FK Partizan Belgrade
Partizan Belgrade | ||||
Basic data | ||||
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Surname | Sportsko društvo Partizan (main club) Fudbalski klub Partizan (professional football team) |
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Seat | Savski Venac , Belgrade , Serbia | |||
founding | October 4, 1945 (as FK Partizan) | |||
Colours | black - white | |||
president | Milorad Vučelić | |||
Website | partizan.rs | |||
First soccer team | ||||
Head coach | Savo Milošević | |||
Venue |
Partizana Stadium (traditionally JNA Stadium ) |
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Places | 32,710 seats | |||
league | Super league | |||
2019/20 | 2nd place | |||
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The FK Partizan (full official name in Serbian : Фудбалски клуб Партизан , Fudbalski klub Partizan ; German : Football club Partizan) - usually Partizan , also known as Crno-beli ( "The black and white"), Parni valjak ( "The Steamroller ") or in German-speaking countries and Partizan Belgrade called - is the football department of the Serbian sports club Partizan , in the Belgrade municipality Savski Venacis located, more precisely in the district of Stadion .
The capital city club has spent its entire history in the top tier of Yugoslav and Serbian football. He won a total of 46 trophies, including 27 national championships, 16 national cups, 1 national Supercup, 1 Mitropapokal 1978, as well as the watch cup 1989. In addition, the club occupies second place in the all-time table of the 1st Yugoslav league . Partizan is the second most successful football club in Serbia and the former Yugoslavia after city rivals Red Star .
The club was founded in 1945 by high officers of the Yugoslav People's Army as part of the Partizan sports club. The home stadium is the Partizana stadium , where the club has played since 1949. Partizan was a participant in the first game of the first ever European Cup in 1955 . In 1966 Partizan was also the first club from Southeastern and Eastern Europe to reach the final of the European Cup, in which Real Madrid were narrowly defeated.
According to a survey, Partizan is the second most popular football club in Serbia after Red Star, with which the club has one of the most famous sporting rivalries in football, known as Večiti derbi ("Eternal Derby"). The club is also very popular in Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina , the latter especially in the Bosnian-Serb republic, Republika Srpska . Partizan also has numerous followers in all other former Yugoslav republics as well as in the Serbian and Yugoslav diaspora .
story
1945–1949: The founding phase and first double
Preparations for the establishment of FK Partizan lasted several months and took place during the Second World War . Svetozar Vukmanović, a young officer of the Yugoslav People's Liberation Army , the so-called Yugoslav Partisans , particularly advocated the idea that a football club should be built near the headquarters of the People's Liberation Army in the capital Belgrade , bringing together those interested in football and members of the army and ultimately as a model for the creation of others Should serve sports clubs that had ties to the army. As early as the summer of 1945, a championship organized by the Yugoslav People's Army , which was formally formed from the partisan units, took place in which around 400 football players took part, including a dozen well-known pre-war players, including Yugoslav national players and members of the army. Even then, a list of the best players was drawn up, some of whom were invited to the capital after the club was founded to become part of the first team in Partizan's history. Already at that time there was Stjepan Bobek , now one of the most famous players in the club's history , among those who traveled .
Partizan was finally on 4 October 1945 by young generals founded the Yugoslav People's Army, among them were located next to Svetozar Vukmanović also Otmar Kreačić and Ratko Vujović and Koča Popović and Mijalko Todorović, which the club as football department of Jugoslovensko Sportsko društvo Partizan Sports Association (Yugoslavian Partizan), named in honor of the Yugoslav partisans to whom the generals previously belonged. The football department was followed on the same day by the establishment of the department for athletics , chess , basketball and volleyball , especially on the initiative of the enthusiastic Vukmanović, who was ultimately appointed the first club president. Today, in addition to the football club, the Partizans basketball and water polo club in particular are the club's figureheads, the latter one of the three most successful teams in the history of European water polo with seven Champions League victories .
On October 6, Partizan had their first encounter with a friendly against a selection from the Belgrade district of Zemun , which was won 4-2 in front of 200 spectators. Florijan Matekalo scored the first goal in the club's history while Franjo Glazer became Partizan's first coach . Seven more games followed, all of which the club won. Partizan scored 45 goals and did not concede a goal. In the first three months of its existence Partizan also completed a number of successful encounters against foreign teams. On October 20th, the anniversary of the liberation of the capital by the Belgrade operation , they played against the selection of Prague , against which the club conceded its first defeat in front of 7,000 spectators with 1: 4. On October 28, the club played in Czechoslovakia (1918-1992) its first encounter on foreign soil, more precisely in what is now the Slovak city of Banská Bystrica , where the selection of the Slovak armed forces was defeated 3-1.
