:   Faruk Čengić
  • Public relations:   Bakir Arapović

Social responsibility

Social responsibility and humanitarian work is one of the fundamental values of FK Sarajevo, and the club is well known for its attitude towards it. The club operates an aid and social programs foundation, which seeks to encourage learning and promote healthy living amongst disadvantaged children, young people and families.[91] Furthermore, the club has been on the forefront of community development for years, donating large sums of money through its foundation to underdeveloped municipalities and school districts.[92] The club organizes traditional blood donation conventions in its private clinic every month, while raising awareness for health issues that are impacting society.[93][94] An annual arts competition is organized by the club in which primary school children in the Sarajevo Canton are asked to draw or paint a mascot for the team.[95] The three best ranked artists get scholarships for afterschool arts and crafts programs.[95] Women's rights are an important aspect of the club's community and social development programs. Apart from sponsoring a battered women's shelter in downtown Sarajevo, the club also bestows free stadium entrance to all female fans on the week of International Women's Day.[96] FK Sarajevo has a signed partnership with one of the leading Bosnian charity and youth development agencies, Pomozi.ba, with whom it cooperates on numerous projects across the country while promoting the agency on its kit.[97] The club is firmly committed to the development of Srebrenica and has been awarding yearly scholarships to hundreds of children from the town, while also sponsoring the local multiethnic football team, FK Guber.[98][99] FK Sarajevo is one of the eight core members of the 2nd Chance Group CIC-led project "Give Football A Chance", the others being Altınordu, Athletic Bilbao, Atromitos, Hammarby, Schalke 04, Sheffield United and Vitesse.[100] The project's goal is the improvement of health and well-being of more than 5000 children living in conflict zones and implementing a comprehensive program of both formal and informal education for the children.[100] In the aftermath of the 2014 Southeast Europe floods that devastated numerous towns in the country, FK Sarajevo was a major contributor to the massive relief effort. The club organized and sent volunteers to the stricken towns, and helped finance the rebuilding of homes both directly and through its foundation.[101][102][103] The club's Malaysian owner Vincent Tan was also a major contributor to the relief effort, personally donating 250,000 KM to hospitals in Maglaj and Doboj. In January 2016 FK Sarajevo hosted Syrian refugee children, in cooperation with UNICEF and the Red Cross.[104] In October 2016 FK Sarajevo, together with FK Novi Pazar and FK Velež, organized a friendly match in Mostar. The profits from the match tickets went to a fund for Syrian refugees.[105] The club employs war veterans from the Ilidža municipality in its training centre as a way of giving back to the community.[106]

Honours

Domestic

League

Cups

European

Doubles

Players

Current squad

As of 14 December 2022[107]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   BIH Muhamed Šahinović
2 DF   NGA Musa Muhammed
3 DF   BIH Avdija Vršajević
4 DF   BIH Muharem Trako
5 DF   BIH Marin Aničić
6 DF   BIH Enedin Mulalić
7 FW   BIH Hamza Čataković
8 MF   BIH Andrej Đokanović (Vice-captain)
9 FW   BIH Mersudin Ahmetović (3rd-captain)
10 MF   BIH Dal Varešanović
14 MF   BIH Tarik Ramić
15 MF   BIH Haris Ališah
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 DF   SRB Nemanja Tomašević
19 MF   BIH Adnan Džafić
20 MF   BIH Đani Salčin
25 MF   CRO Frane Čirjak
27 MF   MKD Daniel Avramovski
29 MF   CRO Ivan Ikić
30 FW   BIH Irfan Ramić
35 GK   BIH Belmin Dizdarević
50 MF   BIH Muhamed Buljubašić
98 MF   BIH Mirza Mustafić
99 MF   BIH Asmir Suljić (Captain)

Players with multiple nationalities

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   BIH Amer Dupovac (at Igman Konjic)
DF   BIH Mihajlo Jovašević (at Mladost Doboj Kakanj)

Ismir Pintol trophy

The Ismir Pintol trophy (Trofej Ismir Pintol), is a trophy awarded to the most distinguished player in the past season and named after deceased FK Sarajevo fan Ismir Pintol.[108] The winner of the trophy is decided by popular vote on the official website of the club's supporters and has been awarded since 2003. To be eligible to participate in the poll, a player must appear for the club in at least 10 official matches. The trophy was not awarded on five separate occasions as an indicator of the supporters' dissatisfaction with team results.[109] As of 2019, the only player to have won the trophy on two separate occasions is Sedin Torlak.[109]

Winners[110]

Name Nat. Position Season
Safet Nadarević   DF 2002–03
Not awarded / / 2003–04
Džemal Berberović   DF 2004–05
Matija Matko   FW 2005–06
Marciano   MF 2006–07
Semjon Milošević   DF 2007–08
Damir Hadžić   MF 2008–09
Not awarded / / 2009–10
Sedin Torlak   DF 2010–11
Not awarded / / 2011–12
Sedin Torlak   DF 2012–13
Ivan Tatomirović   DF 2013–14
Samir Radovac   MF 2014–15
Leon Benko   FW 2015–16
Marko Mihojević   DF 2016–17
Not awarded / / 2017–18
Nihad Mujakić   DF 2018–19
Mersudin Ahmetović   FW 2019–20
Amer Dupovac   DF 2020–21
Not awarded / / 2021–22

Former players

For details of former players, see: List of FK Sarajevo players, and Category:FK Sarajevo players.

Youth department and affiliates

The FK Sarajevo Youth School (Bosnian: Omladinski pogon Fudbalskog kluba Sarajevo), the club's youth department, is split into two sections. Namely, The Asim Ferhatović Hase School of Football (Bosnian: Škola fudbala Asim Ferhatović Hase),[111] named after legendary striker Asim Ferhatović, and the FK Sarajevo Academy (Bosnian: Akademija Fudbalskog kluba Sarajevo).[112] The former functions as both a general model for the popularization of the sport and as a filtering mechanism, used to pick out locally based footballing talents which are later transferred to the Academy. The Academy, in turn, is a top-of-the-line boarding school which brings in the biggest talents from Bosnia and Herzegovina and organizes the competitive youth selections for the club. The department was founded in the 1950s and has been historically known as one of the best youth systems in the former Yugoslavia. FK Sarajevo's youth selections train in two venues: the Asim Ferhatović Hase Sports Complex and the elite Butmir Training Centre, which is currently undergoing a huge expansion as of July 2016.[113]

Personnel

Technical staff

As of 12 December 2022, the staff includes:

Current staff

Medical staff

As of 30 December 2019, the staff includes:

Current staff
  • Coordinator of the Medical Team:   Dr. Reuf Karabeg
  • Doctor:   Dr. Adnan Hadžimuratović
  • Doctor:   Dr. Senad Maksić
  • Doctor:   Dr. Dževad Vrabac
  • Senior Physiotherapist:   Ismar Hadžibajrić
  • Physiotherapist:   Mirza Marevac
  • Physiotherapist:   Eldin Jarović

Historical

Presidents

Below is a list of FK Sarajevo presidents from 1946 until the present day.

Name Years
  Safet Džinović 1946–1947[114]
  Branko Todić 1948–1949
  Miloš Samardžić 1949–1950
  Boško Baškot 1950–1951
  Miloš Samardžić 1952–1953
  Boško Baškot 1953–1954
  Slobodan Kezunović 1955–1956
  Vaso Radić 1957–1959[115]
  Šemso Kapetanović 1959–1961
  Ljubo Kojo 1962–1963
  Mile Perković 1964–1967[116]
  Milivoje Šteković 1967–1968
  Osman Maglajlić 1969–1970[117]
Name Years
  Izet Buševac 1970–1971
  Vaso Radić 1972–1973[115]
  Mustafa Ajanović 1973–1974[118]
  Ljubomir Grupković 1974–1981
  Duško Cvijetić 1981–1983
  Alija Alić 1983–1984
  Mile Markić 1985–1987
  Nedjeljko Despotović 1988
  Kemal Hujić 1988–1992[119]
    Muhamed Granov 1992–1999[120]
  Meho Obradović 1999–2000[121]
  Besim Mehmedić 2000–2001[122]
  Salih Delalić 2001–2002[123]
Name Years
  Faruk Hadžibegić 2002–2004[124]
  Nijaz Gracić 2004–2005[125]
  Savo Vlaški 2005[126]
  Hajrudin Šuman 2005–2010[127]
  Nijaz Merdanović 2010[128]
  Zijad Blekić 2010[129]
  Amir Rizvanović 2010–2012[130]
  Alen Hujić 2013–2014[131]
  Edis Kusturica 2014–2016[132]
    Valentin Ilievski 2016–2019[133]
  Senad Jahić 2019–2021
  Damir Kasum 2021
  Ismir Mirvić 2021–present

Managerial history

Below is a list of FK Sarajevo managers from 1946 until the present day.1

Name Nationality Years
Josip Bulat   1946–1947
Slavko Zagorac   1947–1948
Miroslav Brozović   1948–1952
Slavko Zagorac   1952–1953
Aleksandar Tomašević   1953
Slavko Zagorac   1953
Miroslav Brozović   1954–1956
Slavko Zagorac   1956
Aleksandar Tomašević   1956–1958
László Fenyvesi   1958
Vojin Božović   1958–1959
Miroslav Brozović   1959–1961
Ratomir Čabrić   1961–1963
Abdulah Gegić   1963–1965
Aleksandar Atanacković   1965–1966
Miroslav Brozović   1966–1967
Franjo Lovrić   1967
Munib Saračević   1967–1969
Miroslav Brozović   1969−1970
Srboljub Markušević   1970–1971
Abdulah Gegić   1971–1972
Srboljub Markušević   1972–1973
Svetozar Vujović   1973–1974
Mirsad Fazlagić   1974–1975
Vukašin Višnjevac   1975–1977
Fuad Muzurović   1977–1981
Srboljub Markušević   1981–1983
Boško Antić   1983–1986
Denijal Pirić   1986–1988
Džemaludin Mušović   1988–1990
Rajko Rašević   1990
Srboljub Markušević   1990
Fuad Muzurović     1990–1995
Denijal Pirić   1995-1996
Nermin Hadžiahmetović   1996–1997
Mehmed Janjoš   1997–1998
Nermin Hadžiahmetović   1998–1999
Name Nationality Years
Sead Jesenković   1999
Agim Nikolić   1999
Denijal Pirić   2000–2001
Husref Musemić   2001
Fuad Muzurović   2001–2002
Husref Musemić   2002–2003
Agim Nikolić   2003–2004
Kemal Alispahić   2004
Edin Prljača   2004
Husref Musemić   2005–2008
Šener Bajramović   2008
Husnija Arapović   2008
Mehmed Janjoš   2008–2010
Mirza Varešanović   2010–2011
Jiří Plíšek   2011
Dragan Jović   2012–2013
Husref Musemić   2013
Abdulah Oruč (interim)   2013
Robert Jarni   2013–2014
Dženan Uščuplić   2014
Meho Kodro   2014–2015
Dženan Uščuplić   2015
Almir Hurtić (interim)   2015
Miodrag Ješić   2015–2016
Almir Hurtić   2016
Mehmed Janjoš   2016–2017
Senad Repuh   2017
Husref Musemić   2017–2019
Vinko Marinović   2019–2021
Dženan Uščuplić (interim)   2021
Abdulah Oruč (interim)   2021
Goran Sablić   2021
Aleksandar Vasoski   2022
Dženan Uščuplić (interim)   2022
Feđa Dudić   2022
Emir Obuća (interim)   2022
Mirza Varešanović   2022–present

Technical/Sporting directors

Below is a list of FK Sarajevo Technical director, later Sporting directors and their respective tenures.

Name Years
Svetozar Vujović 1972 – 1973[134][135][136][137]
Svetozar Vujović 1975 – 16 January 1993[134][136]
Mirza Varešanović 11 August 2004 – 30 June 2006[138]
Senad Merdanović 24 August 2006 – 29 December 2010[139]
Edin Hadžialagić 19 January 2011 – 17 February 2012[140]
Abdulah Ibraković 26 August 2013 – 23 September 2015[141][142]
Faruk Ihtijarević 16 August 2016 – 24 May 2018
Emir Hadžić 24 May 2018 – 18 April 2021
23 May 2022 – 23 November 2022

Memorials

 
Memorial on the North side of the Asim Ferhatović Hase stadium.

Below is a list of memorials established by the club.

