Miloš Milutinović

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Miloš Milutinović
Milutinovic Brothers 2.jpg
Milorad, Miloš, Bora Milutinović (from left)
Personnel
birthday February 5, 1933
place of birth Bajina BaštaKGR Yugoslavia
date of death January 28, 2003
Place of death BelgradeSerbia
size 181 cm
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
0000-1951 RFK Bor
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1951-1958 FK Partizan Belgrade 87 (53)
1958-1960 OFK Belgrade 8 0(9)
1960-1961 FC Bayern Munich 20 0(5)
1961-1963 RC Paris 66 (28)
1963-1965 Stade Français 44 0(7)
1968-1969 OFK Belgrade 20 0(5)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1953-1958 Yugoslavia 33 (16)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
FK Proleter Zrenjanin
1975-1976 Atlas Guadalajara
1977-1988 Beşiktaş Istanbul
1980-1982 FK Velež Mostar
1982-1984 FK Partizan Belgrade
1984-1985 Yugoslavia
1986-1987 Beşiktaş Istanbul
1990-1991 FK Partizan Belgrade
1 Only league games are given.

Miloš Milutinović (born February 5, 1933 in Bajina Bašta , Yugoslavia ; † January 28, 2003 in Belgrade ), also called "Milo", was a Yugoslav football player and coach .

Career as a player

societies

Beginning

Milutinović began his career in Bor with the local RFK Bor and stayed there until he was 18. During this time he was also the captain of the youth team, which won the 1951 UEFA youth tournament in France on March 26th in Cannes with 3-2 against Austria.

Out of adolescence, he was committed in 1952 by the first division team Partizan Belgrade , for whom he came to point games for the first time that same year. With the team he took part in the first ever European Cup in 1955 , survived the first round against Sporting Lisbon and was eliminated in the quarter-finals 4: 3 - after a round trip - against eventual winners Real Madrid . Nevertheless, with eight goals he became the most accurate goalscorer in this competition; he scored all three goals in the second leg against Real Madrid, which he won 3-0. A Yugoslav championship title was denied him, it was only enough to win the runner-up title three times (1954, 1956, 1958) and three cup wins (1952, 1954, 1957), with only the third success being used. Between 1951 and 1958 he played 192 competitive games in which he was able to excel as a goalscorer 183 times.

continuation

For the 1958/59 season he moved to league rivals OFK Belgrade , for whom he scored nine goals in his first eight league games before he fell seriously ill and had to interrupt his career for two years.

After he was successfully treated in Munich, he continued his career in the 1960/61 season with FC Bayern Munich in the Oberliga , the top German division at the time. For Bayern , he played 20 point games in which he scored five goals. He played his first game in the Oberliga Süd on September 25, 1960 (7th matchday) in a 4-2 win at home against VfR Mannheim . On October 2, 1960 (8th matchday) he scored not only his first league goal with the goal to 1-0 in the 21st minute in the away game against SSV Jahn Regensburg , it was also the winning goal of this encounter.

The End

From 1961 to 1963 he played for the first division club RC Paris , with whom he was second in his first season and tenth in the championship in his last season. He then moved to the 1963/64 season for league rivals Stade Français with whom he - also in his last season 1964/65 - only finished 15th in the table.

In 1968 he returned to the field for OFK Belgrade - where he had meanwhile held the position of technical director - and scored 13 goals in 42 competitive games.

National team

For the senior team , Milutinović played 33 international matches and scored 16 goals. He made his debut on May 21, 1953 in Belgrade in a 5-2 victory over Wales' selection . He scored his first international goal on November 8, 1953 in Skopje in a 1-0 win over Israel . On October 19, 1955, he scored in the international test match in Dublin, in a 4-1 win over Ireland , his first triple goal , which he scored on September 9, 1956 in Belgrade, in a 4-2 win in the test international against the selection of Indonesia , could repeat.

He took part with the team in the World Cup held in Switzerland from June 16 to July 4, 1954 , was used in both group matches against France and Brazil and in the 2-0 defeat against Germany in the quarter-finals . His only tournament goal was the 1-0 winner in the first group game .

He also took part in the World Cup , which was held in Sweden from June 8 to 29, 1958 , and was used in the first two group matches . As four years before, he and his team were again defeated in the quarter-finals of the German selection - this time with 0: 1; it was also his last international match.

successes

Career as a coach

After his active football career, he began his coaching career in the southern Serbian city of Leskovac . About Proleter Zrenjanin , he moved to Mexico to Atlas Guadalajara , then in the Turkey to Besiktas .

In 1981 he returned to Yugoslavia and initially led Velež Mostar to win the Yugoslav Cup before becoming Yugoslav champion with Partizan Belgrade in 1983. From the end of 1984 to 1985 he coached the Yugoslav national team before he worked in Turkey again for two years in 1986. His last coaching job was again in the 1990/91 season at Partizan Belgrade.

Others

Miloš was the brother of Milorad , who also took part in the 1958 World Cup with Yugoslavia, and Bora Milutinović , who coached a total of five different teams at World Cup finals.

Web links

Commons : Miloš Milutinović  - collection of images, videos and audio files