At the time, only a few months after the liberation of Belgrade from military occupation by the fascist German Reich (1933-1945) and by the equally fascist Independent State of Croatia (1941-1945), was still in the non-aligned Socialist Yugoslavia (1945-1992) No organized football competition possible, so Partizan only took part in friendly matches and tournaments at home and abroad. The first game against a foreign club was played against CSKA Moscow in 1945 . When the Yugoslav championship was played again for the first time after the Second World War in the 1946/47 season, Partizan was able to win the title at his first participation. In addition, the club completed their successful debut for their first double with a 2-0 final win against FK Naša Krila Zemun in the Yugoslav Cup . After a 3-0 defeat against city rivals Red Star in the cup final of the following season, the club was able to win the second championship in the 1948/49 season, which, however, could not be repeated for a long time. From then on, Dinamo Zagreb , Hajduk Split and, above all, Red Star made the championship among themselves.
1949–1959: Cup victories, runner-up championships and own stadium
After three years of construction, the club played from October 1949 in its own 55,000-spectator stadium, the stadium of the Yugoslav People's Army or the stadium JNA , today known as the Partizana Stadium . Apart from three cup wins in 1952, 1954 and 1957, each time winning against city rivals, including two against Red Star and one against Radnički , the club was able to win four runner-up championships in the 1950s , one especially towards the end of the decade initiated a clear upward trend. Only Dinamo Zagreb and Red Star were each twice ahead of Partizan.
A highlight of this time was the club's participation in the first ever European Cup of National Champions in 1955/56 , for which Partizan was reported despite only finishing fourth in the domestic championship. On September 4, 1955, the first game of this competition between Partizan and Sporting Lisbon took place. After defeating the Portuguese representative in the first round , they beat Real Madrid 3-0 in the second leg of the quarter-final match , but were narrowly eliminated from the competition due to the 4-0 defeat in Madrid . Partizan put Miloš Milutinović , who scored eight goals, the first goalscorer and also the first top scorer of the European Cup .
In 1958 the club had to change the jersey color on the instructions of the communist leadership . The club's new colors were white and black , no longer red and blue , which previously stood symbolically for the main colors of the Serbian flag , which the regime disliked. The club's coat of arms was also changed. In the 1950s the club also ended its membership in the army and became an independent football club under the umbrella organization of the Partizan sports club , whose first president was Partizan co-founder, Colonel General of the Yugoslav People's Army and Yugoslav folk hero Ratko Vujović.
1959–1966: Championship trick and European finals
The 1960s got off to a spectacular start for the Belgrade club. The previous decision by the club's management to expand its scouting throughout the country and to strengthen itself with young, talented games, quickly led to success. Partizan was able to win the first three championships of the new decade in a row, the first "title hat-trick " in the 1st Yugoslav league . By the efficiency of this generation, the club was nicknamed Parnji Valjak ( "The Steamroller ").
However, these successes were overshadowed by a tragedy. On October 20, 1962 Partizan and the Yugoslav national team tragically lost one of their players. Defender Bruno Belin, who by then had played 203 games for the club, scored 14 goals and played 25 times for Yugoslavia, died in a car accident on the Belgrade - Zagreb motorway . He was only 33 years old. In his honor, the club's youth school also bears his name, the Partizan youth academy Belin - Lazarević - Nadoveza .
In the subsequent European national championship competitions, Partizan failed one after the other at Juventus Turin , CSKA Sofia and Inter Milan . After an untitled season, another, the meanwhile sixth, Yugoslav championship followed in 1965 and immediately afterwards the club's most successful European Cup participation, the European Cup of National Champions 1965/66 .
Under the direction of coach Abdulah Gegić , the club faced Real Madrid again in the final after victories over Werder Bremen and Manchester United, among others . Partizan was the first club from Southeastern and Eastern Europe to reach the final of the European Champions Cup. The final took place on May 11, 1966 in the Heysel Stadium in Brussels in front of 55,000 spectators, where Partizan lost 2-1 after a 1-0 lead by Velibor Vasović during the last 20 minutes of the game.
1966–1989: slump and comeback
After the narrow defeat in the final against Real Madrid in the European Cup of National Champions in 1965/66 , the club management failed to keep the club at this high level and Partizan fell into an organizational crisis. All the main players signed contracts with clubs from Western Europe , which caused this promising generation to fall apart. Milutin Šoškić and Fahrudin Jusufi moved to the West German Bundesliga for 1. FC Köln and Eintracht Frankfurt . Milan Galić moved to Standard Liège , while Vladica Kovačević moved to FC Nantes . Finally, center-back Velibor Vasović , the player who scored the opening goal against Real Madrid in the final, left the club and joined Ajax Amsterdam . The time of mediocre results began.
Towards the end of the 1960s, the club was less and less able to build on the achievements that had just been shown and had to (as in the 1950s) well into the 1970s with the role of only the second best club in Belgrade behind local rivals Roter Satisfy star. An indicator of a renewed upward movement in sport was then reaching the round of 16 in the 1974/75 UEFA Cup , in which they were eliminated after a 1-0 first leg win against 1. FC Köln with a 5-1 defeat in Cologne . Nationally, the seventh championship followed in the 1975/76 season. The eighth title followed two years later. Internationally, the good performance could not be expanded and the club failed in the first round of the national championship cup at Dinamo Kiev and Dynamo Dresden .