The club raised a memorial outside of the north stand of the Asim Ferhatović Hase Stadium which bears tribute to hundreds of members of the club's ultras group, Horde Zla, killed in the defense of the city during the Siege of Sarajevo.
Svetozar Vujović played for the club from 1959 to 1972 and was a key member of the 1967 championship winning generation. After retiring, he managed the club for one season before being named club director – a position he held for over twenty years. With the start of the Siege of Sarajevo in 1992, Vujović remained in the city, declining numerous offers for refuge. Following his death on 16 January 1993, FK Sarajevo named the club's main ceremonial lounge room in its administrative facility, located in downtown Sarajevo, "The Svetozar Vujović Salon" in his honor.
Asim Ferhatović was a legendary club forward that netted 66 goals in 174 league matches, thus becoming the club's leading all-time goal scorer in official fixtures. He is considered one of the greatest players to ever play for the maroon-whites. The Koševo Stadium that is owned by the city and leased on a long term basis by the club is named after Ferhatović, who died in 1987. The club's School of Football, which is a part of its youth departement, is also named after him.
Želimir Vidović was a star player for the club during the 1970s and early 1980s. On 17 May 1992, with the Siege of Sarajevo already underway, Vidović took part in an operation to help transport wounded civilians to a nearby hospital in the Sarajevo neighbourhood of Dobrinja. After the convoy was stopped by Serb forces he was executed with his remains being buried in a mass grave. An annual tournament in his honour has been organized since 2004, while the main pitch at the recently built FK Sarajevo Training Centre is also named after him. A statue of Vidović was erected on the western grass knoll that encompasses the pitch.
Ismir Pintol was a 6-year-old FK Sarajevo supporter who passed away on 29 June 2002 after a lengthy battle with leukemia. The club, in cooperation with its fan association, established the Ismir Pintol trophy ("Trofej Ismir Pintol"), which is awarded to the most distinguished player of the past season. The trophy has been awarded since the 2002–03 season. Traditionally, vocal support for the team in the first six minutes of every season's last home fixture is not shown, with fans remaining in their seats in memory of the boy. The trophy is awarded before kick off at the base of the north stand.
Vedran Puljić was a 24-year-old member of the club's ultras group, Horde zla who was killed by single gun shot wound during the infamous Široki Brijeg football riots on 4 October 2009. The single gun shot wound that killed Puljić was allegedly fired by a member of the local police force, Oliver Knezović, who was arrested shortly after but never prosecuted. On 23 May 2013 the curva at the north stand of the Koševo stadium, traditionally the main base for the Horde Zla was named in honor of Puljić. Furthermore, the club commemorates his death by holding a vigil at his grave site once a year on the anniversary of his death.

Notes

1^ Includes Caretaker managers
2^ Official title has been changed to Head of the Scouting Department

Club records and statistics

FK Sarajevo, under the name Torpedo, played its first match on 3 November 1946 against Bratstvo Travnik, winning 6–0.[143] The club's first Yugoslav First League tie was a 2–2 draw against Ponziana Trieste on 25 August 1947. The maroon-whites played their first official European match on 18 July 1960 in the Mitropa Cup, losing 2–4 to MTK Budapest. FK Sarajevo's record-holder for number of club appearances is Ibrahim Biogradlić. He played 646 games for the maroon-whites between 1951 and 1967.[144] The goal-scoring record-holder is striker Dobrivoje Živkov who scored 212 goals in both official and unofficial matches for the club. The goal-scoring record-holder in official matches is legendary striker Asim Ferhatović, who found the back of the net on 100 occasions in all official competitions, including 98 league goals (198 in total).[145] Over 50 FK Sarajevo players were capped for the Yugoslav and Bosnian national teams. Former FK Sarajevo defender Faruk Hadžibegić is the third most capped player in the history of the Yugoslav national team with 65 caps.[146] He captained The Blues at the 1990 FIFA World Cup.[147] Former FK Sarajevo defender Mirsad Fazlagić captained Yugoslavia at UEFA Euro 1968 and was named part of the all-tournament team.[148] Former FK Sarajevo midfielder Elvir Baljić would break Real Madrid's transfer record in a 1999 move from Fenerbahçe. The Galacticos paid a transfer fee of €26 million for the Bosnian.[149] Former FK Sarajevo player Safet Sušić would be named Bosnia and Herzegovina's UEFA Golden Jubilee inductee in 2004.[150] Six of the ten former Bosnia and Herzegovina national team managers are former FK Sarajevo players: Fuad Muzurović, Džemaludin Mušović, Faruk Hadžibegić, Denijel Pirić, Miroslav Blažević and Safet Sušić.[151] FK Sarajevo was the most successful club from Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Yugoslav First League, winning two titles and finishing runners-up on two other occasions.[1] The club is ranked 6th in that competition's All-time league table.[152] FK Sarajevo is the record-holder for number of Bosnian Cup triumphs (7).[153] The maroon-whites are first in the All-time table of the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, seven points more than Željezničar.[154] They have won the national championship five times, finishing runners-up on six occasions.[153] FK Sarajevo is Bosnia and Herzegovina's best rated representative in European competitions.

Recent finishes and attendance

*Note: The 2016–17 season was the first to be organized with 12 teams and a two-stage format – Regular season league and Championship/Relegation league rounds. The top six teams in the regular season qualified for the Championship league round, while the bottom six competed between themselves in an effort to avoid relegation. That format lasted until the end of the 2017–18 season, after which the league returned to the old format, this time having 33 full rounds.

European record

Competition Pld W D L GF GA GD
European Cup / Champions League 18 5 2 11 24 26 −2
UEFA Cup / Europa League 60 21 13 26 85 112 −27
UEFA Europa Conference League 2 0 1 1 0 1 –1
Total 80 26 16 38 109 139 −30

Last updated on 15 July 2021.[155]
Pld = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against.

Women's football

 
Armisa Kuć (left) representing Montenegro

FK Sarajevo also operates a women's football team, SFK 2000 Sarajevo. They have been affiliated to the men's team since 2015, when a fusion was signed on 4 July of the same year after which the club assumed the FK Sarajevo crest and colours.[156] The club was founded in June 2000 as part of the Alija Miladin recreational association, after which it tied itself to a now-defunct men's football team from the Otoka neighbourhood of Sarajevo. They play their home games at the Otoka stadium, the home ground of Bosnian Premier League club FK Olimpic Sarajevo. Since the club's founding it has become the strongest element in Bosnian women's football, winning 14 consecutive national titles, 13 consecutive national cups (13 doubles) and representing the country in European competitions, as well as being the most decorated women's club in the Former Yugoslavia.[157][158] The club has participated in the UEFA Women's Cup from 2003 onwards but never reached the final rounds. In the 2009–10 UEFA Women's Champions League, when the competition was rebranded and reorganized, the side reached the round of 32, a feat repeated during the 2012–13 season. The side's best UEFA women's club ranking was 17th in August 2013.[158] SFK 2000 players form the core of the Bosnia and Herzegovina women's national team, while the side's manager, Samira Hurem, is the longstanding Bosnia & Herzegovina manager.[158] The women's section of the club also operates a detached youth system for girls from the ages of five to sixteen.[159] On 29 August 2016 the club qualified for the Round of 32 in the Women's Champions League for a third time in its History.[160] On 1 September 2016 the team drew WFC Rossiyanka of Russia in the round of 32.[161] The club once again qualified for the round of 32, this time in the 2018–19 UEFA Women's Champions League season, but got eliminated by Chelsea F.C. 11–0 on aggregate.[162][163]

USD Bosna

FK Sarajevo garners a close relationship with USD Bosna, or University Sport Society Bosna (Bosnian: Univerzitetsko sportsko društvo Bosna). The society was founded on 7 December 1947 with the goal of organizing the existing university student sports clubs in Sarajevo. USD Bosna was the largest sport society in the Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, with teams in 19 sports. The most notable members of said society are KK Bosna Royal, that won the Euroleague Basketball title in 1979[164] and RK Bosna Sarajevo, that reached the 1/8 finals of the EHF Champions League in 2011.[165] The relationship traditionally stems from the fact that both sides share unique maroon and white club colours, which lead KK Bosna Royal to garner most of its fan base from FK Sarajevo in its rise to the top in the mid and late 1970s. Through time the two sides became colloquially interchangeable, as the FK Sarajevo organized supporters group, Horde Zla, equally followed both, forming a so-called Maroon Family. Even though RK Bosna did not represent a big player in Yugoslav handball, the club's post-war ascent was thoroughly supported by Horde zla.

On 29 August 2013 FK Sarajevo and RK Bosna Sarajevo signed a cooperation agreement based on the principle of strengthening ties between the aforementioned family members.[166] On 6 November 2013 the same was done between FK Sarajevo and KK Bosna Royal, by which the forty-year-old relationship was officialized.[167]

Supporters

FK Sarajevo is one of the two most popular clubs in Bosnia and Herzegovina, having a large fanbase across the country, the Sandžak region of Serbia and Montenegro and the Bosnian diaspora, especially in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Scandinavia, Canada, Australia and the United States. The largest diaspora fan association is registered in Stuttgart under the name Horde Zla Stuttgart.[168] The club's supporters in the US formed FC Bordo Saint Louis in 2013 as an hommage to the club, with the side competing in the National Premier Soccer League as of 2014.[168]

From the moment FK Sarajevo was established on 24 October 1946 it quickly grew a following in the city of Sarajevo. The fact that nearly all pre-war Sarajevan clubs were banned by the new communist authorities left a large vacuum in a city that was traditionally a footballing centre in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. The majority of fans stemmed from the numerous downtown Sarajevan Baščaršija, Stari grad and Centar neighbourhoods predominantly inhabited by Bosniaks. This is not to say that other ethnicities did not support the club. They did in huge numbers, but the history of organized support for the club is nevertheless closely tied to the aforementioned neighbourhoods which culturally and historically represent the soul of the city.

FK Sarajevo fans have been historically called Pitari while an individual was, and is still known as a Pitar. The nickname, meaning a consumer of the local Bosnian dish pita, was originally a derogatory label given by fans of working class Željezničar that implied the pre-war upper-class background of most FK Sarajevo supporters.[169] This notion was based on the fact that the old downtown neighbourhoods of the city, were the traditional centres of commerce and artisanship, even though the socioeconomic landscape of the city had dramatically changed by the time the club was formed.

The organized supporters' group of FK Sarajevo is known as Horde Zla (English: Hordes of Evil or Evil Gang) and was formed in 1987 with the arrival of the Ultras subculture to Yugoslavia. The group is situated on the north stand of the Asim Ferhatović Hase Stadium, and has a fairly decentralized organizational structure with many subgroups present at matches. The group's logo consists of a stylized depiction of the Grim Reaper, borrowed from a Zagor comic book at the time of the group's inception. Horde Zla have gained notoriety through the decades because of infamous examples of football violence.[170][171][172] The group traditionally garners very close relations with the supporters of Dynamo Dresden, with the two groups often travelling together to away games of both clubs and sharing banners.[173][174] Horde Zla have in the past garnered close relations with the FK Novi Pazar ultras group, Torcida Sandžak.[175]

Another notable supporters' association and advocacy group is Maroon Friends 1946 which attracts influential individuals from the financial, political and cultural sectors of Bosnian society with the aim of lobbying both locally and internationally for the club and influencing club policies.[176] The association has close ties to Horde Zla.[177] The current chairman of Maroon Friends 1946 is prominent singer-songwriter and poet, Benjamin Isović.[178]

Rivalries

Sarajevo derby

FK Sarajevo's biggest rivalry is with fellow Sarajevo club FK Željezničar. Meetings between these rivals are known as the Sarajevo derby or the Eternal derby (Bosnian: Vječiti derbi). The Sarajevo 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, "Hellcome to Sarajevo".[179] The roots of the rivalry can be traced back to the strong historical animosity between the capital's working class and bourgeoisie, wherein the former traditionally inhabited the more liberal, yet poorer suburban neighbourhoods and mainly supported FK Željezničar, while the latter resided in the traditional and wealthy, old and central parts of the city and represented the main fan-base of FK Sarajevo.[180] Furthermore, since its formation, FK Sarajevo has always been closely tied to the political and financial elites of Bosnia and Herzegovina, both in socialist Yugoslavia and since the country's independence, while FK Željezničar seldom had such influential support and has been considered a club of common folk, even though this notion can be disputed. Even though the rivalry between the two sides grew large from the very formation of FK Sarajevo,[181] the two teams only met in friendly fixtures for the better part of a decade due to the fact that they competed in different levels of the Yugoslav football league system. The first official league match was held in 1954; FK Sarajevo won 6–1.[182] This is still the biggest victory by any team in the Sarajevo derby. It is important to note that in the past few decades the class divide between clubs has partly eroded and both fan bases gather support from all classes, but the historical differences and animosities are still visible.[182]

As of 26 August 2022, 147 Sarajevo derbies have been played, with 44 wins for FK Sarajevo, 46 for FK Željezničar and 57 draws (177:181).

