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Ivan Ćurković
Ivan Ćurković (, ; born 15 March 1944) is a Serbian sports executive and former Association football, footballer who played as a Goalkeeper (association football), goalkeeper. During his playing career that spanned 21 seasons from 1960 to 1981, Ćurković made over 700 official appearances for three clubs in Yugoslavia and France, winning numerous trophies and reaching the UEFA Champions League, European Cup final on two occasions, with FK Partizan, Partizan in 1966 European Cup final, 1966 and AS Saint-Étienne, Saint-Étienne in 1976 European Cup final, 1976. He was also capped 19 times by Yugoslavia national football team, Yugoslavia at senior level between 1963 and 1970. After hanging up his boots, Ćurković held various high-level administrative positions, including serving as president of the Olympic Committee of Serbia, Serbian Olympic Committee and vice-president of the Football Association of Serbia, Serbian Football Association. He also acted as president of his form ...
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Olympic Committee Of Serbia
The Olympic Committee of Serbia (, sr-Cyrl, Олимпијски комитет Србије) is the National Olympic Committee representing Serbia. It organizes the country's participation at the Olympic Games and other multisport events. The Committee consists of 47 sports federations, which elect an Executive Council composed of the president and seventeen members. History The Serbian Olympic Club (, sr-Cyrl, Српски олимпијски клуб) was established on February 23, 1910. Major Svetomir Đukić is considered the founder of the Olympic movement in Serbia. In 1912, the Serbian Olympic Club changed its name to the Olympic Committee of Serbia and that year it was recognized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC). After the Creation of Yugoslavia, the Yugoslav Olympic Committee () was created in Zagreb in 1919, before moving to Belgrade in 1927. It was recognized by the IOC in 1920. After the country was renamed from the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia ...
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1976 European Cup Final
The 1976 European Cup final was a football match held at Hampden Park, Glasgow, on 12 May 1976, that saw Bayern Munich of West Germany defeat Saint-Étienne of France 1–0. This was the third consecutive European Cup title for Bayern, making them the third club to achieve this feat, following Real Madrid and Ajax. Route to the final Match Summary The match took place at Hampden Park in Glasgow, a city that already had seen Saint-Étienne defeat local team Rangers during the competition. ''Les Verts'' were playing against Bayern Munich, a team hoping to win a third consecutive European Cup. The game began with Gerd Müller finding the back of the net after Bernd Dürnberger won the ball in his own half and went on a 50-metre solo run; however, Müller's effort was disallowed for offside by the Hungarian referee Károly Palotai. In the 37th minute, Uli Hoeneß took a shot, but it did not worry goalkeeper Ivan Ćurković. Saint-Étienne had plenty of chances to score, thou ...
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1975–76 French Division 1
AS Saint-Etienne won Division 1 season 1975/1976 of the French Association Football League with 57 points. Participating teams * Olympique Avignonnais * SEC Bastia * Bordeaux * RC Lens * Lille * Olympique Lyonnais * Olympique de Marseille * FC Metz * AS Monaco * AS Nancy * FC Nantes * OGC Nice * Nîmes Olympique * Paris Saint-Germain FC * Stade de Reims * AS Saint-Etienne * FC Sochaux-Montbéliard * RC Strasbourg * Troyes AF * US Valenciennes-Anzin League table Promoted from Division 2, who will play in Division 1 season 1976/1977 * Angers SCO: Champion of Division 2, winner of Division 2 group B * Stade Rennais FC Stade Rennais Football Club (SRFC, ), commonly referred to as Stade Rennais () or simply Rennes,''Rennais'' and ''Stade Rennes'', used by some English-speaking media outlets and journalists, are not grammatically correct names for the club. is ...: Runner-up, winner of Division 2 group A * Stade Lavallois: Third place, winner of barrag ...