Despite these titles, the club experienced a sporting decline in the four immediately following years, when not only suddenly the championship moved into the distance, but the relegation places were also within reach. Starting from this low point, Partizan won the Yugoslav championship again surprisingly quickly in the 1982/83 season, in large part due to the exceptional performance of young Dragan Mance . Known for his individual celebrations, the striker scored 15 goals in the league and immediately became a crowd favorite. He led the club to the third round of the 1984/85 UEFA Cup in one of the most memorable games in the club's history. The Queens Park Rangers won the first leg 6-2, but Partizan won the second leg 4-0. A goal by Mance against the English is considered to be one of the most beautiful and significant goals in Partizan's history. The game was also voted 70th in the top 100 greatest games in football history in a September 2009 survey by Eurosport .
But Mance's successful career up to that point was to be ended by a tragedy. On September 3, 1985 Partizan Belgrade and the Yugoslav national team tragically lost one of their players, as did the fans, their absolute darling. Mance, who up to then had played 279 games for the club and scored 174 goals, as well as played four times for Yugoslavia, died in a car accident on the Belgrade - Novi Sad highway . His death caused deep consternation across the country. He was only 22 years old and was at the height of his popularity or rather young career. Even today, Dragan Mance is regarded and revered by many Partizan supporters as the greatest club legend. The street next to the Partizana stadium has been named in his honor since 2011.
In 1986 and 1987, the Yugoslav championship could be won again, with Partizan then not reported for the European championship competition and instead Red Star and Vardar Skopje were nominated. Vardar had been awarded the championship after a 6-point deduction for several Yugoslav clubs, which was only corrected later and Partizan was declared champion of the 1986/87 season. In 1987 Partizan signed its first foreign players, the Chinese internationals Jia Xiuquan and Liu Haiguang. Although they never became regulars, they were well known among Partizan's fans.
In 1989, the club rounded off the 1980s by winning the fifth Yugoslav Cup and defeating Velež Mostar spectacularly 6-1 in the final . In the same year Ivan Ćurković became club president, while Mirko Marjanović became president of Partizan's executive board. In October 1989, Hajduk Split fans burned the national flag of Yugoslavia during a home game against Partizan, causing national outrage and a harbinger of the war in Yugoslavia . The game was canceled when the score was 2-0 for Partizan. The last trophy before the breakup of Yugoslavia was winning the Yugoslav Supercup, which was held for the first and only time.
1989–1999: Football during the Balkan conflict
After the death of President Josip Broz Tito in 1980, ethnic tensions in the country increased, with the result that in the early 1990s the state began to fall apart and the war in Yugoslavia broke out. In the midst of a turbulent 1991/92 season, in the run-up to which the Croatian and Slovenian clubs left the league after these countries declared their unilateral independence from Yugoslavia , and games in which Bosnian-Herzegovinian clubs, except Borac Banja Luka , were involved due to the Bosnian War were partially or completely canceled or canceled, the club won its sixth trophy by beating Red Star.
In the following season, all Bosnian-Herzegovinian and Macedonian clubs, with the exception of Borac Banja Luka, left the league. Yugoslavia disintegrated into its individual states, but Serbia and Montenegro came to terms and formed the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in April 1992 . At the end of May, however, the United Nations imposed UN sanctions on the country . This led to the economic decline of Yugoslavia and the hyperinflation of the Yugoslav dinar .
Since the 1992/93 season, mostly a duel between Partizan and Red Star has developed. This led under coach Ljubiša Tumbaković next to the cup victory in 1994 to further championship titles for Partizan in 1993, 1994, 1996 and 1997. 1997 Partizan could also win the cup. During the 1994/95 season, UEFA allowed all Yugoslav football clubs to return to the European Cup, while the national team remained excluded.
But in the end another stroke of fate struck the Yugoslav clubs, because instead of being able to pick up where they had to stop in the spring of 1992, UEFA decided that the points that had been scored up to then for the UEFA five-year standings of all Yugoslav clubs should be deleted. Thus Partizan was placed practically at the end of the UEFA five-year ranking or UEFA club rankings. This decision was to have long-term disastrous consequences not only for Partizan, but for all of Yugoslav football. Instead of enjoying the advantages of decades of work and getting a place in the first round of the 1996/97 UEFA Cup , they had to start in the preliminary round.
After a few years of peace, the Yugoslav clubs faced difficult times again. Between 1998 and 1999 the situation in the Serbian province of Kosovo deteriorated due to the ongoing clashes between Yugoslav security forces and the Albanian paramilitary organization UÇK . Four days after the 112th Belgrade derby between Partizan and Red Star, the US- led three-month NATO bombing of Yugoslavia began, although there was no UN mandate and therefore without the consent of the United Nations. During this tragic period Partizan was able to win the championship again in the 1998/99 season under extremely difficult circumstances.