Other rivalries

FK Sarajevo also shares a strong historic rivalry with NK Čelik Zenica as well as a relatively new rivalry with NK Široki Brijeg which came into being as a result of the 2009 Široki Brijeg riots that cost the life of FK Sarajevo supporter Vedran Puljić and resulted in over thirty serious injuries including four gunshot wounds. There are conflicting reports about who started the violence. Horde Zla accused local residents and police for their mistreatment on their way to the match, and right up to entering the stadium. The official statement of Horde Zla claims that the incident was planned by local politicians and that their buses were separated and parked too far from the stadium which left them open to stoning and attacks. They also claim that initially there were only 30 local policemen present, and they did nothing to prevent the violence.[183] Local police and residents said Horde Zla fans were the first to attack.[184] According to local police officials, most of the regional police had earlier been sent to the nearby city of Mostar to prevent possible violence during the match between city rivals Zrinjski and Velež.[183] The subsequent violence that followed resulted in Verdan Puljić's death. Since the riots, meetings of the two sides carry an ominous atmosphere. Sarajevo shares another relatively new rivalry with HŠK Zrinjski Mostar based on both clubs' playing pivotal roles in Bosnian football.

Relations

Affiliated clubs

Friends

Kit and sponsorships

Period Supplier Shirt sponsor
1946–1969 None None
1969–1972 None Energopetrol
1972–1980 YASSA Šipad
1981–1983 Playground Energoinvest
1984–1988 Admiral Jutro

Gorenje

1988–1990 Slovenija Sport Privredna banka
1991–1992 Vocado Cenex
1993–1994 None Vemex
1996–1997 Patrick Sarajevo Tobacco Factory[187]
1997–2002 Umbro
2002–2003 NAAI Aura[188]
2003–2004 Lotto[189]
2004–2007 Legea[189]
2007–2010 Nike[190]
2010–2011 Legea[191]
2011–2012 Royal[192]
2012–2013 Lescon[193]
2013–2015 Haad[194] Visit Malaysia[195]
2015–2016 Turkish Airlines[196]
2016–2021 Nike[197]
2021– Erreà[198]

