Yugoslavia at the 1988 Summer Olympics

Athletes from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia competed at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. This was the last time that the SFR Yugoslavia competed in the Summer Olympics. 155 competitors, 117 men and 38 women, took part in 72 events in 18 sports.[1]

Yugoslavia at the
1988 Summer Olympics
IOC codeYUG
NOCYugoslav Olympic Committee
in Seoul
Competitors155 (117 men and 38 women) in 18 sports
Flag bearer Matija Ljubek
Medals
Ranked 16th
Gold
3
Silver
4
Bronze
5
Total
12
Summer Olympics appearances (overview)
Other related appearances
 Serbia (1912, 2008–)
 Croatia (1992–)
 Slovenia (1992–)
 Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992 S–)
 Independent Olympic Participants (1992 S)
 North Macedonia (1996–)
 Serbia and Montenegro (1996–2006)
 Montenegro (2008–)
 Kosovo (2016–)

Medalists

Medal Name Sport Event Date
 GoldGoran MaksimovićShootingMen's 10 metre air rifle20 September
 GoldJasna ŠekarićShootingWomen's 10 metre air pistol21 September
 GoldYugoslavia men's national water polo team
Water poloMen's tournament1 October
 SilverYugoslavia women's national basketball team
  • Stojna Vangelovska
  • Mara Lakić
  • Žana Lelas
  • Eleonora Vild
  • Kornelija Kvesić
  • Danira Nakić
  • Slađana Golić
  • Polona Dornik
  • Razija Mujanović
  • Anđelija Arbutina
  • Bojana Milošević
  • Vesna Bajkuša
BasketballWomen's tournament29 September
 SilverYugoslavia men's national basketball team
BasketballMen's tournament30 September
 SilverShaban TërstenaWrestlingMen's freestyle 52 kg30 September
 SilverIlija Lupulesku
Zoran Primorac
Table tennisMen's doubles30 September
 BronzeJasna ŠekarićShootingWomen's 25 metre pistol19 September
 BronzeSadik Mujkić
Bojan Prešern
RowingMen's coxless pair24 September
 BronzeDamir ŠkaroBoxingLight heavyweight29 September
 BronzeGordana Perkučin
Jasna Fazlić
Table tennisWomen's doubles30 September
 BronzeYugoslavia men's national handball team
  • Rolando Pušnik
  • Momir Rnić
  • Muhamed Memić
  • Zlatan Saračević
  • Iztok Puc
  • Goran Perkovac
  • Irfan Smajlagić
  • Zlatko Portner
  • Veselin Vujović
  • Jožef Holpert
  • Boris Jarak
  • Mirko Bašić
  • Alvaro Načinović
  • Slobodan Kuzmanovski
  • Ermin Velić
HandballMen's tournament1 October

Competitors

The following is the list of number of competitors in the Games.[2]

Sport Men Women Total
Athletics 8210
Basketball 121224
Boxing 77
Canoeing 303
Cycling 606
Football 1717
Gymnastics 123
Handball 151530
Judo 44
Rowing 10010
Sailing 101
Shooting 336
Swimming 213
Table tennis 325
Tennis 213
Water polo 1313
Wrestling 1010
Total11738155

Athletics

Men's 400 metres

Men's 800 metres

  • Slobodan Popović

Men's 1,500 metres

  • Branko Zorko

Men's Marathon

  • Mirko Vindiš
  • Final — 2:17:47 (→ 25th place)

Men's 400 metres Hurdles

  • Branislav Karaulić
  • Rok Kopitar

Men's 4 × 400 m Relay

  • Heat — 3:05.62
  • Semi Final — 3:01.59 (→ did not advance)

Men's Javelin Throw

  • Sejad Krdžalić
  • Qualification — 79.90 m
  • Final — 73.28 m (→ 12th place)

Women's 800 metres

  • Slobodanka Čolović

Women's High Jump

  • Biljana Petrović

Basketball

Men's tournament

Team roster

The following is the Yugoslavia roster in the men's basketball tournament of the 1988 Summer Olympics.[3]

