Zoran Barišić

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Zoran Barišić
Rapid tren (8) .jpg
Zoran Barišić (2015)
Personnel
birthday May 22, 1970
place of birth ViennaAustria
size 181 cm
position midfield
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1989-1991 Viennese sports club 55 0(4)
1991-1992 Favoritner AC 35 0(8)
1992-1993 VfB Mödling 35 0(6)
1993-1997 SK Rapid Vienna 83 (11)
1997 FC Linz 13 0(0)
1997-2002 FC Tirol Innsbruck 99 (13)
2002-2004 VfB Admira Wacker Mödling 19 0(0)
2004-2005 SC Eisenstadt 26 0(5)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1999 Austria 1 0(0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2006-2009 SK Rapid Wien (assistant trainer)
2009-2011 AKA Rapid Vienna
2011 SK Rapid Vienna (interim)
2011-2013 SK Rapid Vienna II
2013-2016 SK Rapid Vienna
2017 Kardemir Karabükspor
2018 NK Olimpija Ljubljana
1 Only league games are given.

Zoran "Zoki" Barišić (born May 22, 1970 in Vienna ) is a former Austrian football player in the position of midfielder and today's coach .

Club career

Barišić made his Bundesliga debut in 1989 for the Vienna sports club. After the Dornbachers got into a sporty and financial tailspin during this time, the midfielder left the club after relegation to the second division and moved to the Favoritner AC , a club that also played in the 2nd division of the Bundesliga. After Barišić narrowly missed promotion to the first division with the team, he left the favorites after just one season and went to Lower Austria for VfB Mödling , which in turn had previously made it to the Bundesliga. Although Zoran Barišić had some success with the then first division and qualified for the newly created ten-man league, he only stayed in Mödling for a year.

Zoran Barišić in a senior game.

In 1993 he moved to SK Rapid Vienna and soon earned a regular place in the fighting team . In 1995 he won the Austrian cup competition with the Hütteldorfer and a year later he celebrated the Austrian record champion's first championship title since 1988. Zoran Barisic also had a large share in the successes of the “legendary” team in the 1995/96 season and counted alongside the then stars like Trifon Ivanov and Carsten Jancker were among the most reliable players on his team. With Rapid, he not only won the 30th championship title of the Hütteldorfer in their club history, but also played with the successful team with victories over Sporting Lisbon , Dynamo Moscow and Feyenoord Rotterdam up to the final of the European Cup Winners' Cup , which his team played after an extremely good performance 0: 1 against Paris Saint-Germain was just lost.

After qualifying for the Champions League , Barišić left SK Rapid and went to the Upper Austrian capital for FC Linz for a few months. After the liquidation of the traditional club through merger with LASK Linz, the Viennese moved to FC Tirol Innsbruck . With the Innsbruck team under coach Kurt Jara he celebrated three championship titles in a row and in 1999 made it to the national team . In 2002 Zoki moved back to the now merged VfB Admira Wacker Mödling due to the dissolution of the club . 2004/05 Zoran Barišić played in the Regionalliga Ost for the Burgenland club SC Eisenstadt. In 2005, Barišić organized his first youth football camp for ten to 14-year-olds at the sports facility of the Viennese league club Hellas Kagran .

National team

On June 6, 1999 Barišić appeared for the only time in the dress of the Austrian national soccer team. But the away match against Israel as part of the qualification for the European Football Championship 2000 ended with a 0: 5 in favor of the Israelis. Barišić, who was disappointed by the professionalism in the team under Otto Barić , did not want to be used again for the ÖFB selection.

Career as a trainer and sports director

Zoran Barišić as coach of SK Rapid Vienna in May 2013

In September 2006, Barišić was appointed by Rapids' then sports director Peter Schöttel as assistant coach under the newly appointed coach Peter Pacult . After differences at the start of the 2009/10 season , Pacult had him replaced by his preferred Leopold Rotter , whereupon he moved to the club's youth academy as a coach.

After Pacult's termination without notice in April 2011, he took over his interim successor at SK Rapid Vienna. With the start of the 2011/12 season he took over the support of the Rapid amateurs after Peter Schöttel had been appointed head coach of the fighting team. When he was dismissed in the spring of 2013 after a series of bad results with the cup-out against the regional league team Pasching as a negative climax, Barišić took over the coaching position at SK Rapid and reached third place in the Bundesliga with his team. Then his contract was extended to 2014, in the 2013/14 season Rapid was runner-up under him and reached the group stage of the Europa League, in which progress was just missed. After the end of the season, his contract was extended by one year to summer 2015. On June 6, 2016, Rapid and Barišić announced the separation from each other.

On February 16, 2017, the Turkish first division club Karabükspor announced the signing of Barišić as their new coach. He received a contract there until the summer of 2018. In June, he made use of a right of termination due to outstanding salary payments.

Barišić has been the head coach of Olimpija Ljubljana since September 2018. He signed a three-year contract. After the end of the autumn round when Barišić was the head coach of Olimpija Ljubljana and only lost 1 game in 15 games, he resigned after the end of the 2018 autumn season.

Barisic has been the sports director of SK Rapid Vienna since May 16, 2019.

Away from football

Away from football, Zoran Barišić founded Kuba Rohstoffe AG ​​in 1998 , a trading company for Southeast Europe in which he still has a third share. He also runs the “Artificium” furniture store.

titles and achievements

Web links

Commons : Zoran Barisic  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Amar Rajković, Dino Čehajić: Zoran Barisic: "I was disappointed with the national team". In: beaver . November 2009. Retrieved August 29, 2015 .
  2. Peter Pacult divides the Rapid fans. In: diepresse.com. June 18, 2009, accessed June 8, 2016 .
  3. A new beginning: Changes in Hütteldorf. In: skrapid.at. April 11, 2011, accessed June 8, 2016 .
  4. ^ Interim trainer: Zoran Barišić. In: Skrapid.at. April 12, 2011, accessed June 8, 2016 .
  5. SK Rapid and head coach Zoran Barisic split up. In: skrapid.at. June 6, 2016, accessed June 8, 2016 .
  6. How Barisic became a trainer in Karabük. In: kurier.at. February 17, 2017. Retrieved February 17, 2017 .
  7. Zoran Barisic resigns from Karabükspor. June 15, 2017, accessed September 4, 2018 .
  8. Zoran Barisic tri sezone trener Olimpije. Retrieved September 4, 2018 (Slovenian).
  9. ^ Barisic-Aus in Ljubljana: "Have made office available". December 11, 2018, accessed December 11, 2018 .
  10. Official: Barisic Rapid Sports Director until summer 2022. May 16, 2019, accessed May 16, 2019 .
  11. ^ Official: Barisic new Rapid Sports Director. May 16, 2019, accessed May 16, 2019 .
  12. Barisic returns to Hütteldorf. May 16, 2019, accessed May 16, 2019 .