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sarajevo, fudbalski, klub, sarajevo, cyrillic, Фудбалски, клуб, Сарајево, english, sarajevo, football, club, professional, football, club, based, sarajevo, capital, city, bosnia, herzegovina, most, successful, clubs, country, full, namefudbalski, klub, sarajev. Fudbalski klub Sarajevo Cyrillic Fudbalski klub Saraјevo English Sarajevo Football Club is a professional football club based in Sarajevo the capital city of Bosnia and Herzegovina and is one of the most successful clubs in the country FK SarajevoFull nameFudbalski klub SarajevoNickname s Bordo bijeli The Maroon Whites Divovi The Giants Short nameFKSFounded24 October 1946 76 years ago 1946 10 24 as FD TorpedoGroundKosevo City StadiumCapacity34 500OwnerVincent Tan 60 Ismir Mirvic 30 Other 10 ChairmanIsmir MirvicManagerMirza VaresanovicLeaguePremier League BH2021 22Premier League BH 4thWebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursCurrent seasonFounded on 24 October 1946 FK Sarajevo was the most successful club from SR Bosnia and Herzegovina in the former SFR Yugoslavia winning two Yugoslav First League titles finishing runners up on two other occasions and placing 6th in that competition s all time table 1 Today FK Sarajevo is one of the most prominent members of the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina where it has won five Bosnian championships seven Bosnian Cups and one Bosnian Supercup Furthermore the club finished runners up in the national championship another seven times It is ranked first in the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina all time table and is the country s most prominent representative in European competitions FK Sarajevo is the most popular football club in the country along with FK Zeljeznicar with whom it shares a strong rivalry that manifests itself in the Sarajevo derby also known as the Eternal derby Vjeciti derbi The club plays its home matches at the Asim Ferhatovic Hase Stadium named after legendary club striker Asim Ferhatovic The stadium has a capacity of 34 500 and is the largest in the country 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Champions of Yugoslavia Bosnian breakthrough 1 2 1 The 1960s First championship 1 2 1 1 The Last 16 of the European Cup 1 2 2 The 1980s Second championship 1 2 2 1 Final years in Yugoslavia 1 3 Recent years 1 3 1 War and independence 1 3 2 Vincent Tan era a financial injection 1 3 3 Club s domestic revival 2 Crest and colours 3 Stadium and training grounds 4 Organization 4 1 Ownership and finances 4 2 Management 4 2 1 Board of directors 4 2 2 Club administration 4 3 Social responsibility 5 Honours 5 1 Domestic 5 1 1 League 5 1 2 Cups 5 2 European 5 3 Doubles 6 Players 6 1 Current squad 6 2 Players with multiple nationalities 6 3 Out on loan 6 4 Ismir Pintol trophy 6 5 Former players 7 Youth department and affiliates 8 Personnel 8 1 Technical staff 8 2 Medical staff 9 Historical 9 1 Presidents 9 2 Managerial history 9 3 Technical Sporting directors 9 4 Memorials 9 5 Notes 10 Club records and statistics 10 1 Recent finishes and attendance 11 European record 12 Women s football 13 USD Bosna 14 Supporters 15 Rivalries 15 1 Sarajevo derby 15 2 Other rivalries 16 Relations 16 1 Affiliated clubs 16 2 Friends 17 Kit and sponsorships 18 References 19 Further reading 20 External linksHistory EditMain article History of FK Sarajevo Further information on league performance List of FK Sarajevo seasons FK Sarajevo was the only major football club founded by the post war Yugoslav authorities in the city of Sarajevo The club entered the Yugoslav First League in the 1948 49 season and eventually competed in all but two seasons in the top tier After Bosnia and Herzegovina gained independence from Yugoslavia FK Sarajevo became one of the country s biggest ambassadors departing on a large world tour during the Bosnian War with the goal of gaining international support for the country s cause 3 Origins Edit FK Sarajevo was established on 24 October 1946 as the result of a merger between local Sarajevo football clubs Udarnik Vanguard and Sloboda Liberty 4 The club first appeared on the Yugoslav sports scene in 1946 under the name FD Torpedo that represented an homage to Torpedo Moscow The first chairman of the newly founded club was Safet Dzinovic while the positions of vice chairmen were granted to Vojo Markovic and Alojz Stanarevic respectively Furthermore Josip Bulat was named manager 5 The newly formed team which inherited the results and league standings of Udarnik was joined by selected players from both Udarnik and Sloboda Namely Hodzic Vlajicic Sarenkapa Paukovic Fizovic Konjevic Radovic Viđen and Mustagrudic from the former and Mantula Glavocevic Tosic Pecelj Novo Strinic Đ Lovric and Alajbegovic from the latter The team played its first match on 3 November 1946 Another historical assembly was held on 5 October 1947 when it was decided on the proposal of then editor of the popular daily newspaper Oslobođenje Mirko Ostojic that the club name would be changed to FD Sarajevo later SDM Sarajevo before it was finally changed to the current name in 1949 In September 1948 FD Sarajevo was joined by Yugoslav footballing legend Miroslav Brozovic who brought in a largely needed level of experience to the new team The Mostar native previously wore the black and white jersey of FK Partizan as well as captaining the Yugoslav national team Brozovic was offered the position of player manager which he accepted turning his attentions to promoting the team to the Yugoslav First League 6 FK Sarajevo first entered the top flight Yugoslav First League after eliminating Belgrade club Sloga They drew the first match 3 3 in Novi Sad but then won the second match 5 1 in Sarajevo The team were relegated after their first season in the First League but were promoted back to the top tier in 1950 From then on FK Sarajevo played in every season of the First League apart from 1957 to 1958 The club s first taste of European competitions began during the 1960s when it took part in the 1960 Mitropa Cup 7 and the 1961 63 Balkans Cup 8 while the first serious European competition the club took part in was the 1962 63 Intertoto Cup 9 Champions of Yugoslavia Bosnian breakthrough Edit Up until Sarajevo s Yugoslav First League title no club from other republics within the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia other than SR Serbia and SR Croatia has ever won this competition The big four of SFRJ football dominated the league and Bosnian breakthrough finally came thanks to FK Sarajevo during the 1966 67 season With Sarajevo winning the title they ended a run of eight consecutive seasons of winners from SR Serbia record The 1960s First championship Edit See also 1966 67 Yugoslav First League Mate I can t play for money while having others tell me how to play the game I m grateful they were fair and didn t make an issue out of it I told them I can only play for Sarajevo Asim Ferhatovic in an interview after returning from a short stint with Fenerbahce 10 A key player for Sarajevo in their early years was legendary striker Asim Ferhatovic nicknamed Hase who played for the club from 1952 to 1967 In 1963 64 he was top scorer in the First League with nineteen goals 11 while the club finished fourth The following year the club finished second to Partizan Belgrade 12 Sarajevo won their first Yugoslav First League title in 1966 67 becoming the first national champions from Bosnia and Herzegovina 12 Sarajevo started the historic season with Brozovic at the helm of the coaching staff The team had a dream start with back to back wins against FK Sutjeska Niksic and their city rivals FK Zeljeznicar This was followed by a draw against the European Cup runners up FK Partizan in which Sarajevo squandered an early lead With seven points from their first three fixtures Sarajevo was still not considered a title favorite but that was to change after Brozovic s boys returned from the Dalmatian coast with a win against Hajduk Split Four days later Sarajevo beat NK Olimpija 2 1 at a sold out Kosevo stadium Hard earned wins against HNK Rijeka and Crvena Zvezda followed and by the winter break Sarajevo had won 14 out of their first 20 league fixtures finishing the year at pole position The team opened the second part of the season away to Dinamo Zagreb in the last sixteen of the Yugoslav Cup winning 1 0 courtesy of a Bosko Antic stunner In the quarterfinals Sarajevo got the better of FK Napredak but eventually lost in the Cup final to Hajduk Split played at the Stari plac stadium on 24 May 13 The team was quickly back to winning ways defeating Crvena Zvezda at the Rajko Mitic Stadium 3 1 with two goals by Antic and one by Prodanovic A week later OFK Beograd was defeated with the same margin but a shock defeat to FK Vojvodina in Novi Sad brought Dinamo Zagreb on level points with three games to go FK Vardar was defeated next thanks to a Musemic brace while Dinamo dropped points in Rijeka In the last league fixture of the season Sarajevo hosted NK Celik in front of 30 000 spectators and went on to win 5 2 bringing home the club s first league title The Last 16 of the European Cup Edit The league triumph qualified Sarajevo to the 1967 68 European Cup today s UEFA Champions League where they played their first tie against Cypriots Olympiakos Nicosia winning 5 3 on aggregate 14 In the second round one round short of the quarter finals Sarajevo was knocked out 2 1 on aggregate by eventual champions Manchester United of England despite hosting a goalless draw in the first leg 15 The first leg was played before an audience of 40 000 spectators and refereed by the Italian Francesco Francescon The second leg played at Old Trafford ended in controversy after the ball went out of bounds prior to the hosts scoring their second goal Notable Sarajevo players during this era included Bosko Antic Mirsad Fazlagic Vahidin Musemic Fahrudin Prljaca and Bosko Prodanovic Shortly after winning its first Yugoslav league title FK Sarajevo endured a period of general stagnation 16 The team entered the 1967 68 season as strong title favorites but the campaign turned out to be a complete disaster The maroon whites managed by former player Franjo Lovric did not manage to enter the championship race in hopes of defending the title finishing mere 7th 17 The club management quickly named Munib Saracevic manager for the 1968 69 season but this move also turned out to be fruitless The team concluded the disappointing campaign 11th in the league standings In the 1971 January transfer window six members of the championship winning generation including Bosko Prodanovic Anđelko Tesan and Fahrudin Prljaca left the club while three more followed in July of the same year including star player Bosko Antic The next season brought hope with the team going into the winter break clinching first spot but only managing to finish 7th at the end of season The 1973 74 season brought in a handful of new players including the likes of future club legend Zelimir Vidovic and former Red Star Belgrade and Bayern Munich striker Dusan Jovanovic Furthermore that same year 18 year old Safet Susic joined the club from Krivaja Zavidovici and would go on to be one of the main catalysts for the club s second major spell at the top of Yugoslav football in the coming years 18 It is important to note that all FK Sarajevo was able to muster in the first eleven seasons after taking home the title in 1967 was one 6th place league finish two 7th place league finishes and a 1 4 final finish in the Yugoslav Cup in 1976 77 16 In that same year the club barely retained its place in the top tier with a two point advantage over relegated Napredak Krusevac The 1978 79 season though brought a breath of fresh air for Sarajevo fans with the team finishing 4th behind Hajduk Split Dinamo Zagreb and Red Star Belgrade and in doing so signalled things to come 17 The 1980s Second championship Edit See also 1984 85 Yugoslav First League Safet Susic represented the club for nearly a decade before moving to PSG He managed Bosnia and Herzegovina at the 2014 FIFA World Cup Sarajevo had a second successful spell between 1978 and 1985 led by the attacking duo Predrag Pasic Safet Susic which established itself among the most prolific tandems in Yugoslav and Bosnian football history Predrag Pasic nicknamed Paja was a winger or striker and had emerged through the club s youth ranks eventually going on to play for Sarajevo up until his move to VfB Stuttgart after the title winning season in 1985 On the other hand Susic nicknamed Pape played the positions of playmaker and attacking midfielder and wore the maroon white jersey from 1973 to 1982 when he moved to Paris Saint Germain F C In 1978 79 Susic scored 15 goals and was named Player of the Season as Sarajevo finished fourth The following year Susic s 17 goals helped retain his Player of the Year title but he was also joint top scorer in the league 11 On 4 May 1980 during the 23rd round of 1979 80 Yugoslav First League at Kosevo Stadium during the game between Sarajevo and Osijek the news broke out of death of the Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito The game was locked at 1 1 Later a song by local band Zabranjeno Pusenje dedicated a part of the song Nedelja kad je otisao hase to that sad event The club came runner up that season seven points behind Red Star Belgrade 19 therefore qualifying for the 1980 81 UEFA Cup Sarajevo was knocked out in the first round by German powerhouse Hamburger SV that won 7 5 on aggregate 20 Sarajevo returned to the UEFA Cup in 1982 83 having finished fourth during the 1981 82 Yugoslav First League beating Bulgaria s Slavia Sofia 6 4 in the first round 21 and Romanian club FC Corvinul Hunedoara 8 4 in the second thanks to a 4 0 home win in the second leg 22 In the third round last 16 Sarajevo lost their first leg 6 1 to Belgian club RSC Anderlecht and despite winning the second leg 1 0 were eliminated by the eventual champions 23 Sarajevo also reached the Yugoslav Cup final that season losing 3 2 to Dinamo Zagreb in Belgrade 24 Sarajevo won their second championship title in 1984 85 finishing four points ahead of runners up Hajduk Split 25 The new championship season didn t start in spectacular fashion for Sarajevo but as the season continued the team kept gaining momentum and grasped first spot on way to the winter break 26 Bosko Antic s boys didn t start the second part of the season on a positive note winning only two points out of their first three fixtures 26 Their main rival Hajduk Split also started the second part of the season on the wrong foot winning just one out of their first three matches which kept Sarajevo above by one point Antic s team went on to beat Sloboda and draw Dinamo Zagreb and Zeljeznicar before travelling to Split for the crucial game against Hajduk A packed Poljud stadium witnessed a 0 0 draw that ensured Sarajevo s one point advantage over the Croatian side The title race eventually came down to just the maroon whites and the