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1974–75 French Division 1
AS Saint-Etienne won Division 1 season 1974/1975 of the French Association Football League with 58 points. Participating teams * Angers SCO * SEC Bastia * Bordeaux * RC Lens * Lille * Olympique Lyonnais * Olympique de Marseille * FC Metz * AS Monaco * FC Nantes * OGC Nice * Nîmes Olympique * Paris Saint-Germain FC * Red Star Paris * Stade de Reims * Stade Rennais FC * AS Saint-Etienne * FC Sochaux-Montbéliard Football Club Sochaux-Montbéliard (; commonly referred to as FCSM or simply Sochaux) is a Football in France, French association football club based in the city of Montbéliard. The club was founded in 1928 and currently plays in Championnat N ... * RC Strasbourg * Troyes AF League table Promoted from Division 2, who will play in Division 1 season 1975/1976 * AS Nancy: Champion of Division 2, winner of Division 2 group B * US Valenciennes-Anzin: Runner-up, winner of Division 2 group A * Olympique Avignonnais: Third place, winner of barrages Resu ...
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1973–74 French Division 1
AS Saint-Etienne won the 1973–74 edition of the French Association Football League Division 1 season with 66 points. Participating teams * Angers SCO * SEC Bastia * Bordeaux * RC Lens * Olympique Lyonnais * Olympique de Marseille * FC Metz * AS Monaco * AS Nancy * FC Nantes * OGC Nice * Nîmes Olympique * Paris FC * Stade de Reims * Stade Rennais FC * AS Saint-Etienne * CS Sedan * FC Sochaux-Montbéliard * RC Strasbourg * Troyes AF League table Promoted from Division 2, who will play in Division 1 season 1974/1975 * Lille: Champion of Division 2, winner of Division 2 group A * Red Star Paris: Runner-up, winner of Division 2 group B * Paris Saint-Germain FC Paris Saint-Germain Football Club, commonly referred to as Paris Saint-Germain () or simply PSG, is a French professional Association football, football club based in Paris. They compete in Ligue 1, the French football league system, top d ...: Third place, winner of barrages Results Top go ...
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Real Madrid CF
Real Madrid Club de Fútbol (), commonly referred to as Real Madrid, is a Spanish professional Football club (association football), football club based in Madrid. The club competes in La Liga, the top tier of Spanish football league system, Spanish football. Founded in 1902 as Madrid Football Club, the club has traditionally worn a white home kit since its inception. The Title of honour, honorific title 'Real' is Spanish for "Royal" and was bestowed to the club by Alfonso XIII, King Alfonso XIII in 1920 along with the crown in the club crest. Real Madrid have played their home matches in the 78,297-capacity Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, Santiago Bernabéu in Madrid since 1947. Unlike most European sporting clubs, Real Madrid's members (''socios'') have owned and operated the club throughout its history. The official Madrid anthem is the "Hala Madrid y nada más", written by RedOne and Manuel Jabois. The club is one of the most widel ...
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1966 European Cup Final
The 1966 European Cup final was a football match held at the Heysel Stadium, Brussels, on 11 May 1966 that saw Real Madrid of Spain defeat FK Partizan of Yugoslavia 2–1 to win the 1965–66 European Cup title. Route to the final Match Summary Partizan took the lead through a goal by Velibor Vasović in the 55th minute, but Real Madrid equalised in the 70th minute through Spanish international Amancio. Fernando Serena scored the winner for Real six minutes later. This was Real Madrid's sixth European Cup triumph in the 11 years of the tournament's existence, with Paco Gento being the only Madrid player to win all of these. However, they would not win the competition again until 1998, when Predrag Mijatović–– who was, ironically, a former Partizan player–– scored the winning goal in the 66th minute of the final. Details See also *1965–66 European Cup * FK Partizan in European football * Real Madrid CF in international football competitions References ...
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1965–66 European Cup
The 1965–66 European Cup was the 11th season of the European Cup, UEFA's premier club football tournament. The competition was won by Real Madrid, winners of the first five European Cups from 1956 to 1960, who beat Partizan 2–1 in a close final at Heysel Stadium in Brussels on 11 May 1966. Inter Milan were the defending champions, but were eliminated by eventual winners Real Madrid in the semi-finals. No new association entered its representative, which happened only for the second time after 1959–60 edition. However, Cyprus returned to the competition after their inaugural 1963–64 season. In the preliminary round, Benfica recorded highest aggregate win in the history of the European Cup by beating Stade Dudelange 18–0 (8–0 away, 10–0 at home). Teams A total of 31 teams participated in the competition. For the first time since inaugural edition all associations were represented by only one team. 17 Nëntori, LASK, Levski Sofia, APOEL, Sparta Prague, H ...
