Otto Baric
Otto Baric | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
birthday | June 19, 1932 | |
place of birth | Eisenkappel , Austria | |
date of death | December 13, 2020 | |
Place of death | Zagreb , Croatia | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
1946-1952 | NK Dinamo Zagreb | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1952-1958 | NK Metalac Zagreb | |
1958-1963 | Lokomotiva Zagreb | |
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
1964-1967 | Lokomotiva Zagreb | |
1967-1969 | Opel Rüsselsheim | |
1969-1970 | Germania Wiesbaden | |
1970-1972 | Wacker Innsbruck | |
1972-1974 | LASK Linz | |
1974-1976 | NK Zagreb | |
1976-1979 | NK Dinamo Vinkovci | |
1979-1980 | NK Dinamo Zagreb | |
1980-1982 | SK Sturm Graz | |
1982-1985 | SK Rapid Vienna | |
1985-1986 | VfB Stuttgart | |
1986-1988 | SK Rapid Vienna | |
1988-1989 | SK Sturm Graz | |
1989-1991 | SK Forward Steyr | |
1991-1995 | SV Austria Salzburg | |
1995-1996 | Croatia (assistant coach) | |
1996-1997 | Dinamo Zagreb | |
1997-1998 | Fenerbahçe Istanbul | |
1998-1999 | LASK Linz | |
1999-2001 | Austria | |
2001-2002 | SV Austria Salzburg | |
2002-2004 | Croatia | |
2006-2007 | Albania | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Otto Barić (born June 19, 1932 , according to his own information 1933 in Eisenkappel , Carinthia , Austria ; † December 13, 2020 in Zagreb ) was a Yugoslav soccer player and later Yugoslav and Croatian soccer coach .
As coach of Rapid Vienna and Austria Salzburg, he reached the final of the cup winners' competition in 1984/85 and the UEFA Cup in 1993/94. He was the coach of the national teams of Austria, Croatia and Albania.
Career
Barić's Croatian parents returned with him to their homeland when he was four years old. Barić grew up in Zagreb , where he began his footballing career at Dinamo Zagreb and Lokomotiva Zagreb . This was followed by a successful international coaching career, for which he was able to show coaching certificates from three countries; he acquired it in Cologne in 1970 , in Vienna in 1972 and in Zagreb in 1975.
Barić died as a result of a COVID-19 infection.
Career as a coach
Barić began his coaching career in Germany, where he looked after some lower class teams towards the end of the 1960s. In 1970 he was hired by the Austrian Bundesliga club FC Wacker Innsbruck as a new coach and won his first championship title here in 1970/71. On May 8, 1972, however, he took a leave of absence, for the time being, assistant coach Richard Kirchler took over the support of the fighting team and as a result, “ideal candidate” Branko Elsner was signed up. The reason for Barić's resignation was a physical attack on him two days earlier after the match against ASK from Linz(1: 1) and he had been demoralized in the local press for weeks. A short time later, Barić became a coach (of all people) at ASK Linz . In 1974 Barić went back to Yugoslavia before he was brought back to Austria in 1980 by SK Sturm Graz .
He had the greatest international successes in 84 European Cup matches as the person in charge with SK Rapid Wien in 1985 and SV Austria Salzburg in 1994, when he reached the finals of the cup winners' competition and the UEFA Cup . A commitment in the German Bundesliga at VfB Stuttgart , which he took over for the 1985/86 season, was unsuccessful. He was dismissed shortly after the start of the second half of this season. At the European Championships in England in 1996 , he looked after the Croatian national team under head coach Miroslav Blažević as an assistant coach.
After his successful time in Salzburg, where he made it to the UEFA Cup final and took part in the Champions League, he first moved to his regular club Dinamo Zagreb and then to Fenerbahçe Istanbul . With both clubs he achieved good placements, but no title win.
In 1999 he became the successor to Herbert Prohaska , who had resigned after a 9-0 defeat against Spain, coach of the Austrian national team . Austria clearly missed qualifying for EM 2000 after another clear 5-0 defeat against Israel. In 2001 Austria came under Baric to the play-off of the qualification for the soccer world championship 2002 , in which one failed at the later World Cup third, Turkey. As a result, Barić resigned as team boss in 2001 and Hans Krankl took over as his successor in 2002.
As the person in charge of the Croatian national team, he qualified for the 2004 European Football Championship in Portugal. Barić then worked as an observer and advisor to FK Austria Wien and as a sports director at Dinamo Zagreb, although he gave up this post after a short time because he could not implement his ideas.
His last coaching engagement was as team manager of the Albanian national team, which he supervised during qualification for the 2008 European Football Championship .
He owed his nickname Otto “Maximum” Barić to the use of his favorite word “maximum” (which he pronounced “maximum”). He wasn't afraid to use this word constantly (examples: maximum effort, maximum concentration).