Dalmatian side with hard won victories on both sides Three games until the finish Hajduk secured a comfortable route over Rijeka while Sarajevo had a much more difficult time in Novi Sad against Vojvodina the hosts broke the deadlock after just two minutes of play Luckily for the huge number of travelling fans Bosko Antic s men were able to equalize ten minutes from the break through a Jakovljevic effort and to eventually snatch the win seven minutes from time courtesy of a phenomenal volley from the edge of the box by Slavisa Vukicevic 26 The maroon whites now needed five points from their three last fixtures to clinch the title A routine 3 0 victory over Iskra was followed by a tough match against Vardar in Skopje that ended in a 2 2 draw after the hosts went up 2 0 just before half time 26 It all came down to the final league game against Red Star Belgrade played at a sold out Kosevo stadium where the maroon whites needed just a point to mathematically clinch the title Musemic broke the deadlock in the 23 minute and Jakovljevic doubled Sarajevo s lead with fifteen minutes to go The visitors were able to pull one back through Bosko Gjurovski in the 85th minute but it was too little too late 25 The celebrations began Sarajevo had won its second Yugoslav league title 27 The triumph qualified the club for the first round of the 1985 86 European Cup where they shockingly lost both legs to Finnish side Kuusysi Lahti 28 This result is still considered Sarajevo s worst in major European competitions The championship winning generation included the likes of Husref Musemic Faruk Hadzibegic Davor Jozic Dragan Jakovljevic Milos Đurkovic Predrag Pasic Mirza Kapetanovic Slavisa Vukicevic Zijad Svrakic Senad Merdanovic and Mehmed Janjos 29 Final years in Yugoslavia Edit Former Sarajevo midfielder Vladimir Petkovic has been manager of Switzerland since 2014 FK Sarajevo entered a turbulent period after clinching its second Yugoslav league title Three major members of the championship winning squad left the team in the summer of 1985 Star striker Husref Musemic joined Red Star Belgrade Faruk Hadzibegic moved to Spanish side Real Betis Team captain Predrag Pasic moved to VfB Stuttgart in the Bundesliga 30 The club management in search of replacements turned its sights to young players from lower tier sides bringing in Bernard Barnjak Vladimir Petkovic and Zoran Ljubicic Even though the team started the season on a high note it finished a disappointing 15th at the end of the 1985 86 season avoiding relegation by virtue of a superior goal difference compared to relegated OFK Beograd The following season again culminated in a lowly finish as new manager Denijel Piric led the team to a disappointing 13th place in the league standings 17 Further departures followed at the end of the season as Milos Đurkovic joined Besiktas Muhidin Teskeredzic made the move to Sturm Graz Davor Jozic joined Serie A side A C Cesena Zijad Svrakic transferred to Adana Demirspor and Branko Bosnjak joined NK Olimpija 30 The following two seasons again brought mediocre league finishes as the maroon whites concluded the respective campaigns on 13th and 14th spots barely avoiding relegation on both occasions 17 As with previous seasons a handful of players left the club during the summer transfer window with Slavisa Vukicevic moving to Creteil goalkeeper Enver Lugusic joining Konyaspor and Dragan Jakovljevic moving to FC Nantes On a positive note the 1989 90 season brought the return of fan favorite Husref Musemic who had spent the previous season playing for Scottish side Hearts His nine goals in 26 appearances did little to improve league results as the team again concluded the campaign on 13th spot along with an early exit in the Yugoslav Cup after a defeat to Macedonian third division minnows FK Sileks 17 The 1990 91 season saw Fuad Muzurovic again being named manager after a ten year absence Furthermore Soviet goalkeeper Aleksei Prudnikov was brought in from Velez Mostar thus becoming the first foreign player in the history of the club The team was able to conclude the season on 11th spot defeating Red Star Belgrade in a crucial hallmark game only days after the Belgrade outfit won the European Cup 30 The 1991 92 season was marked by the disintegration of Yugoslavia and was subsequently abandoned by Slovenian Croatian and Bosnian sides 31 Football was abruptly halted in Bosnia and Herzegovina for the duration of the war that would last for four years Notable FK Sarajevo players in the pre war period were Milos Nedic Dragan Jakovljevic Boban Bozovic Dane Kupresanin and Dejan Raickovic Recent years Edit Since the Bosnian independence the club has won 11 domestic titles 5 of which were Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina honors In addition the club reached play off stage final qualifying round for European competitions on 4 occasions once for UCL vs Dynamo Kyiv and three for UEL vs CFR Cluj Borussia Monchengladbach and Celtic War and independence Edit The Bosnian War in the early 1990s shut down competitive football in the territory and as a result FK Sarajevo became a touring club in 1993 under manager Fuad Muzurovic featuring players such as Elvir Baljic Almir Turkovic Senad Repuh and Mirza Varesanovic all future national team players for Bosnia and Herzegovina Many of the club s supporters including the infamous Horde Zla joined the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and fought in the war FK Sarajevo played a number of friendly games during this time such as the now famous 4 1 victory over the local UN peacekeeping force in 1994 a 1 1 draw against Parma F C while on tour in Italy and a 3 1 victory over the Iranian national team in Teheran In 1994 95 the first ever Bosnia and Herzegovina championship was held Sarajevo came first in their six team league in Jablanica and came runners up in the final league stage in Zenica behind local club Celik 32 Sarajevo again finished as runners up to Celik in 1996 97 by two points 33 but beat the Zenica based club in the Cup final and Super Cup 33 The Cup was retained the following year and despite finishing third in the league Sarajevo was runner up due to play offs There was no play off in 1998 99 the title was given to Sarajevo but it does not count 34 In 2004 Safet Susic who played at FK Sarajevo from 1973 to 1982 was voted Bosnia and Herzegovina s best player of the last 50 years at the UEFA Jubilee Awards 35 Sarajevo were runners up in the Bosnia and Herzegovina Premier League in 2006 07 but won their second title the following season beating Zrinjski Mostar by three points 36 Sarajevo have been a regular in Europa League qualification in the 21st century but are yet to make the group stages Off the back of their 2006 07 league title under manager Husref Musemic Sarajevo played in the UEFA Champions League for the first time in its current format They beat Maltese champions Marsaxlokk F C 6 0 away in their first game eventually winning 9 1 on aggregate 37 The second round saw Sarajevo defeat Belgians KRC Genk on away goals due to a 2 1 away win in the first leg 38 although the club was knocked out in the play offs for the competition s Group stage by Ukrainian champions Dynamo Kyiv who won 4 0 on aggregate 39 The club made the play offs round of the 2009 10 UEFA Europa League and faced CFR Cluj but lost 3 2 on aggregate The team defeated Spartak Trnava and Helsingborg to get to the play offs round Vincent Tan era a financial injection Edit Vincent Tan is worth an estimated US 1 6 billion 2014 40 Vincent Tan a Malaysian businessman and the owner of the Championship club Cardiff City bought FK Sarajevo in late 2013 pledging to invest 2 million into the club 41 Under the deal Cardiff will cooperate with FK Sarajevo exchanging players and taking part in a football academy yet to be established which Tan has said would lure new talents Under Tan s management the club brought in quality players with the likes of Milos Stojcev Dzemal Berberovic and Nemanja Bilbija who helped the club win the 2013 14 Bosnian Cup their first silverware since winning the Premier League in 2006 07 42 Prior to the Cup triumph Robert Jarni was brought in as the new manager of the club in December 2013 by Tan but was quickly dismissed only 4 months into his tenure on 7 April 2014 while the team was still in the semi finals of the Bosnian Cup due to the team failing to keep its chances of winning the domestic league title alive during later stages of the 2013 14 season 43 FK Sarajevo played a friendly match against Tan s Cardiff City FC U21 winning 4 1 44 In 2014 15 UEFA Europa League FK Sarajevo eliminated FK Haugesund and Atromitos to qualify for the play off round where it lost to German side Borussia Monchengladbach On 17 July 2014 Tan presented pledges of assistance of 255 000 each to two hospitals in Doboj and Maglaj during the halftime break of the UEFA Europa League qualifying match between Sarajevo and Norwegian club Haugesund at the Olympic Stadium in Sarajevo The money raised would be used to purchase and donate much needed medical equipment for the two hospitals 45 46 In June 2014 Tan made a personal donation of 114 000 while the people of Malaysia raised a total of 169 000 toward Bosnia s flood relief fund 47 In May 2014 the heaviest rains and floods in 120 years hit Bosnia and the surrounding region The worst affected areas were the towns of Doboj and Maglaj which were cut off from the rest of the country when floods deluged all major roads Damage from landslides and floods was estimated to run into hundreds of millions of euros and twenty four people lost their lives The cost of the disaster an official said could exceed that of the Bosnian War 48 On 5 August 2014 Sarajevo signed a cooperation agreement with third tier Bosnian club NK Bosna Visoko by which Sarajevo will loan its talented youngsters to the Visoko based side and will have first buy rights on all of Bosna players The agreement was signed by Adis Hajlovac and Mirza Laletovic on behalf of Bosna and Abdulah Ibrakovic on behalf of Sarajevo 49 The agreement de facto names Bosna the club s farm team On 26 September 2014 manager Dzenan Uscuplic was relieved of his duties as first team manager and was transferred back to the youth academy 50 On 30 September 2014 former Barcelona Real Sociedad and Bosnia and Herzegovina national team striker Meho Kodro was appointed manager 51 On 24 February 2015 Sarajevo signed a three and a half year general sponsorship agreement with Turkish Airlines which has been labeled the most lucrative in Bosnian professional sports history 52 53 On 21 April after poor league results the club sacked Kodro and once again named Dzenan Uscuplic manager until the end of the season 54 On 30 May the team defeated Sloboda Tuzla in the season s last fixture thus winning the league title after an eight year drought 55 56 The next season was a turbulent one for the club After Uscuplic left his post former Partizan and CSKA Sofia manager Miodrag Jesic took over the helm 57 only to be sacked after a string of disappointing results with Almir Hurtic leading the side to a disappointing 4th place finish in the league 58 On 29 August 2016 after another string of bad results at the start of the 2016 17 season Hurtic was sacked and Mehmed Janjos was named manager 59 Club s domestic revival Edit Since March 2019 FK Sarajevo is run by Vietnamese businessman Nguyễn Hoai Nam and the PVF Investment and Trading JSC Promotion Fund of Vietnamese Football Talents F C 60 61 62 The club has won back to back titles in Bosnia under managers Husref Musemic and Vinko Marinovic both 2018 19 and 2019 20 seasons of the Bosnian Premier League and a 2018 19 Bosnian Cup triumph as well Crest and colours Edit The club s original kit in traditional maroon The club s traditional colours are maroon and white while in recent years black gray and gold have also been represented as alternative club colours As the story goes the club s founders wanted to create a visual distinction between the new side and all other Yugoslav clubs of the time They chose maroon as the club s feature colour and in doing so preserved the identity of defunct club Sparta that operated in the city of Sarajevo during the early years of the Kingdom of SHS 63 The club colors were used as a reference during the formation of USD Bosna a sporting society that included former Euroleague winner KK Bosna Royal by the society s founders all supporters of the club FK Sarajevo s nickname is based on club colours which have become a major pop culture reference in the city The first official club crest depicted a red five pointed communist star with golden borders containing a golden silhouette of a footballer Further more a blue gear like circular frame representing socialist industrialization contained the club name 64 In the early 1950s the club crest was changed for the first time It namely received a badge like form and was split vertically into two sides of which the outer held the club name and aforementioned communist star while the inner contained a football with the club s foundation year under it In the early 1970s the club crest was restylized keeping the previous motifs that can still be found on today s club crest The color yellow was added to the restylized crest s borders at this time giving it a fresher look On the 30th anniversary of the club s founding in 1976 the club crest was again slightly altered With the end of the Bosnian War in 1996 the club crest was once again slightly altered by the replacement of the ideologically motivated communist star with a Bosnian Fleur de lis and a slight stylization of the crest s design including the lettering font which in subsequent years became one of the club s biggest trademarks 64 The adding of Fleur de lis motifs to their crests was a common practice by Bosnian football clubs in the first few years after the war The Fleur de lis was eventually removed altogether from the club crest in 2009 which today lacks any ideological or national symbolism 65 Instead the club readily emphasizes the two pre war crests as part of its heritage often selling souvenirs that are embroidered with them 66 The Bosnian Fleur de lis was once again restored as a temporary club motif during the 2013 14 season when it was included in the third kit design 67 Crests 1946 1947 1947 1958 1958 1992 1995 2001 2001 2009 2009 presentStadium and training grounds EditMain articles Asim Ferhatovic Hase Stadium and Butmir Training Centre Olympic stadium Asim Ferhatovic Hase FK Sarajevo play at the Asim Ferhatovic Hase Stadium formerly known as the Kosevo Stadium It is owned by the City of Sarajevo but is leased to the club on a long term basis The club runs and operates the stadium and has sole commercial and developmental rights to the olympic complex until at least 2051 with the possibility of a further 15 year extension 68 The current seating capacity is 34 500 The stadium was opened in 1947 and named after the Sarajevo neighbourhood of Kosevo where it is located 69 The stadium was