FK Sutjeska Foča

Fudbalski klub Sutjeska Foča (Serbian Cyrillic: Фудбалски клуб Cутjecкa Фoчa) is a professional association football club based in the town of Foča that is situated in southern Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Sutjeska Foča
Full nameFudbalski klub Sutjeska Foča
Founded23 February 1946 (1946-02-23)
GroundGradski stadion, Foča
Capacity4,000
ChairmanRadenko Vasiljević
ManagerDuško Rašević
LeagueFirst League of RS
2021–225th

Sutjeska currently plays in the First League of the Republika Srpska.[1] The club plays its home matches at the Foča City Stadium, which has a capacity of 4,000 seats.

History

The first football clubs in Foča were Graničar and Sloga founded in 1920. In 1925 Sloga was merged into Graničar. In 1927 a club named Jugović was formed and in 1930 it will also be merged into Graničar. Graničar will become one of the most active clubs in Podrinje region.[2] The stadium of Graničar was located in the same place were the current Gradski Stadion is located.

In 1946, after the end of the Second World War, FK Sutjeska is founded, and it is named after the Battle of Sutjeska in which numerous players of Graničar lost their lives fighting against the Axis forces.[2] The club will play in regional levels all the way until the late 1970s, when coached by Maglalija, they will be promoted to the Bosnia and Herzegovina Republic League (one of Yugoslav third levels at the time) for the season 1979–80. However in their first season they will be relegated and will stay in regional leagues all the way until the start of the Yugoslav Wars in the early 1990s.[2]

Numerous club players had spells in major Yugoslav and foreign clubs: Miroslav Visočki, Refik Muftić, Stole Blagojević, Ekrem Maglalija, Faruk Hadžimešić, Rasim Ahmetović, Miloš Nedić and Predrag Koprivica all played in FK Sarajevo, while in their city rivals FK Željezničar Sarajevo played Dragan Popadić, Josip Šimović, Rade Paprica, Duško Ivanović, Zoran Paprica and Radmilo Mihajlović; in Belgrade's FK Partizan played Mladen Furtula and Rešad Kunovac; in NK Čelik Zenica played Vušković, Mojović and Živković; while in HNK Hajduk Split played Ranko Sekulić. Radmilo Mihajlović later played in Germany with Schalke 04 and Bayern Munich, Refik Muftić in Austrian Sturm Graz, and Mladen Furtula and Rade Paprica in Greek PAOK.[2]

The war in Bosnia started in 1992 and all football competitions were abandoned. However by mid-1993 a group of enthusiasts led by Rada Šobota organised the first football cup in entire Republika Srpska and it was played in the stadium of Sutjeska. Among other local teams, FK Sutjeska Nikšić from the neighbouring FR Yugoslavia also participated, being that considered the first international visit in the Republika Srpska after the start of the war.[2]

In the season 1995–96 Sutjeska played in the Second League of the Republika Srpska and by finishing second it qualified for the First League of the Republika Srpska play-offs. There, they meat FK Željezničar from Istočno Sarajevo and after losing 3–1 away, Sutjeska won in Foča by 7–3 thus grabbing a spot in the next RS first league season. However, they will only play one season in the top tier of RS, as they ended up relegated at the end of the season.[2]

In the season 2006–07 Sutjeska returned to the First League of the Republika Srpska, now being a second tier of Bosnia and Herzegovina football league system, where it consistently played during the following seasons. It wasn't until the 2018–19 season in which Sutjeske got relegated back to the Second League of RS.

Players

Current squad

As of 17 April 2021 [3]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Matija Vasiljević
3 DF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Milan Vladičić
4 DF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Filip Filipović
7 FW Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Dejan Rašević
8 MF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Dejan Mojović
9 FW Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Boško Radović
10 FW Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Jovan Bokić
11 DF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Ognjen Mojović
12 GK Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Darko Krnojelac
13 FW Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Dejan Davidović
14 DF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Marko Ivanović
15 DF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Luka Vasiljević
16 MF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Mujo Gabela
18 Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Luka Sekulić
19 DF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Srđan Žugić
20 DF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Đorđe Milutinović
21 DF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Igor Mirković
22 DF Serbia SRB Uroš Milinković
No. Pos. Nation Player
23 Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Jovan Ćevriz
24 FW Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Jovan Bokić
25 MF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Dejan Mojović
26 MF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Stevo Đajić
27 MF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Igor Višnjevac
28 Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Tarik Suljić
29 Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Nikola Šupić
31 Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Marko Danilović
44 GK Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Nebojša Tomić
99 Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Adrijan Milanović
Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Ognjen Pljevaljčić
Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Marko Tadić
Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Jovica Dačević
Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Andrija Prodanović
Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Dragan Pavlović
Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Boško Marković
Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Radenko Matković
Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Paša Perišić

For the list of current and former players with Wikipedia article, please see Category:FK Sutjeska Foča players.

Historical list of managers

  • Darko Vojvodić (2009)
  • Milenko Radić
  • Nikola Bala
  • Dragan Radović[4]
  • Momčilo Stanić
  • Duško Rašević
  • Darko Nestorović (2012–14)
  • Branko Vučković
  • Miljan Radanović
  • Filip Ikonić
  • Duško Rašević

References

  1. Slaviša Vukašinović (5 July 2020). "FOČACI PREZADOVOLJNI ODLUKOM IZVRŠNOG ODBORA FSRS". sportdc.net (in Serbian). Retrieved 5 July 2020.
  2. Club history at FK Sutjeska Foča official website (in Serbian)
  3. "SUTJESKA FUDBAL / MUŠKARCI". SportDC. Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  4. Dragan Radović at fis-gol83-91.com.ba
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