1999 – today: National dominance
Since 2000, the championship title has always been played between Partizan and Red Star, who mostly occupied the first two places in the final table. Partizan was able to win the title in 2002, 2003 and 2005, with the latter two championships being equated with the club's first titles as "Master of the Country of Serbia and Montenegro " (instead of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia previously ). In 2003, the team was able to qualify for the newly created Champions League for the first time after Newcastle United had been eliminated on penalties in the final qualifying round . Opponents in the group stage were Real Madrid , FC Porto and Olympique Marseille . Partizan was eliminated in the group stage despite impressive performances. Mention should be made of the home games against Real Madrid (0-0) and the later Champions League winners FC Porto (1-1).
The positive international development continued in the following years. In the 2004/05 UEFA Cup they reached the round of 16, where they were eliminated against eventual winners CSKA Moscow . In 2006 the club received the UEFA award for “the best European youth work”. In the 2006/07, 2008/09 and 2009/10 UEFA Cup seasons they reached the group stage. Since mid-2000, FK Vojvodina has been getting closer to the top group in Serbian football and the championship has developed into a three-way battle. In 2006 and 2007 Partizan was Serbian runner-up . Since 2008 the club has dominated national events again. They won five national championships in a row and three national cup wins . In 2010 they reached the Champions League group stage for the second time after defeating the Belgian record champions RSC Anderlecht on penalties. In 2012 Partizan reached the Europa League group stage again.
In the 2012/13 season, despite leading the table, coach Vladimir Vermezović was dismissed and replaced by Vuk Rašović. After the defending champions won only two of their last six league games, the club was only two points ahead of their local rivals, Red Star, after they had already had an eleven point lead in mid-March. In the end, there was an all-important duel between these two teams with three games remaining, which Partizan won with a free kick from Miloš Jojić in stoppage time . The 25th championship was finally made perfect on the penultimate matchday when they won 2-0 against relegated FK Smederevo . For Partizan it was the sixth championship in a row and the 25th in the club's history. In 2014 the championship went back to Red Star. The club qualified for the group stage of the 2014/15 Europa League . In 2015 Partizan was again Serbian champion. However, the club did not qualify for the Champions League and therefore took part in the group stage of the 2015/16 Europa League .
Stadium and training ground
The Partizana stadium had a great tradition in Yugoslavia . The stadium was built after the Second World War. Football was often played at this point before. Construction began in 1946 and lasted three years. The first game was played on October 9, 1949, when Yugoslavia and France played (1-1). To date, the stadium has welcomed numerous teams from Europe, including dozens of national teams. The capacity used to be 55,000. Since it no longer met European standards in 1998, it was redesigned - today it holds 32,710 spectators.
The SC Partizan-Teleoptik , sometimes also referred to as SC Teleoptik , is the club's training and education center, which also houses the football stadium for the Teleoptik Zemun farm team . It is located in the Zemun district of Belgrade and is one of the most modern in Europe . This is why it was given the now widespread nickname Zemunelo , analogous to the Milanello , the training ground of AC Milan .
Fan culture
Partizan's followers, known as Grobari ( The Gravedigger ), traditionally support all of the Partizan family's associations. In 1999 some of the fans in the south stand organized a division into two different groups. The newly formed part was henceforth known as Južni Front (south front) and distanced itself from the traditional fans. In 2005 the fans were reunited under the name Grobari Jug , and after being eliminated twice in the European Cup, the football club was boycotted, which was accompanied by numerous protests against the top of the football department. Partizan Belgrade and PAOK Saloniki have a close fan friendship . One of the Partizan fans' slogans is Partizan - PAOK, iste boje - ista vera , in German: Partizan - PAOK, same colors - same belief. Greek fans can often be seen at football matches, especially the local derby against Red Star , in Belgrade, while Serbian fans also appear, especially at basketball games. Other friendly fan camps are supporters of CSKA Moscow and CSKA Sofia . There are also good relationships with the fans of Steaua Bucharest .