literally buried into a local hill thus merging with its natural surroundings In 1950 a pitch and a tartan track were also added The first international football match at the stadium was played between Yugoslavia and Turkey in 1954 In 1966 the stadium hosted the Balkan Games and was again renovated for the occasion 70 A new administration building was built as were new locker rooms and a restaurant A modern scoreboard and new lighting were also provided In 1984 the stadium was reconstructed for the 1984 Winter Olympics that were held in Sarajevo and is therefore often unofficially called The Olympic Stadium 71 It is important to note that on 7 February 1984 the Asim H Ferhatovic stadium hosted the opening ceremony of the games and seated roughly 50 000 The West stand held 18 500 seating places at the time 72 In 2004 the stadium s official name was changed to Asim H Ferhatovic in memory of legendary FK Sarajevo striker Asim Ferhatovic who died after a heart attack in 1987 73 In 1998 three years after the end of the Bosnian War the stadium was renovated for a fourth time The seating capacity of the stadium was reduced to 34 500 and new seats were added 74 The ground has held matches for Sarajevo and their local rival FK Zeljeznicar including Europa League and Champions League fixtures Furthermore the stadium has hosted the national teams of Yugoslavia and Bosnia and Herzegovina on numerous occasions as well as many notable athletic meetings The stadium s highest attendance was recorded in a 1981 82 league match between FK Sarajevo and their city rival FK Zeljeznicar Allegedly roughly 60 000 people attended the game The stadium s largest post war attendance was recorded in the 2002 2003 UEFA Champions League third qualifying round match between FK Zeljeznicar and Newcastle United F C Allegedly about 34 000 people attended the game 75 The club s current training ground known as the Butmir Training Centre is located in the Ilidza municipality of the Sarajevo Canton The complex was opened in October 2015 and comprises a 70 000 square meter 17 acre surface containing state of the art facilities 76 It is also used by the club s youth school and women s team 77 78 The main artificial turf pitch is named after club legend Zelimir Vidovic who was killed during the Siege of Sarajevo while transporting wounded citizens to a nearby hospital 79 A statue of Vidovic was erected on the western grass knoll that encompasses the turf 79 Organization EditOwnership and finances Edit FK Sarajevo is a registered Private company limited by guarantee and corporate personhood that unlike football clubs that are registered as limited companies does not issue shares by which individuals or corporations can buy majority or minority ownership Instead the club s members act as guarantors by buying non ownership based management stakes in the form of contributions earning in return managing and voting rights 80 The guarantors give an undertaking to contribute a nominal amount in the event of the winding up of the company It is often believed that such a company cannot distribute its profits to its members but depending on the provisions of the articles as is the case with FK Sarajevo it very well may 81 Managing rights imply the right to form and control the club assembly steering committee and Supervisory Board by which the largest contributor de jure takes full control of the club 82 Furthermore the fact that the largest contributor may negotiate profit provisions between himself and the club opens the possibility for large scale financial investment that exceeds charitable and non profit contributions that are usually the cornerstone of companies limited by guarantee Malaysian billionaire investor and former Chairman of Berjaya Group Vincent Tan was the club s majority contributor and thus its sole operator After gaining control of the club in December 2013 by contributing 2 million Tan negotiated an agreement between himself and the club by which he will invest an undisclosed sum while also running the operational finances and policies of the club in return gaining the right to profit as would be the case of the club being a limited company 82 Furthermore the formation of Public limited companies in the fields of real estate and tourism have been negotiated between the club and Tan by which the companies will represent a joint venture by both parties earning the club complete financial self sustainability in the future 82 After taking control of the club Vincent Tan dissolved the long standing steering committee and Supervisory Board opting to create a five member board of directors for the day to day running of the club He appointed two of his Malaysian business associates Ken Choo i Lim Meng Kwong members of the board alongside three local members 83 84 The club s annual operational expenditure and budget have been undisclosed since Tan gained control of the club 85 In September 2015 the club paid off the last of its public and private debt thus becoming one of the rare debt free clubs in eastern Europe 86 In March 2019 it was announced that the ownership majority package was sold to Vietnamese businessman Nguyễn Hoai Nam and the PVF Investment and Trading JSC Promotion Fund of Vietnamese Football Talents F C 61 62 60 The club s general sponsor is Turkish Airlines with whom it signed a lucrative four year deal in 2015 It has been hailed as the most profitable sponsorship agreement in the history of Bosnian sports 87 FK Sarajevo s kit has been manufactured by Errea since 2021 88 The club has a variety of other sponsors and official partners which include Tourism Malaysia Visit Vietnam BH Telecom Securitas Skoda Bosna Bank International NLB Group Hayat TV Sarajevo Brewing Company and others 89 Management Edit Board of directors Edit As of 3 April 2022 90 Current Members Chairman Ismir Mirvic Member Hajrudin Kapetanovic Member Nenad PodgoracClub administration Edit As of 23 November 2022 Current staff Chairman of the Board Ismir Mirvic President of Assembly Valentin Ilievski Director Ajla Alimanovic General secretary Mirza Hadzic Finances Merisa Peco Cukurija Marketing director Faruk Cengic Public relations Bakir ArapovicSocial responsibility Edit Social responsibility and humanitarian work is one of the fundamental values of FK Sarajevo and the club is well known for its attitude towards it The club operates an aid and social programs foundation which seeks to encourage learning and promote healthy living amongst disadvantaged children young people and families 91 Furthermore the club has been on the forefront of community development for years donating large sums of money through its foundation to underdeveloped municipalities and school districts 92 The club organizes traditional blood donation conventions in its private clinic every month while raising awareness for health issues that are impacting society 93 94 An annual arts competition is organized by the club in which primary school children in the Sarajevo Canton are asked to draw or paint a mascot for the team 95 The three best ranked artists get scholarships for afterschool arts and crafts programs 95 Women s rights are an important aspect of the club s community and social development programs Apart from sponsoring a battered women s shelter in downtown Sarajevo the club also bestows free stadium entrance to all female fans on the week of International Women s Day 96 FK Sarajevo has a signed partnership with one of the leading Bosnian charity and youth development agencies Pomozi ba with whom it cooperates on numerous projects across the country while promoting the agency on its kit 97 The club is firmly committed to the development of Srebrenica and has been awarding yearly scholarships to hundreds of children from the town while also sponsoring the local multiethnic football team FK Guber 98 99 FK Sarajevo is one of the eight core members of the 2nd Chance Group CIC led project Give Football A Chance the others being Altinordu Athletic Bilbao Atromitos Hammarby Schalke 04 Sheffield United and Vitesse 100 The project s goal is the improvement of health and well being of more than 5000 children living in conflict zones and implementing a comprehensive program of both formal and informal education for the children 100 In the aftermath of the 2014 Southeast Europe floods that devastated numerous towns in the country FK Sarajevo was a major contributor to the massive relief effort The club organized and sent volunteers to the stricken towns and helped finance the rebuilding of homes both directly and through its foundation 101 102 103 The club s Malaysian owner Vincent Tan was also a major contributor to the relief effort personally donating 250 000 KM to hospitals in Maglaj and Doboj In January 2016 FK Sarajevo hosted Syrian refugee children in cooperation with UNICEF and the Red Cross 104 In October 2016 FK Sarajevo together with FK Novi Pazar and FK Velez organized a friendly match in Mostar The profits from the match tickets went to a fund for Syrian refugees 105 The club employs war veterans from the Ilidza municipality in its training centre as a way of giving back to the community 106 Honours EditDomestic Edit League Edit Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina Winners 5 1998 99 2006 07 2014 15 2018 19 2019 20 Runners up 7 1994 95 1996 97 1997 98 2005 06 2010 11 2012 13 2020 21 Yugoslav First League Winners 2 1966 67 1984 85 Runners up 2 1964 65 1979 80 Yugoslav Second League Winners 1 1948 49Cups Edit Bosnia and Herzegovina Cup Winners 7 1996 97 1997 98 2001 02 2004 05 2013 14 2018 19 2020 21 record Runners up 4 1998 99 2000 01 2016 17 2021 22 Yugoslav Cup Runners up 2 1966 67 1982 83 Supercup of Bosnia and Herzegovina Winners 1 1997 Runners up 2 1998 1999European Edit European Cup UEFA Champions League Best Round of 16 1 1967 68 UEFA Cup UEFA Europa League Best Round of 16 1 1982 83Doubles Edit Premier League and National Cup 1 2018 19Players EditMain article List of FK Sarajevo players Current squad Edit As of 14 December 2022 107 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 BIH Muhamed Sahinovic2 DF NGA Musa Muhammed3 DF BIH Avdija Vrsajevic4 DF BIH Muharem Trako5 DF BIH Marin Anicic6 DF BIH Enedin Mulalic7 FW BIH Hamza Catakovic8 MF BIH Andrej Đokanovic Vice captain 9 FW BIH Mersudin Ahmetovic 3rd captain 10 MF BIH Dal Varesanovic14 MF BIH Tarik Ramic15 MF BIH Haris Alisah No Pos Nation Player17 DF SRB Nemanja Tomasevic19 MF BIH Adnan Dzafic20 MF BIH Đani Salcin25 MF CRO Frane Cirjak27 MF MKD Daniel Avramovski29 MF CRO Ivan Ikic30 FW BIH Irfan Ramic35 GK BIH Belmin Dizdarevic50 MF BIH Muhamed Buljubasic98 MF BIH Mirza Mustafic99 MF BIH Asmir Suljic Captain Players with multiple nationalities Edit Marin Anicic Nemanja Tomasevic Mirza Mustafic Asmir Suljic 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 DF BIH Amer Dupovac at Igman Konjic DF BIH Mihajlo Jovasevic at Mladost Doboj Kakanj Ismir Pintol trophy Edit The Ismir Pintol trophy Trofej Ismir Pintol is a trophy awarded to the most distinguished player in the past season and named after deceased FK Sarajevo fan Ismir Pintol 108 The winner of the trophy is decided by popular vote on the official website of the club s supporters and has been awarded since 2003 To be eligible to participate in the poll a player must appear for the club in at least 10 official matches The trophy was not awarded on five separate occasions as an indicator of the supporters dissatisfaction with team results 109 As of 2019 the only player to have won the trophy on two separate occasions is Sedin Torlak 109 Winners 110 Name Nat Position SeasonSafet Nadarevic DF 2002 03Not awarded 2003 04Dzemal Berberovic DF 2004 05Matija Matko FW 2005 06Marciano MF 2006 07Semjon Milosevic DF 2007 08Damir Hadzic MF 2008 09Not awarded 2009 10Sedin Torlak DF 2010 11Not awarded 2011 12Sedin Torlak DF 2012 13Ivan Tatomirovic DF 2013 14Samir Radovac MF 2014 15Leon Benko FW 2015 16Marko Mihojevic DF 2016 17Not awarded 2017 18Nihad Mujakic DF 2018 19Mersudin Ahmetovic FW 2019 20Amer Dupovac DF 2020 21Not awarded 2021 22Former players Edit For details of former players see List of FK Sarajevo players and Category FK Sarajevo players Youth department and affiliates EditMain article FK Sarajevo Youth School The FK Sarajevo Youth School Bosnian Omladinski pogon Fudbalskog kluba Sarajevo the club s youth department is split into two sections Namely The Asim Ferhatovic Hase School of Football Bosnian Skola fudbala Asim Ferhatovic Hase 111 named after legendary striker Asim Ferhatovic and the FK Sarajevo Academy Bosnian Akademija Fudbalskog kluba Sarajevo 112 The former functions as both a general model for the popularization of the sport and as a filtering mechanism used to pick out locally based footballing talents which are later transferred to the Academy The Academy in turn is a top of the line boarding school which brings in the biggest talents from Bosnia and Herzegovina and organizes the competitive youth selections for the club The department was founded in the 1950s and has been historically known as one of the best youth systems in the former Yugoslavia FK Sarajevo s youth selections train in two venues the Asim Ferhatovic Hase Sports Complex and the elite Butmir Training Centre which is currently undergoing a huge expansion as of July 2016 113 Personnel EditTechnical staff Edit As of 12 December 2022 the staff includes Current staff Manager Mirza Varesanovic Assistant Manager Senad Repuh Assistant Manager Emir Obuca Goalkeeping Coach Adi Adilovic Fitness Coach Almir Seferovic Fitness Coach Evelin Pipo Video analyst Admir Kozlic Equipment Manager Mustafa Beridan Equipment Manager Nermin Huskic Youth Academy Manager Mensur DoganMedical staff Edit As of 30 December 2019 the staff includes Current staff Coordinator of the Medical Team Dr Reuf Karabeg Doctor Dr Adnan Hadzimuratovic Doctor Dr Senad Maksic Doctor Dr Dzevad Vrabac Senior Physiotherapist Ismar Hadzibajric Physiotherapist Mirza Marevac Physiotherapist Eldin JarovicHistorical EditPresidents Edit Below is a list of FK Sarajevo presidents from 1946 until the present day Name Years Safet Dzinovic 1946 1947 114 Branko Todic 1948 1949 Milos Samardzic 1949 1950 Bosko Baskot 1950 1951 Milos Samardzic 1952 1953 Bosko Baskot 1953 1954 Slobodan Kezunovic 1955 1956 Vaso Radic 1957 1959 115 Semso Kapetanovic 1959 1961 Ljubo Kojo 1962 1963 Mile Perkovic 1964 1967 116 Milivoje Stekovic 1967 1968 Osman Maglajlic 1969 1970 117 Name Years Izet Busevac 1970 1971 Vaso Radic 1972 1973 115 Mustafa Ajanovic 1973 1974 118 Ljubomir Grupkovic 1974 1981 Dusko Cvijetic 1981 1983 Alija Alic 1983 1984 Mile Markic 1985 1987 Nedjeljko Despotovic 1988 Kemal Hujic 1988 1992 119 Muhamed Granov 1992 1999 120 Meho Obradovic 1999 2000 121 Besim Mehmedic 2000 2001 122 Salih Delalic 2001 2002 123 Name Years Faruk Hadzibegic 2002 2004 124 Nijaz Gracic 2004 2005 125 Savo Vlaski 2005 126 Hajrudin Suman 2005 2010 127 Nijaz Merdanovic 2010 128 Zijad Blekic 2010 129 Amir Rizvanovic 2010 2012 130 Alen Hujic 2013 2014 131 Edis Kusturica 