Yugoslavia men's national basketball team – 1988 Summer Olympics roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.NameAge – Date of birthHeightClubCtr.
SG 4 Dražen Petrović 23 – (1964-10-22)22 October 1964 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) KK Cibona Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
SG 5 Zdravko Radulović 21 – (1966-12-12)12 December 1966 1.91 m (6 ft 3 in) KK Bosna Royal Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
F 6 Zoran Čutura 26 – (1962-03-12)12 March 1962 2.02 m (6 ft 8 in) KK Cibona Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
F 7 Toni Kukoč 19 – (1968-09-18)18 September 1968 2.08 m (6 ft 10 in) KK Split Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
F 8 Žarko Paspalj 22 – (1966-03-27)27 March 1966 2.07 m (6 ft 9 in) KK Partizan Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
PG 9 Željko Obradović 28 – (1960-03-09)9 March 1960 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) KK Partizan Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
G 10 Jure Zdovc 21 – (1966-12-13)13 December 1966 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) KK Olimpija Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
C 11 Stojko Vranković 24 – (1964-01-22)22 January 1964 2.18 m (7 ft 2 in) KK Zadar Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
C 12 Vlade Divac 20 – (1968-02-03)3 February 1968 2.16 m (7 ft 1 in) KK Partizan Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
C 13 Dino Rađa 21 – (1967-04-24)24 April 1967 2.11 m (6 ft 11 in) KK Split Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
C 14 Franjo Arapović 23 – (1965-06-02)2 June 1965 2.15 m (7 ft 1 in) KK Cibona Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
SG 15 Danko Cvjetićanin 24 – (1963-10-16)16 October 1963 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) KK Cibona Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Head coach
Dušan Ivković
Legend
  • Club – describes last
    club before the tournament
  • Age – describes age
    on 17 September 1988
Group play
Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Yugoslavia 5 4 1 468 384 +84 9[lower-alpha 1] Quarterfinals
2  Soviet Union 5 4 1 460 393 +67 9[lower-alpha 1]
3  Australia 5 3 2 429 408 +21 8[lower-alpha 2]
4  Puerto Rico 5 3 2 382 387 5 8[lower-alpha 2]
5  Central African Republic 5 1 4 346 436 90 6 9th–12th classification round
6  South Korea (H) 5 0 5 384 461 77 5
Source: FIBA archive
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal average; 4) head-to-head number of points scored.
(H) Hosts
Notes:
  1. Head-to-head record: Yugoslavia 1–0 Soviet Union
  2. Head-to-head record: Australia 1–0 Puerto Rico
18 September 1988
Soviet Union  7992  Yugoslavia
Scoring by half: 33–39, 46–53

20 September 1988
Central African Republic  61102  Yugoslavia
Scoring by half: 21–51, 40–51

21 September 1988
South Korea  92104  Yugoslavia
Scoring by half: 46–48, 46–56

23 September 1988
Australia  7898  Yugoslavia
Scoring by half: 43–52, 35–46

24 September 1988
Puerto Rico  7472  Yugoslavia
Scoring by half: 36–37, 38–35
Quarterfinals
26 September 1988 (1988-09-26)
21:30
Yugoslavia  9573  Canada
Scoring by half: 40–26, 55–47
Pts: Divac 17
Rebs: Vranković 9
Asts: Cvjetićanin, Divac, Petrović 2
Pts: Walton 17
Rebs: Mungar, Walton 7
Asts: Hatch 2
Semifinals
28 September 1988 (1988-09-28)
Yugoslavia  9170  Australia
Scoring by half: 44–31, 47–39
Pts: Petrović 24
Rebs: Divac 10
Asts: Petrović 3
Pts: Gaze 27
Rebs: Borner, Vlahov 4
Asts: Sengstock 4
Gold medal match
30 September 1988 (1988-09-30)
Yugoslavia  6376  Soviet Union
Scoring by half: 28–31, 35–45
Pts: Petrović 24
Rebs: Divac 7
Asts: Petrović 4
Pts: Marčiulionis 21
Rebs: Sabonis 15
Asts: Marčiulionis 6

Women's tournament

Team roster

The following is the Yugoslavia roster in the women's basketball tournament of the 1988 Summer Olympics.[4]

Yugoslavia women's national basketball team – 1988 Summer Olympics roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.NameAge – Date of birthHeightClubCtr.
SG 4 Stojna Vangelovska 24 – (1964-02-05)5 February 1964 1.72 m (5 ft 8 in) ŽKD Ježica Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
SG 5 Mara Lakić 25 – (1963-08-18)18 August 1963 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in) ŽKK Jedinstvo Tuzla Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
C 6 Žana Lelas 18 – (1970-05-28)28 May 1970 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) ŽKK Šibenik Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
SG 7 Eleonora Vild 19 – (1969-06-09)9 June 1969 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) DJK Wildcats Aschaffenburg Germany
C 8 Kornelija Kvesić 25 – (1963-08-25)25 August 1963 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) Israel
SG 9 Danira Nakić 19 – (1969-07-22)22 July 1969 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in) ŽKK Šibenik Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
C 10 Slađana Golić 28 – (1960-02-12)12 February 1960 1.89 m (6 ft 2 in) ŽKK Vršac Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
C 11 Polona Dornik 25 – (1962-11-20)20 November 1962 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) ŽKD Ježica Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
C 12 Razija Mujanović 21 – (1967-04-15)15 April 1967 2.02 m (6 ft 8 in) ŽKK Jedinstvo Tuzla Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
G 13 Vesna Bajkuša 20 – (1968-05-21)21 May 1968 1.76 m (5 ft 9 in) Italy
SG 14 Anđelija Arbutina 21 – (1967-03-29)29 March 1967 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in) ŽKK Crvena zvezda Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
C 15 Bojana Milošević 22 – (1965-11-29)29 November 1965 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) France
Head coach
Milan Vasojević
Legend
  • Club – describes last
    club before the tournament
  • Age – describes age
    on 17 September 1988
Group play
Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  United States 3 3 0 282 234 +48 6 Semifinals
2  Yugoslavia 3 2 1 199 211 12 5
3  China 3 1 2 200 214 14 4 Classification round
4  Czechoslovakia 3 0 3 202 224 22 3
Source: FIBA
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal average; 4) head-to-head number of points scored.
19 September 1988
21:30
China  5356  Yugoslavia
Scoring by half: 32–35, 21–21
Pts: Zheng 13
Rebs: Zheng 7
Asts: Xue 3
Pts: Nakić 13
Rebs: Golić 9
Asts: Vangelovska 4