people
Current squad 2018/19
Current squad: January 31, 2019
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All trainers
All presidents
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player
sorted alphabetically
A - J |
K - R
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S - Z |
Title / Achievements
National
Yugoslav / Serbian-Montenegrin / Serbian championship : 27
- 1947, 1949, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1976, 1978, 1983, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2008, 2009 , 2010 , 2011 , 2012 , 2013 , 2015 , 2017
Yugoslav / Serbian-Montenegrin / Serbian cup winners : 16
- 1947, 1952, 1954, 1957, 1989, 1992, 1994, 1998, 2001, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
Yugoslav / Serbian-Montenegrin / Serbian double : 6
- 1947, 1994, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2017
Yugoslav / Serbian-Montenegrin / Serbian runners-up: 16 1954, 1956, 1958, 1959, 1968, 1970, 1984, 1988, 1992, 1995, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2014
Yugoslav / Serbian-Montenegrin / Serbian Cup finalists: 8
- 1948, 1959, 1960, 1979, 1993, 1996, 1999, 2015
Yugoslav Supercup Winner (1)
- 1989
International success
European Champion Clubs' Cup :
- Quarter-finals 1990
UEFA Cup :
Mitropapokal : 1
- 1978
Watch Cup : 1
- 1989
European Cup balance sheet
season | competition | round | opponent | total | To | Back |
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1955/56 | European Champions Cup | 1 round | Sporting Lisbon | 8: 5 | 3: 3 (A) | 5: 2 (H) |
Quarter finals | real Madrid | 3: 4 | 0: 4 (A) | 3: 0 (H) | ||
1961/62 | European Champions Cup | Preliminary round | Sporting Lisbon | 3: 1 | 1: 1 (A) | 2: 0 (H) |
1 round | Juventus Turin | 1: 7 | 1: 2 (H) | 0: 5 (A) | ||
1962/63 | European Champions Cup | Preliminary round | ZDNA Sofia | 2: 6 | 1: 2 (A) | 1: 4 (H) |
1963/64 | European Champions Cup | Preliminary round | Anorthosis Famagusta | 6: 1 | 3: 0 (H) | 3: 1 (A) |
1 round | Jeunesse Esch | 7: 4 | 1: 2 (A) | 6: 2 (H) | ||
Quarter finals | Inter Milan | 1: 4 | 0: 2 (H) | 1: 2 (A) | ||
1965/66 | European Champions Cup | Preliminary round | FC Nantes | 4: 2 | 2: 0 (H) | 2: 2 (A) |
1 round | Werder Bremen | 3: 1 | 3: 0 (H) | 0: 1 (A) | ||
Quarter finals | Sparta Prague | 6: 4 | 1: 4 (A) | 5: 0 (H) | ||
Semifinals | Manchester United | 2: 1 | 2: 0 (H) | 0: 1 (A) | ||
final | real Madrid | 1: 2 | 1: 2 in Brussels | |||
1967/68 | Exhibition cities cup | 1 round | Locomotive Plovdiv | 6: 2 | 5: 1 (H) | 1: 1 (A) |
2nd round | Leeds United | 2: 3 | 1: 2 (H) | 1: 1 (A) | ||
1969/70 | Exhibition cities cup | 1 round | Újpesti Dózsa SC | 2: 3 | 2: 1 (H) | 0: 2 (A) |
1970/71 | Exhibition cities cup | 1 round | Dynamo Dresden | 0: 6 | 0: 0 (H) | 0: 6 (A) |
1974/75 | Uefa cup | 1 round | Górnik Zabrze | 5: 2 | 2: 2 (A) | 3: 0 (H) |
2nd round | Portadown FC | 6: 1 | 5: 0 (H) | 1: 1 (A) | ||
3rd round | 1. FC Cologne | 2: 5 | 1: 0 (H) | 1: 5 (A) | ||
1976/77 | European Champions Cup | 1 round | Dynamo Kiev | 0: 5 | 0: 3 (A) | 0: 2 (H) |
1978/79 | European Champions Cup | 1 round | Dynamo Dresden |
2: 2 (4: 5 on account ) |
2: 0 (H) | 0: 2 a.d. (A) |
1983/84 | European Champions Cup | 1 round | Viking Stavanger | 5: 1 | 5: 1 (H) | 0: 0 (A) |
2nd round | Dynamo Berlin | 1: 2 | 0: 2 (A) | 1: 0 (H) | ||
1984/85 | Uefa cup | 1 round | Rabat Ajax FC | 4-0 | 2: 0 (A) | 2: 0 (H) |