2014 2016 132 Valentin Ilievski 2016 2019 133 Senad Jahic 2019 2021 Damir Kasum 2021 Ismir Mirvic 2021 presentManagerial history Edit Main article List of FK Sarajevo managers Below is a list of FK Sarajevo managers from 1946 until the present day 1 Name Nationality YearsJosip Bulat 1946 1947Slavko Zagorac 1947 1948Miroslav Brozovic 1948 1952Slavko Zagorac 1952 1953Aleksandar Tomasevic 1953Slavko Zagorac 1953Miroslav Brozovic 1954 1956Slavko Zagorac 1956Aleksandar Tomasevic 1956 1958Laszlo Fenyvesi 1958Vojin Bozovic 1958 1959Miroslav Brozovic 1959 1961Ratomir Cabric 1961 1963Abdulah Gegic 1963 1965Aleksandar Atanackovic 1965 1966Miroslav Brozovic 1966 1967Franjo Lovric 1967Munib Saracevic 1967 1969Miroslav Brozovic 1969 1970Srboljub Markusevic 1970 1971Abdulah Gegic 1971 1972Srboljub Markusevic 1972 1973Svetozar Vujovic 1973 1974Mirsad Fazlagic 1974 1975Vukasin Visnjevac 1975 1977Fuad Muzurovic 1977 1981Srboljub Markusevic 1981 1983Bosko Antic 1983 1986Denijal Piric 1986 1988Dzemaludin Musovic 1988 1990Rajko Rasevic 1990Srboljub Markusevic 1990Fuad Muzurovic 1990 1995Denijal Piric 1995 1996Nermin Hadziahmetovic 1996 1997Mehmed Janjos 1997 1998Nermin Hadziahmetovic 1998 1999Name Nationality YearsSead Jesenkovic 1999Agim Nikolic 1999Denijal Piric 2000 2001Husref Musemic 2001Fuad Muzurovic 2001 2002Husref Musemic 2002 2003Agim Nikolic 2003 2004Kemal Alispahic 2004Edin Prljaca 2004Husref Musemic 2005 2008Sener Bajramovic 2008Husnija Arapovic 2008Mehmed Janjos 2008 2010Mirza Varesanovic 2010 2011Jiri Plisek 2011Dragan Jovic 2012 2013Husref Musemic 2013Abdulah Oruc interim 2013Robert Jarni 2013 2014Dzenan Uscuplic 2014Meho Kodro 2014 2015Dzenan Uscuplic 2015Almir Hurtic interim 2015Miodrag Jesic 2015 2016Almir Hurtic 2016Mehmed Janjos 2016 2017Senad Repuh 2017Husref Musemic 2017 2019Vinko Marinovic 2019 2021Dzenan Uscuplic interim 2021Abdulah Oruc interim 2021Goran Sablic 2021Aleksandar Vasoski 2022Dzenan Uscuplic interim 2022Feđa Dudic 2022Emir Obuca interim 2022Mirza Varesanovic 2022 presentTechnical Sporting directors Edit Below is a list of FK Sarajevo Technical director later Sporting directors and their respective tenures Name YearsSvetozar Vujovic 1972 1973 134 135 136 137 Svetozar Vujovic 1975 16 January 1993 134 136 Mirza Varesanovic 11 August 2004 30 June 2006 138 Senad Merdanovic 24 August 2006 29 December 2010 139 Edin Hadzialagic 19 January 2011 17 February 2012 140 Abdulah Ibrakovic 26 August 2013 23 September 2015 141 142 Faruk Ihtijarevic 16 August 2016 24 May 2018Emir Hadzic 24 May 2018 18 April 202123 May 2022 23 November 2022Memorials Edit Memorial on the North side of the Asim Ferhatovic Hase stadium Below is a list of memorials established by the club Horde ZlaThe club raised a memorial outside of the north stand of the Asim Ferhatovic Hase Stadium which bears tribute to hundreds of members of the club s ultras group Horde Zla killed in the defense of the city during the Siege of Sarajevo Svetozar VujovicSvetozar Vujovic played for the club from 1959 to 1972 and was a key member of the 1967 championship winning generation After retiring he managed the club for one season before being named club director a position he held for over twenty years With the start of the Siege of Sarajevo in 1992 Vujovic remained in the city declining numerous offers for refuge Following his death on 16 January 1993 FK Sarajevo named the club s main ceremonial lounge room in its administrative facility located in downtown Sarajevo The Svetozar Vujovic Salon in his honor Asim Ferhatovic HaseAsim Ferhatovic was a legendary club forward that netted 66 goals in 174 league matches thus becoming the club s leading all time goal scorer in official fixtures He is considered one of the greatest players to ever play for the maroon whites The Kosevo Stadium that is owned by the city and leased on a long term basis by the club is named after Ferhatovic who died in 1987 The club s School of Football which is a part of its youth departement is also named after him Zelimir Vidovic KeliZelimir Vidovic was a star player for the club during the 1970s and early 1980s On 17 May 1992 with the Siege of Sarajevo already underway Vidovic took part in an operation to help transport wounded civilians to a nearby hospital in the Sarajevo neighbourhood of Dobrinja After the convoy was stopped by Serb forces he was executed with his remains being buried in a mass grave An annual tournament in his honour has been organized since 2004 while the main pitch at the recently built FK Sarajevo Training Centre is also named after him A statue of Vidovic was erected on the western grass knoll that encompasses the pitch Ismir PintolIsmir Pintol was a 6 year old FK Sarajevo supporter who passed away on 29 June 2002 after a lengthy battle with leukemia The club in cooperation with its fan association established the Ismir Pintol trophy Trofej Ismir Pintol which is awarded to the most distinguished player of the past season The trophy has been awarded since the 2002 03 season Traditionally vocal support for the team in the first six minutes of every season s last home fixture is not shown with fans remaining in their seats in memory of the boy The trophy is awarded before kick off at the base of the north stand Vedran PuljicVedran Puljic was a 24 year old member of the club s ultras group Horde zla who was killed by single gun shot wound during the infamous Siroki Brijeg football riots on 4 October 2009 The single gun shot wound that killed Puljic was allegedly fired by a member of the local police force Oliver Knezovic who was arrested shortly after but never prosecuted On 23 May 2013 the curva at the north stand of the Kosevo stadium traditionally the main base for the Horde Zla was named in honor of Puljic Furthermore the club commemorates his death by holding a vigil at his grave site once a year on the anniversary of his death Notes Edit 1 Includes Caretaker managers 2 Official title has been changed to Head of the Scouting DepartmentClub records and statistics EditMain article FK Sarajevo records and statistics FK Sarajevo under the name Torpedo played its first match on 3 November 1946 against Bratstvo Travnik winning 6 0 143 The club s first Yugoslav First League tie was a 2 2 draw against Ponziana Trieste on 25 August 1947 The maroon whites played their first official European match on 18 July 1960 in the Mitropa Cup losing 2 4 to MTK Budapest FK Sarajevo s record holder for number of club appearances is Ibrahim Biogradlic He played 646 games for the maroon whites between 1951 and 1967 144 The goal scoring record holder is striker Dobrivoje Zivkov who scored 212 goals in both official and unofficial matches for the club The goal scoring record holder in official matches is legendary striker Asim Ferhatovic who found the back of the net on 100 occasions in all official competitions including 98 league goals 198 in total 145 Over 50 FK Sarajevo players were capped for the Yugoslav and Bosnian national teams Former FK Sarajevo defender Faruk Hadzibegic is the third most capped player in the history of the Yugoslav national team with 65 caps 146 He captained The Blues at the 1990 FIFA World Cup 147 Former FK Sarajevo defender Mirsad Fazlagic captained Yugoslavia at UEFA Euro 1968 and was named part of the all tournament team 148 Former FK Sarajevo midfielder Elvir Baljic would break Real Madrid s transfer record in a 1999 move from Fenerbahce The Galacticos paid a transfer fee of 26 million for the Bosnian 149 Former FK Sarajevo player Safet Susic would be named Bosnia and Herzegovina s UEFA Golden Jubilee inductee in 2004 150 Six of the ten former Bosnia and Herzegovina national team managers are former FK Sarajevo players Fuad Muzurovic Dzemaludin Musovic Faruk Hadzibegic Denijel Piric Miroslav Blazevic and Safet Susic 151 FK Sarajevo was the most successful club from Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Yugoslav First League winning two titles and finishing runners up on two other occasions 1 The club is ranked 6th in that competition s All time league table 152 FK Sarajevo is the record holder for number of Bosnian Cup triumphs 7 153 The maroon whites are first in the All time table of the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina seven points more than Zeljeznicar 154 They have won the national championship five times finishing runners up on six occasions 153 FK Sarajevo is Bosnia and Herzegovina s best rated representative in European competitions Recent finishes and attendance Edit Yugoslav First League Season Cup Europe League Average1984 85 1 16 1st 9 3231990 91 1 8 11th 3 382Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina Season Cup Europe League Average2009 10 1 8 EL Play off 5th 5 5042010 11 1 4 2nd 3 6002011 12 1 4 EL 3QR 4th 3 4552012 13 1 8 EL 3QR 2nd 3 9362013 14 Winners EL 2QR 3rd 3 4952014 15 1 4 EL Play off 1st 6 5912015 16 1 4 CL 2QR 4th 4 5702016 17 Runners up 3rd 3 6802017 18 1 16 EL 1QR 3rd 3 1862018 19 Winners EL 2QR 1st 4 4172019 20 1 8 CL 1QREL 3QR 1st 5 1612020 21 Winners CL 2QREL Play off 2nd N A2021 22 Runners up ECL 1QR 4th 3 062 Note The 2016 17 season was the first to be organized with 12 teams and a two stage format Regular season league and Championship Relegation league rounds The top six teams in the regular season qualified for the Championship league round while the bottom six competed between themselves in an effort to avoid relegation That format lasted until the end of the 2017 18 season after which the league returned to the old format this time having 33 full rounds European record EditMain article FK Sarajevo in European football Competition Pld W D L GF GA GDEuropean Cup Champions League 18 5 2 11 24 26 2UEFA Cup Europa League 60 21 13 26 85 112 27UEFA Europa Conference League 2 0 1 1 0 1 1Total 80 26 16 38 109 139 30Last updated on 15 July 2021 155 Pld Matches played W Matches won D Matches drawn L Matches lost GF Goals for GA Goals against Women s football EditMain article SFK 2000 Armisa Kuc left representing Montenegro FK Sarajevo also operates a women s football team SFK 2000 Sarajevo They have been affiliated to the men s team since 2015 when a fusion was signed on 4 July of the same year after which the club assumed the FK Sarajevo crest and colours 156 The club was founded in June 2000 as part of the Alija Miladin recreational association after which it tied itself to a now defunct men s football team from the Otoka neighbourhood of Sarajevo They play their home games at the Otoka stadium the home ground of Bosnian Premier League club FK Olimpic Sarajevo Since the club s founding it has become the strongest element in Bosnian women s football winning 14 consecutive national titles 13 consecutive national cups 13 doubles and representing the country in European competitions as well as being the most decorated women s club in the Former Yugoslavia 157 158 The club has participated in the UEFA Women s Cup from 2003 onwards but never reached the final rounds In the 2009 10 UEFA Women s Champions League when the competition was rebranded and reorganized the side reached the round of 32 a feat repeated during the 2012 13 season The side s best UEFA women s club ranking was 17th in August 2013 158 SFK 2000 players form the core of the Bosnia and Herzegovina women s national team while the side s manager Samira Hurem is the longstanding Bosnia amp Herzegovina manager 158 The women s section of the club also operates a detached youth system for girls from the ages of five to sixteen 159 On 29 August 2016 the club qualified for the Round of 32 in the Women s Champions League for a third time in its History 160 On 1 September 2016 the team drew WFC Rossiyanka of Russia in the round of 32 161 The club once again qualified for the round of 32 this time in the 2018 19 UEFA Women s Champions League season but got eliminated by Chelsea F C 11 0 on aggregate 162 163 USD Bosna EditSee also USD Bosna KK Bosna Royal and RK Bosna Sarajevo FK Sarajevo garners a close relationship with USD Bosna or University Sport Society Bosna Bosnian Univerzitetsko sportsko drustvo Bosna The society was founded on 7 December 1947 with the goal of organizing the existing university student sports clubs in Sarajevo USD Bosna was the largest sport society in the Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina with teams in 19 sports The most notable members of said society are KK Bosna Royal that won the Euroleague Basketball title in 1979 164 and RK Bosna Sarajevo that reached the 1 8 finals of the EHF Champions League in 2011 165 The relationship traditionally stems from the fact that both sides share unique maroon and white club colours which lead KK Bosna Royal to garner most of its fan base from FK Sarajevo in its rise to the top in the mid and late 1970s Through time the two sides became colloquially interchangeable as the FK Sarajevo organized supporters group Horde Zla equally followed both forming a so called Maroon Family Even though RK Bosna did not represent a big player in Yugoslav handball the club s post war ascent was thoroughly supported by Horde zla On 29 August 2013 FK Sarajevo and RK Bosna Sarajevo signed a cooperation agreement based on the principle of strengthening ties between the aforementioned family members 166 On 6 November 2013 the same was done between FK Sarajevo and KK Bosna Royal by which the forty year old relationship was officialized 167 Supporters EditMain articles Horde Zla and Maroon Friends 1946 FK Sarajevo is one of the two most popular clubs in Bosnia and Herzegovina having a large fanbase across the country the Sandzak region of Serbia and Montenegro and the Bosnian diaspora especially in Germany Austria Switzerland Scandinavia Canada Australia and the United States The largest diaspora fan association is registered in Stuttgart under the name Horde Zla Stuttgart 168 The club s supporters in the US formed FC Bordo Saint Louis in 2013 as an hommage to the club with the side competing in the National Premier Soccer League as of 2014 168 From the moment FK Sarajevo was established on 24 October 1946 it quickly grew a following in the city of Sarajevo The fact that nearly all pre war Sarajevan clubs were banned by the new communist authorities left a large vacuum in a city that was traditionally a footballing centre in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia The majority of fans stemmed from the numerous downtown Sarajevan Bascarsija Stari grad and Centar neighbourhoods predominantly inhabited by Bosniaks This is not to say that other ethnicities did not support the club They did in huge numbers but the history of organized support for the club is nevertheless closely tied to the aforementioned neighbourhoods which culturally and historically represent the soul of the city FK Sarajevo fans have been historically called Pitari while an individual was and is still known as a Pitar The nickname meaning a consumer of the local Bosnian dish pita was originally a derogatory label given by fans of working class Zeljeznicar that implied the pre war upper class background