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1965–66 FK Partizan Season
The 1965–66 season was the 20th season in FK Partizan's existence. This article shows player statistics and matches that the club played during the 1965–66 season. Players Squad information (Captain Captain is a title, an appellative for the commanding officer of a military unit; the supreme leader or highest rank officer of a navy ship, merchant ship, aeroplane, spacecraft, or other vessel; or the commander of a port, fire or police depa ...) Friendlies Competitions Yugoslav First League Yugoslav Cup European Cup Preliminary round First round Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final , valign="top", Statistics Goalscorers This includes all competitive matches. Score overview See also * List of FK Partizan seasons References External links Official website (in Serbian) {{DEFAULTSORT:1965-66 FK Partizan season FK Partizan seasons Partizan ...
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Yugoslav People's Army
The Yugoslav People's Army (JNA/; Macedonian language, Macedonian, Montenegrin language, Montenegrin and sr-Cyrl-Latn, Југословенска народна армија, Jugoslovenska narodna armija; Croatian language, Croatian and ; , JLA), also called the Yugoslav National Army, was the military of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and its antecedents from 1945 to 1992. Origins The origins of the JNA started during the Yugoslav Partisans of World War II. As a predecessor of the JNA, the People's Liberation Army of Yugoslavia (NOVJ) was formed as a part of the Resistance during World War II, anti-fascist World War II in Yugoslavia, People's Liberation War of Yugoslavia in the Bosnian town of Rudo on 22 December 1941. After the Yugoslav Partisans liberated the country from the Axis Powers, that date was officially celebrated as the "Day of the Army" in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFR Yugoslavia). In March 1945, the NOVJ was renamed the "Yugo ...
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Milutin Šoškić
Milutin Šoškić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милутин Шошкић; 31 December 1937 – 27 August 2022) was a Serbian professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper. He is considered one of FK Partizan's greatest players. Biography He was born in Jablanica, a village near Peć from father Jeremija, a royal officer and mother Radunka. He spent World War II in exile in the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć. Playing career Šoškić started training football when he was 11 in Red Star, for which he played six months, but because of a small misunderstanding with the host of the stadium, he decided to continue his career at Partizan where he spent most of his career. Soon after, Šoškić was called to play for Yugoslavia youth team. After performing well at Partizan he was invited to play for the Yugoslavia national team. Šoškić inherited the position of Vladimir Beara as a new goalkeeper. For Yugoslavia he played 50 games. The first major competition that Šoškić played ...
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1964–65 FK Partizan Season
The 1964–65 season was the 19th season in FK Partizan's existence. This article shows player statistics and matches that the club played during the 1964–65 season. Players Squad information player (league matches/league goals) Vladica Kovačević (28/14) Josip Pirmajer (27/7) Ljubomir Mihajlović (26/0) Milan Galić (24/15)Ivan Ćurković (23/0) (goalkeeper) Mustafa Hasanagić (20/13)Radoslav Bečejac (20/2) Jovan Miladinović (19/0) Joakim Vislavski (18/5)Fahrudin Jusufi (18/0) Branko Rašović (17/0) Velibor Vasović (15/0) Velimir Sombolac (14/0) Milan Damjanović (11/0) Milan Vukelić (10/0) Lazar Radović (8/0) Bora Milutinović (6/0)Mane Bajić (5/1) Miodrag Petrović (5/1)Milutin Šoškić Milutin Šoškić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милутин Шошкић; 31 December 1937 – 27 August 2022) was a Serbian professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper. He is considered one of FK Partizan's greatest players. Biography He was ... (4/0) (goalkeeper) Branislav Mih ...
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