2nd round | Queens Park Rangers | ( a ) 6: 6 | 2: 6 (A) | 4: 0 (H) | ||
3rd round | Videoton SC | 2: 5 | 0: 5 (A) | 2: 0 (H) | ||
1985/86 | Uefa cup | 1 round | Portimonense SC | 4: 1 | 0: 1 (A) | 4: 0 (H) |
2nd round | FC Nantes | 1: 5 | 1: 1 (H) | 0: 4 (A) | ||
1986/87 | Uefa cup | 1 round | Borussia Monchengladbach | 2: 3 | 0: 2 (A) | 2: 1 (H) |
1987/88 | Uefa cup | 1 round | KS Flamurtari Vlora | 1: 4 | 0: 1 (A) | 1: 3 (H) |
1988/89 | Uefa cup | 1 round | Slavia Sofia | 10-0 | 5: 0 (H) | 5: 0 (A) |
2nd round | AS Roma | a ) | 4: 4 (4: 2 (H) | 0: 2 (A) | ||
1989/90 | UEFA Cup Winners' Cup | 1 round | Celtic Glasgow | ( a ) 6: 6 | 2: 1 (H) | 4: 5 (A) |
2nd round | FC Groningen | 6: 5 | 3: 4 (A) | 3: 1 (H) | ||
Quarter finals | Dinamo Bucharest | 1: 4 | 1: 2 (A) | 0: 2 (H) | ||
1990/91 | Uefa cup | 1 round | Hibernians Paola | 5-0 | 3: 0 (A) | 2: 0 (H) |
2nd round | Real Sociedad |
1: 1 (4: 3 i.E. ) |
0: 1 (A) | 1: 0 a.d. (H) | ||
3rd round | Inter Milan | 1: 4 | 0: 3 (A) | 1: 1 (H) | ||
1991/92 | Uefa cup | 1 round | Sporting Gijón |
2: 2 (2: 3 i.E. ) |
0: 2 (A) | 2: 0 a.d. (H) |
1996/97 | Uefa cup | Preliminary round | Maccabi Haifa | 4: 1 | 1: 0 (A) | 3: 1 (H) |
qualification | National Bucharest | 0: 1 | 0: 0 (H) | 0: 1 (A) | ||
1997/98 | UEFA Champions League | 1st qualifying round | Croatia Zagreb | 1: 5 | 1: 0 (H) | 0: 5 (A) |
1998/99 | UEFA Cup Winners' Cup | qualification | Dinamo Batumi | 2: 1 | 2: 0 (H) | 0: 1 (A) |
1 round | Newcastle United | ( a ) 2: 2 | 1: 2 (A) | 1: 0 (H) | ||
2nd round | AS Roma | 2: 3 | 0: 0 (A) | 2: 3 (H) | ||
1999/2000 | UEFA Champions League | 1st qualifying round | FC Flora Tallinn | 10: 1 | 6: 0 (H) | 4: 0 (A) |
2nd qualifying round | HNK Rijeka | 6: 1 | 3: 1 (H) | 3: 0 (A) | ||
3rd qualifying round | Spartak Moscow | 1: 5 | 0: 2 (A) | 1: 3 (H) | ||
1999/2000 | Uefa cup | 1 round | Leeds United | 1: 4 | 1: 3 (H) | 0: 1 (A) |
2000/01 | Uefa cup | qualification | Sliema Wanderers | 5: 3 | 1: 2 (A) | 4: 1 (H) |
1 round | FC Porto | 1: 2 | 1: 1 (H) | 0: 1 (A) | ||
2001/02 | Uefa cup | qualification | FC Santa Coloma | 8: 1 | 1: 0 (A) | 7: 1 (H) |
1 round | SK Rapid Vienna | 2: 5 | 1: 0 (H) | 1: 5 (A) | ||
2002/03 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | Hammarby IF | 5: 1 | 1: 1 (A) | 4: 0 (H) |
3rd qualifying round | FC Bayern Munich | 1: 6 | 0: 3 (H) | 1: 3 (A) | ||
2002/03 | Uefa cup | 1 round | Sporting Lisbon | 6: 4 | 3: 1 (A) | 3: 3 a.d. (H) |
2nd round | Slavia Prague | 4: 6 | 3: 1 (H) | 1: 5 a.d. (A) | ||
2003/04 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | Djurgårdens IF | ( a ) 3: 3 | 1: 1 (H) | 2: 2 (A) |
3rd qualifying round | Newcastle United |
1: 1 (4: 3 i.E. ) |
1: 0 (H) | 0: 1 a.d. (A) | ||
Group stage | FC Porto | 2: 3 | 1: 1 (H) | 1: 2 (A) | ||
Olympique Marseille | 1: 4 | 0: 3 (A) | 1: 1 (H) | |||
real Madrid | 0: 1 | 0: 1 (A) | 0: 0 (H) | |||
2004/05 | Uefa cup | 2nd qualifying round | Oțelul Galați | 1-0 | 0: 0 (A) | 1: 0 (H) |
1 round | Dinamo Bucharest | 3: 1 | 0: 0 (H) | 3: 1 (A) | ||
Group stage | Egaleo AO Athens | 4-0 | 4: 0 (H) | |||
Lazio Rome | 2: 2 | 2: 2 (A) | ||||
Villarreal CF | 1: 1 | 1: 1 (H) | ||||
Middlesbrough FC | 0: 3 | 0: 3 (A) | ||||
Round of 16 | Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk | 3: 2 | 2: 2 (H) | 1: 0 (A) | ||
Round of 16 | CSKA Moscow | 1: 3 | 1: 1 (H) | 0: 2 (A) | ||
2005/06 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | Sheriff Tiraspol | 2-0 | 1: 0 (H) | 1: 0 (A) |