of most FK Sarajevo supporters 169 This notion was based on the fact that the old downtown neighbourhoods of the city were the traditional centres of commerce and artisanship even though the socioeconomic landscape of the city had dramatically changed by the time the club was formed The organized supporters group of FK Sarajevo is known as Horde Zla English Hordes of Evil or Evil Gang and was formed in 1987 with the arrival of the Ultras subculture to Yugoslavia The group is situated on the north stand of the Asim Ferhatovic Hase Stadium and has a fairly decentralized organizational structure with many subgroups present at matches The group s logo consists of a stylized depiction of the Grim Reaper borrowed from a Zagor comic book at the time of the group s inception Horde Zla have gained notoriety through the decades because of infamous examples of football violence 170 171 172 The group traditionally garners very close relations with the supporters of Dynamo Dresden with the two groups often travelling together to away games of both clubs and sharing banners 173 174 Horde Zla have in the past garnered close relations with the FK Novi Pazar ultras group Torcida Sandzak 175 Another notable supporters association and advocacy group is Maroon Friends 1946 which attracts influential individuals from the financial political and cultural sectors of Bosnian society with the aim of lobbying both locally and internationally for the club and influencing club policies 176 The association has close ties to Horde Zla 177 The current chairman of Maroon Friends 1946 is prominent singer songwriter and poet Benjamin Isovic 178 Rivalries EditSarajevo derby Edit Main article Sarajevo derby FK Sarajevo s biggest rivalry is with fellow Sarajevo club FK Zeljeznicar Meetings between these rivals are known as the Sarajevo derby or the Eternal derby Bosnian Vjeciti derbi The Sarajevo 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 Hellcome to Sarajevo 179 The roots of the rivalry can be traced back to the strong historical animosity between the capital s working class and bourgeoisie wherein the former traditionally inhabited the more liberal yet poorer suburban neighbourhoods and mainly supported FK Zeljeznicar while the latter resided in the traditional and wealthy old and central parts of the city and represented the main fan base of FK Sarajevo 180 Furthermore since its formation FK Sarajevo has always been closely tied to the political and financial elites of Bosnia and Herzegovina both in socialist Yugoslavia and since the country s independence while FK Zeljeznicar seldom had such influential support and has been considered a club of common folk even though this notion can be disputed Even though the rivalry between the two sides grew large from the very formation of FK Sarajevo 181 the two teams only met in friendly fixtures for the better part of a decade due to the fact that they competed in different levels of the Yugoslav football league system The first official league match was held in 1954 FK Sarajevo won 6 1 182 This is still the biggest victory by any team in the Sarajevo derby It is important to note that in the past few decades the class divide between clubs has partly eroded and both fan bases gather support from all classes but the historical differences and animosities are still visible 182 As of 26 August 2022 147 Sarajevo derbies have been played with 44 wins for FK Sarajevo 46 for FK Zeljeznicar and 57 draws 177 181 Other rivalries Edit Main article 2009 NK Siroki Brijeg FK Sarajevo football riots FK Sarajevo also shares a strong historic rivalry with NK Celik Zenica as well as a relatively new rivalry with NK Siroki Brijeg which came into being as a result of the 2009 Siroki Brijeg riots that cost the life of FK Sarajevo supporter Vedran Puljic and resulted in over thirty serious injuries including four gunshot wounds There are conflicting reports about who started the violence Horde Zla accused local residents and police for their mistreatment on their way to the match and right up to entering the stadium The official statement of Horde Zla claims that the incident was planned by local politicians and that their buses were separated and parked too far from the stadium which left them open to stoning and attacks They also claim that initially there were only 30 local policemen present and they did nothing to prevent the violence 183 Local police and residents said Horde Zla fans were the first to attack 184 According to local police officials most of the regional police had earlier been sent to the nearby city of Mostar to prevent possible violence during the match between city rivals Zrinjski and Velez 183 The subsequent violence that followed resulted in Verdan Puljic s death Since the riots meetings of the two sides carry an ominous atmosphere Sarajevo shares another relatively new rivalry with HSK Zrinjski Mostar based on both clubs playing pivotal roles in Bosnian football Relations EditAffiliated clubs Edit Cardiff City 185 Friends Edit Dynamo Dresden 186 Kit and sponsorships EditPeriod Supplier Shirt sponsor1946 1969 None None1969 1972 None Energopetrol1972 1980 YASSA Sipad1981 1983 Playground Energoinvest1984 1988 Admiral Jutro Gorenje1988 1990 Slovenija Sport Privredna banka1991 1992 Vocado Cenex1993 1994 None Vemex1996 1997 Patrick Sarajevo Tobacco Factory 187 1997 2002 Umbro2002 2003 NAAI Aura 188 2003 2004 Lotto 189 2004 2007 Legea 189 2007 2010 Nike 190 2010 2011 Legea 191 2011 2012 Royal 192 2012 2013 Lescon 193 2013 2015 Haad 194 Visit Malaysia 195 2015 2016 Turkish Airlines 196 2016 2021 Nike 197 2021 Errea 198 References Edit a b Vecna lista fudbalskih prvenstava SFR Jugoslavije Strategija org Retrieved 17 March 2014 World Stadiums Stadiums in Bosnia amp Herzegovina worldstadiums com Archived from the original on 1 May 2017 Retrieved 27 March 2017 Utakmice sirom svijeta prijem u Vatikanu in Bosnian Oslobođenje ba Archived from the original on 27 February 2015 Retrieved 12 August 2014 FK Sarajevo slavi 68 rođendan Scsport ba Archived from the original on 24 October 2014 Retrieved 20 August 2014 Kako je nastao FK Sarajevo Fksinfo com Retrieved 27 October 2014 Junaci bez ulica Miroslav Meho Brozovic Radiosarajevo ba Archived from the original on 26 August 2014 Retrieved 27 October 2014 Pivoda Ales 2013 Legenda se vratila in Czech p 35 ISBN 978 80 86783 65 9 George J Vassalos 14 March 2007 2nd Balkan Cup 1961 63 Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation Intertoto Cup 1962 63 Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation Retrieved 20 August 2014 IN MEMORIAM Asim Ferhatovic 1933 1987 in Bosnian Fksinfo ba Retrieved 3 August 2016 a b List of Topscorers Yugoslav First League 1963 64 Asim Ferhatovic 19 goals Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation 25 July 2014 a b 1966 67 FK Sarajevo List of Champions Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation 25 July 2014 Cup of SFR Yugoslavia 1966 67 Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation 25 July 2014 Sarajevo v Olympiakos Sept Oct 1967 UEFA 25 July 2014 Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Sarajevo v Man United Nov 1967 UEFA 25 July 2014 Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 a b FK Sarajevo i period stagnacije in Bosnian Fksinfo com Retrieved 12 August 2014 a b c d e Yugoslavia List of Final Tables Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation Retrieved 12 August 2014 FK Sarajevo 1970 1975 in Bosnian Fksarajevo ba Retrieved 12 August 2014 SFR Yugoslavia First League 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on 12 August 2014 Retrieved 17 March 2014 Uscuplic smijenjen jer nema UEFA licencu in Bosnian Vijesti ba Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 30 September 2014 El exbarcelonista Meho Kodro es el nuevo entrenador del Sarajevo Marca in Spanish Spain 26 September 2014 Retrieved 30 September 2014 FK Sarajevo i Turkish Airlines potpisali sponzorski ugovor na tri i po godine in Bosnian Trt net tr Archived from the original on 24 February 2015 Retrieved 24 February 2015 FK Sarajevo i Turkish Airlines ozvanicili saradnju in Bosnian Oslobođenje ba Retrieved 24 February 2015 Uscuplic back Kodro fired Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 21 April 2015 Nakon osam godina Sarajevo opet prvak BiH Retrieved 31 May 2015 Sarajevo novi prvak BiH Retrieved 31 May 2015 Miodrag Jesic novi trener FK Sarajevo in Bosnian Al Jazeera Retrieved 31 August 2016 Miodrag Jesic vise nije trener FK Sarajeva in Bosnian Sportsport ba Retrieved 31 August 2016 Sluzbeno Mehmed Janjos novi 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2014 Scenes from Sarajevo From the Olympics to War and Back Again The Wire Retrieved 20 August 2014 1984 Winter Olympics official report Archived 26 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine pp 10 14 90 Sarajevski smeker u kopackama Asim Ferhatovic Hase Vesti rs Retrieved 20 August 2014 Asim Ferhatovic Hase Stadium StadiumDB com Retrieved 20 August 2014 Champions League 3rd qualifying round summaries UEFA 14 August 2002 Retrieved 30 September 2015 Predstavljamo Idejni projekat trening kampa FK Sarajevo Sportsport ba 8 May 2014 Retrieved 28 July 2016 U Akademiji FK Sarajevo trenira 110 mladih igraca nove uzdanice stizu iz Butmira Official website 17 April 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2016 Igracice SFK 2000 igraju prvu zvanicnu utakmicu u trening centru FK Sarajevo Sutra ba 19 March 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2016 a b Uprava FK Sarajevo odlucila Trening kamp u Butmiru nazvan po legendarnom Keliju Novi ba 25 October 2016 Retrieved 25 October 2016 Zakon o sportu Kantona Sarajevo PDF Sluzbene novine Kantona Sarajevo Retrieved 3 August 2016 Hannigan B 2003 Company Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 406 91356 2 a b c Vincent Tan vecinski vlasnik FK Sarajevo Al Jazeera Retrieved 3 August 2016 Ko je Ken Cho i koja je njegova uloga u FK Sarajevu Avaz ba Retrieved 3 August 2016 Promjene u FK Sarajevo Restruktuiranje kluba po zelji Tana vecinskog ulagaca Nap ba 10 June 2016 Retrieved 3 August 2016 Odluka o novom konceptu strateskog upravljanja FK Sarajevo na predstojecoj Skupstini kluba Official website Retrieved 3 August 2016 FK Sarajevo izvrsio uplatu posljednje rate duga prema PU Federacije BiH Official website Retrieved 3 August 2016 Turkish Airlines i FK Sarajevo zvanicno potpisali ugovor Bordo klub dobio novog generalnog sponzora Official website Retrieved 3 August 2016 Predstavljeni novi dresovi FK Sarajevo proizvođac je italijanski brend Errea Klix Retrieved 14 July 2021 FK Sarajevo sponzori Official website Retrieved 3 August 2016 Odrzana vanredna sjednica Skupstine FKS Predstavljen novi Upravni odbor tima sa Koseva in Bosnian Official website 4 April 2022 Retrieved 2 June 2022 Fudbalski klub Sarajevo nastavlja sa podrskom skolovanja djece iz Srebrenice Official website Retrieved 30 July 2016 Fudbalski klub Sarajevo u posjetu Centralnom uredu MFS EMMAUS Official website Retrieved 30 July 2016 Uspjesno odrzana akcija dobrovoljnog darivanja krvi u svecanom salonu Svetozar Vujovic Official website Retrieved 30 September 2015 Uspjesno realizovana akcija darivanja krvi Official website Retrieved 30 September 2015 a b Nacrtaj ili napisi kako izgleda Bordo div u tvojoj prici Official website Retrieved 30 September 2015 Poklon za 8 mart besplatan ulaz za Bordo dame protiv Celika Official website Retrieved 30 September 2015 Fudbalski klub Sarajevo i humanitarno Udruzenje Pomozi potpisali memorandum o saradnji i razumijevanju Official website Retrieved 30 July 2016 FK Sarajevo nastavlja sa podrskom internatskog smjestaja za djecu iz Srebrenice Official website Retrieved 30 July 2016 FK Sarajevo ucestvuje na jubileju FK Guber iz Srebrenice Klix ba Retrieved 30 July 2016 a b DAJTE FUDBALU SANSU Mijenjamo zivote djece sirom svijeta Official website Retrieved 30 July 2016 Realizovana akcija Bordo Armija za BiH Official website Retrieved 30 July 2016 Poziv za ucesce u volonterskoj akciji BORDO ARMIJA ZA BiH Official website Retrieved 30 July 2016 BORDO ARMIJA nastavlja prikupljanje pomoci za unesrecene građane BiH Official website Retrieved 30 July 2016 Sarajevo ugostilo djecake iz Sirije Kallasi pozelio dobrodoslicu svojim sunarodnjacima Official website Retrieved 30 July 2016 SARAJEVO U VRAPCICIMA PROTIV NOVOG PAZARA Sav prihod za izbjeglice iz Sirije avaz ba Retrieved 27 March 2017 Trening centar Official website 28 January 2017 Retrieved 9 February 2017 FK Sarajevo Prvi tim fksarajevo ba in Bosnian Retrieved 14 December 2022 Preminuo Ismir Pintol Historija ba Retrieved 20 August 2014 a b Trofej Ismir Pintol osvojio Sedin Torlak Klix ba Retrieved 20 August 2014 Svi dobitnici trofeja Ismir Pintol Nogomanija ba Archived from the original on 30 October 2014 Retrieved 20 August 2014 Skola fudbala Asim Ferhatovic Hase in Bosnian Fksarajevo ba Retrieved 12 August 2014 Akademija Fudbalskog kluba Sarajevo in Bosnian Fksarajevo ba Retrieved 12 August 2014 Predstavljamo Idejni projekat trening kampa FK Sarajevo in Bosnian Sportsport ba Retrieved 12 August 2014 Za prvog Predsjednika izabran je Safet Dzinovic Sarajevo co ba Retrieved 2 October 2014 a b Sahranjen Vaso Radic bivsi gradonacelnik Sarajeva Depo ba Retrieved 2 October 2014 Preminuo bivsi Predsjednik FK Sarajevo Mile Perkovic Fksarajevo ba Retrieved 2 October 2014 In memoriam Osman Maglajlic 1921 2010 Fksinfo com Retrieved 2 October 2014 Prim dr Mustafa Ajanovic Rogatica online Retrieved 2 October 2014 Preminuo Kemal Hujic nekadasnji predsjednik FK Sarajevo Klix ba Retrieved 2 October 2014 FK Sarajevo korak po korak s Tanom Al Jazeera Retrieved 2 October 2014 Predsjednik FK Sarajevo podnio ostavku Infobih com Retrieved 2 October 2014 Nisam usvojio nikakav Nacrt budzeta Kantona Klix ba Retrieved 2 May 2016 Delalic s death stuns Sarajevo UEFA Retrieved 2 October 2014 FK Sarajevo Faruk Hadzibegic predsjednik Đine u Skupstini Klix ba Retrieved 2 October 2014 Nijaz Gracic ponovo predsjednik Sarajeva Fksinfo com Retrieved 2 October 2014 Druzenje legendi Fksarajevo ba Retrieved 2 October 2014 Hajrudin Suman novi predsjednik FK Sarajevo Fksinfo com Retrieved 20 August 2014 Nijaz Merdanovic u As exkluzivu sa Muhamedom Bikicem Avaz ba Retrieved 20 August 2014 Blekic novi predsjednik Upravnog odbora FK Sarajevo Radiosarajevo ba Archived from the original on 11 December 2014 Retrieved 20 August 2014 Amir Rizvanovic novi predsjednik FK Sarajevo TV1 ba Archived from the original on 7 December 2014 Retrieved 20 August 2014 Izabran novi predsjednik i organi uprave FK Sarajevo Sportsport ba Retrieved 20 August 2014 Edis Kusturica novi predsjednik FK Sarajevo Klix ba Retrieved 20 August 2014 Zvanicno Valentin Ilievski novi predsjednik Skupstine FK Sarajevo Klix ba Retrieved 20 December 2016 a b IN MEMORIAM Svetozar Vujovic 1940 1993 FKSinfo com in Bosnian 16 January 2012 Retrieved 3 April 2017 cite cl, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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