Controversies over homophobic statements
In 2007, Barić was fined € 1,825 by UEFA for making homophobic statements in an interview with the Croatian magazine Jutarnji list in 2004 . Barić had stated: “I know that there are no homosexuals in my team. I recognize a gay person within ten minutes, and I don't want them on my team. ”In 2004, in an interview with the Swiss newspaper Blick, he made a similar statement:“ My players have to be real guys. So homosexuals can't play with me, at most against me. "
Success as a trainer
- 1 × finalist in the European Cup Winners' Cup : 1985 (Rapid)
- 1 × UEFA Cup finalist : 1994 (Salzburg)
- 7 × Austrian champion : 1971, 1972 (W. Innsbruck), 1983, 1987, 1988 (Rapid), 1994, 1995 (Salzburg)
- 1 × Croatian champion : 1997 (Dinamo Zagreb)
- 3 × Austrian Cup winners : 1984, 1985, 1987 (Rapid)
- 1 × Croatian Cup Winner : 1997 (Dinamo Zagreb)
- 5 × Austrian Supercup winner: 1986, 1987, 1988 (Rapid), 1994, 1995 (Salzburg)
ÖFB international matches under team boss Otto Barić
Legend
- H = home game
- A = away game
- green background color = victory of Austria
- yellow background color = tie
- red background color = defeat
Games | Victories | draw | Defeats | Gates | TD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
22nd | 7th | 6th | 9 | 31:35 | −4 |
No. | date | Result | opponent | venue | occasion | comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
594 | 04/28/1999 | 7-0 | San Marino | H | Graz | EM 2000 qualification | First international match under Otto Barić, first international match in the Arnold Schwarzenegger Stadium |
595 | 06/06/1999 | 0: 5 | Israel | A. | Tel Aviv ( ISR ) | EM 2000 qualification | |
596 | 08/18/1999 | 0-0 | Sweden | A. | Malmo ( SWE ) | ||
597 | 09/04/1999 | 1: 3 | Spain | H | Vienna | EM 2000 qualification | |
598 | 10/10/1999 | 3: 1 | Cyprus | H | Vienna | EM 2000 qualification | Austria missed qualification as third in the group |
599 | 02/23/2000 | 1: 4 | Greece | A. | Kalamata ( GRE ) | ||
600 | 03/29/2000 | 1: 1 | Sweden | H | Graz | ||
601 | 04/26/2000 | 1: 2 | Croatia | H | Vienna | First international match against Croatia | |
602 | 08/16/2000 | 1: 1 | Hungary | A. | Budapest ( HUN ) | ||
603 | 09/01/2000 | 5: 1 | Iran | H | Vienna | First international game against Iran 95th and last international game by Toni Polster , record national player until 2002 |
|
604 | 07.10.2000 | 1-0 | Liechtenstein | A. | Vaduz ( LIE ) | World Cup 2002 qualification | |
605 | 10/11/2000 | 1: 1 | Spain | H | Vienna | World Cup 2002 qualification | |
606 | 02/28/2001 | 0: 1 | Croatia | A. | Rijeka ( CRO ) | ||
607 | 03/24/2001 | 1: 1 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | A. | Sarajevo ( BIH ) | World Cup 2002 qualification | First international match against Bosnia-Herzegovina |
608 | 03/28/2001 | 2: 1 | Israel | H | Vienna | World Cup 2002 qualification | |
609 | 04/25/2001 | 2-0 | Liechtenstein | H | innsbruck | World Cup 2002 qualification | First international match at Tivoli-Neu |
610 | 08/15/2001 | 1: 2 | Switzerland | H | Vienna | ||
611 | 09/01/2001 | 0: 4 | Spain | A. | Valencia ( ESP ) | World Cup 2002 qualification | Austria received their 1000th goal through Gaizka Mendieta |
612 | 09/05/2001 | 2-0 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | H | Vienna | World Cup 2002 qualification | |
613 | 10/27/2001 | 1: 1 | Israel | A. | Tel Aviv ( ISR ) | World Cup 2002 qualification | " Tel Aviv scandal game " Austria lands in 2nd group place |
614 | 11/10/2001 | 0: 1 | Turkey | H | Vienna | World Cup 2002 qualification | Relegation game for World Cup participation |
615 | 11/14/2001 | 0: 5 | Turkey | A. | Istanbul ( TUR ) | World Cup 2002 qualification | Relegation game for World Cup participation, last international game under Otto Barić |
Web links
- Otto Barić in the database of weltfussball.de
Individual evidence
-
↑ Otto Baric. In: Munzinger biography. Retrieved December 3, 2020 . Baric: "Moved a little forward". In: Kurier.at . June 17, 2012, accessed December 3, 2020 .
- ^ A b Sigi Lützow: Obituary: Ex-ÖFB team boss Otto Barić died. In: derStandard.at . December 13, 2020, accessed December 13, 2020 .
- ↑ Matej Kaçan: Od posljedica koronavirusa preminuo Otto Barić. In: RTL.hr . December 13, 2020, accessed on December 13, 2020 (Croatian).
- ↑ The "maximum" Otto celebrates his 80th birthday. In: SN.at . June 19, 2013, accessed October 12, 2018 .
- ↑ "Elszner as a lifeline" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna April 30, 1972, p. 9 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
- ↑ Column 5, middle: “Baric becomes LASK trainer” . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna May 14, 1972, p. 12 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
- ↑ "LASK 3 bsk 1" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna May 21, 1972, p. 14 ( Arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
- ↑ Vorarlberger Nachrichten , July 31, 2007.
- ↑ Homophobic Austrians make headlines across Europe. In: hosiwien.at. January 21, 2004, accessed December 13, 2020 .
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Baric, Otto |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Yugoslav soccer player and later Yugoslav and Croatian soccer coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | June 19, 1932 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Eisenkappel , Carinthia , Austria |
DATE OF DEATH | December 13, 2020 |
Place of death | Zagreb |