3rd qualifying round | Artmedia Bratislava |
0: 0 (3: 4 on perk ) |
0: 0 (A) | 0: 0 a.d. (H) | ||
2005/06 | Uefa cup | 1 round | Maccabi Petach Tikwa | 4: 5 | 2: 0 (A) | 2: 5 (H) |
2006/07 | Uefa cup | 2nd qualifying round | NK Maribor | 3: 2 | 2: 1 (H) | 1: 1 (A) |
1 round | FC Groningen | 4: 3 | 4: 2 (H) | 0: 1 (A) | ||
Group stage | AS Livorno | 1: 1 | 1: 1 (H) | |||
Maccabi Haifa | 0: 1 | 0: 1 (A) | ||||
AJ Auxerre | 1: 4 | 1: 4 (H) | ||||
Glasgow Rangers | 0: 1 | 0: 1 (A) | ||||
2007/08 | Uefa cup | 1st qualifying round | HŠK Zrinjski Mostar | 11: 1 1 | 6: 1 (A) | 5: 0 (H) |
2008/09 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | Inside Baku | 3: 1 | 1: 1 (A) | 2: 0 (H) |
3rd qualifying round | Fenerbahçe Istanbul | 3: 4 | 2: 2 (H) | 1: 2 (A) | ||
2008/09 | Uefa cup | 1 round | ACS Poli Timișoara | 3: 1 | 2: 1 (A) | 1: 0 (H) |
Group stage | Sampdoria Genoa | 1: 2 | 1: 2 (H) | |||
VfB Stuttgart | 0: 2 | 0: 2 (A) | ||||
Standard Liege | 0: 1 | 0: 1 (H) | ||||
Sevilla FC | 0: 3 | 0: 3 (A) | ||||
2009/10 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | Rhyl FC | 12: 0 | 4: 0 (A) | 8: 0 (H) |
3rd qualifying round | APOEL Nicosia | 1: 2 | 0: 2 (A) | 1: 0 (H) | ||
2009/10 | UEFA Europa League | Play-offs | MŠK Žilina | 3: 1 | 1: 1 (H) | 2: 0 (A) |
Group stage | Toulouse FC | 2: 4 | 2: 3 (H) | 0: 1 (A) | ||
Shakhtar Donetsk | 2: 4 | 1: 4 (A) | 1: 0 (H) | |||
Club Bruges | 2: 6 | 0: 2 (A) | 2: 4 (H) | |||
2010/11 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | FC Pyunik Yerevan | 4: 1 | 3: 1 (H) | 1: 0 (A) |
3rd qualifying round | HJK Helsinki | 5: 1 | 3: 0 (H) | 2: 1 (A) | ||
Play-offs | RSC Anderlecht |
4: 4 (3: 2 in good condition ) |
2: 2 (H) | 2: 2 a.d. (A) | ||
Group stage | Shakhtar Donetsk | 0: 4 | 0: 1 (A) | 0: 3 (H) | ||
Arsenal FC | 2: 6 | 1: 3 (H) | 1: 3 (A) | |||
Sporting Braga | 0: 3 | 0: 2 (A) | 0: 1 (H) | |||
2011/12 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | KF Shkëndija | 4: 1 | 3: 1 (H) | 1: 0 (A) |
3rd qualifying round | KRC Genk | 2: 3 | 1: 2 (A) | 1: 1 (H) | ||
2011/12 | UEFA Europa League | Play-offs | Shamrock Rovers | 2: 3 | 1: 1 (A) | 1: 2 a.d. (H) |
2012/13 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | Valletta FC | 7: 2 | 4: 1 (A) | 3: 1 (H) |
3rd qualifying round | AEL Limassol | 0: 2 | 0: 1 (A) | 0: 1 (H) | ||
2012/13 | UEFA Europa League | Play-offs | Tromso IL | ( a ) 3: 3 | 2: 3 (A) | 1: 0 (H) |
Group stage | Neftçi Baku PFK | 1: 1 | 0: 0 (H) | 1: 1 (A) | ||
Rubin Kazan | 1: 3 | 0: 2 (A) | 1: 1 (H) | |||
Inter Milan | 1: 4 | 0: 1 (A) | 1: 3 (H) | |||
2013/14 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | FC Shirak Gyumri | ( a ) 1: 1 | 1: 1 (A) | 0: 0 (H) |
3rd qualifying round | Ludogorez Razgrad | 1: 3 | 1: 2 (A) | 0: 1 (H) | ||
2013/14 | UEFA Europa League | Play-offs | FC Thun | 1: 3 | 1: 0 (H) | 0: 3 (A) |
2014/15 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | HB Tórshavn | 6: 1 | 3: 0 (H) | 3: 1 (A) |
3rd qualifying round | Ludogorez Razgrad | a ) | 2: 2 (0: 0 (A) | 2: 2 (H) | ||
2014/15 | UEFA Europa League | Play-offs | Neftçi Baku PFK | 5: 3 | 3: 2 (H) | 2: 1 (A) |
Group stage | Tottenham Hotspur | 0: 1 | 0: 0 (H) | 0: 1 (A) | ||
Asteras Tripoli | 0: 2 | 0: 2 (A) | 0: 0 (H) | |||
Beşiktaş Istanbul | 1: 6 | 0: 4 (H) | 1: 2 (A) | |||
2015/16 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | FC Dila Gori | 3-0 | 1: 0 (H) | 2: 0 (A) |
3rd qualifying round | Steaua Bucharest | 5: 3 | 1: 1 (A) | 4: 2 (H) | ||
Play-offs | BATE Baryssau | a ) | 2: 2 (0: 1 (A) | 2: 1 (H) | ||
2015/16 | UEFA Europa League | Group stage | AZ Alkmaar | 5: 3 | 3: 2 (H) | 2: 1 (A) |
FC Augsburg | 4: 4 | 3: 1 (A) | 1: 3 (H) | |||
Athletic Bilbao | 1: 7 | 0: 2 (H) | 1: 5 (A) | |||
2016/17 | UEFA Europa League | 2nd qualifying round | Zagłębie Lubin |
0: 0 (3: 4 on perk ) |
0: 0 (H) | 0: 0 a.d. (A) |
2017/18 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | FK Budućnost Podgorica | 2-0 | 2: 0 (H) | 0: 0 (A) |
3rd qualifying round | Olympiacos Piraeus | 3: 5 | 1: 3 (H) | 2: 2 (A) | ||
2017/18 | UEFA Europa League | Play-offs | Videoton FC | 4-0 | 0: 0 (H) | 4: 0 (A) |
Group stage | Young Boys Bern | 3: 2 | 1: 1 (A) | 2: 1 (H) | ||
Dynamo Kiev | 3: 7 | 2: 3 (H) | 1: 4 (A) | |||
KF Skënderbeu Korça | 2-0 | 0: 0 (A) | 2: 0 (H) | |||
Round of 16 | Viktoria Plzen | 1: 3 | 1: 1 (H) | 0: 2 (A) | ||
2018/19 | UEFA Europa League | 1st qualifying round | FK Rudar Pljevlja | 6-0 | 3: 0 (A) | 3: 0 (H) |
2nd qualifying round | FK Trakai | 2: 1 | 1: 0 (H) | 1: 1 (A) | ||
3rd qualifying round | FC Nordsjælland | 5: 3 | 2: 1 (A) | 3: 2 (H) | ||
Play-offs | Beşiktaş Istanbul | 1: 4 | 1: 1 (H) | 0: 3 (A) | ||
2019/20 | UEFA Europa League | 2nd qualifying round | Connah's Quay Nomads | 4-0 | 1: 0 (A) | 3: 0 (H) |
3rd qualifying round | Yeni Malatyaspor | 3: 2 | 3: 1 (H) | 0: 1 (A) | ||
Play-offs | Molde FK | 3: 2 | 2: 1 (H) | 1: 1 (A) | ||
Group stage | AZ Alkmaar | 4: 4 | 2: 2 (H) | 2: 2 (A) | ||
FK Astana | 6: 2 | 2: 1 (A) | 4: 1 (H) | |||
Manchester United | 0: 5 | 0: 1 (H) | 0: 3 (A) | |||
2020/21 | UEFA Europa League | 1st qualifying round | FK RFS | 1-0 | 1: 0 (H) | |
2nd qualifying round | FC Sfântul Gheorghe Suruceni | 1-0 | 1: 0 a.d. (A) | |||
3rd qualifying round | Sporting Charleroi | 1: 2 | 1: 2 a.d. (A) |
Legend: (H) - home game, (A) - away game, (N) - neutral place, (a) - away goal rule , (i. E.) - on penalties , (n. V.) - after extra time
competition | Games | S. | U | N | T + | T- |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
UEFA Champions League | 105 | 41 | 24 | 40 | 160 | 134 |
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup | 12 | 4th | 1 | 7th | 19th | 21st |
Trade fair trophy | 8th | 2 | 3 | 3 | 10 | 14th |
UEFA Cup / Europa League | 149 | 60 | 33 | 56 | 214 | 204 |
total | 274 | 107 | 61 | 106 | 403 | 373 |
As of September 24, 2020
Web links
Footnotes
- ↑ a b c d e f g Issuu.com: Istorijat Partizana (Serbian)
- ^ The match statistics Newcastle United - Partizan Belgrade. Retrieved August 14, 2013 .
- ↑ Partizan Belgrade in Champions League 2003/2004 fixture. Retrieved August 14, 2013 .
- ↑ Match report - Match report CSKA Moscow - FK Partizan Belgrade, March 17, 2005 - UEFA Cup - transfermarkt.de. Retrieved August 14, 2013 .
- ↑ Partizan Belgrade champion for the 24th time. Retrieved August 14, 2013 .
- ↑ RSC Anderlecht - Partizan Belgrade 2: 3, Champions League qualification, 2010/11 season, 4th matchday - the last ten pairings - kicker online. Retrieved August 14, 2013 .
- ↑ SC Teleoptik (Serbian)
- ↑ After rioting by Belgrade hooligans in the first leg on July 19, 2007, Partizan Belgrade was excluded from the current competition by UEFA and sentenced to pay a fine of CHF 50,000. Partizan appealed, but the UEFA Disciplinary Committee rejected it, so HŠK Zrinjski Mostar took over from Partizan.