22 September 1988
9:45
United States  10174  Yugoslavia
Scoring by half: 55–40, 46–34
Pts: Edwards 23
Rebs: McClain 9
Asts: Weatherspoon 2
Pts: Golić 16
Rebs: Dornik 4
Asts: Bajkuša, Vangelovska 2

25 September 1988
9:45
Czechoslovakia  5769  Yugoslavia
Scoring by half: 15–41, 42–28
Pts: Dobrovičová 17
Rebs: Dobrovičová 9
Asts: Kalužáková 3
Pts: Nakić 24
Rebs: Dornik 8
Asts: Vangelovska 7
Semifinals
27 September 1988 (1988-09-27)
9:45
Australia  5657  Yugoslavia
Scoring by half: 30–32, 26–25
Pts: Timms 19
Rebs: Dalton 8
Asts: Dalton, Maher 2
Pts: Mujanović 20
Rebs: Dornik, Mujanović, Nakić 4
Asts: Vangelovska 2
Gold medal game
29 September 1988 (1988-09-29)
12:00
Yugoslavia  7077  United States
Scoring by half: 36–42, 34–35
Pts: Nakić 23
Rebs: Golić 10
Asts: Nakić 3
Pts: Edwards 18
Rebs: Brown 8
Asts: Edwards, McConnell 3

Boxing

Men's Featherweight (– 57 kg)

  • Ljubiša Simić
  • First Round — Bye
  • Second Round — Lost to Mikhail Kazaryan (URS), 0:5

Men's Light-Welterweight (– 63,5 kg)

  • Vukašin Dobrašinović
  • First Round — Defeated Borislav Abadzhiev (BUL), 3:2
  • Second Round — Lost to Adrian Carew (GUY), 1:4

Men's Welterweight (– 67 kg)

  • Đorđe Petronijević
  • First Round — Bye
  • Second Round — Lost to Robert Wangila (KEN), RSC-2

Men's Middleweight (– 75 kg)

  • Darko Dukić
  • First Round — Bye
  • Second Round — Defeated Vili Lesiva (SAM), RSC-2
  • Third Round — Lost to Egerton Marcus (CAN), KO-2

Men's Light-Heavyweight (– 81 kg)

  • Damir Škaro → Bronze Medal
  • First Round — Defeated Deyan Kirilov (BUL), 3:2
  • Second Round — Defeated Osmond Imadiyi (NGA), 5:0
  • Quarterfinals — Defeated Joseph Akhasamba (KEN), 5:0
  • Semifinals — Lost to Nuramgomed Shanavazov (URS), walkover

Men's Heavyweight (– 91 kg)

  • First Round — Bye
  • Second Round — Lost to Baik Hyun-Man (KOR), 0:5

Men's Super-Heavyweight (+ 91 kg)

  • Aziz Salihu
  • First Round — Bye
  • Second Round — Lost to Ulli Kaden (GDR), 0:5

Canoeing

Men's C-1 500 metres

  • Ivan Šabjan

C-1 1000 metres

  • Ivan Šabjan

C-2 1000 metres

Cycling

Six male cyclists represented Yugoslavia in 1988.

Men's road race
  • Rajko Čubrić
  • Mićo Brković
  • Valter Bonča
Men's team time trial
  • Valter Bonča
  • Sandi Papež
  • Robert Šebenik
  • Jože Smole

Football

Men's team competition

Gymnastics

Artistic Gymnastics

Men's Individual All-Around

  • Jože Kolman

Men's Floor Exercise

  • Jože Kolman

Men's Horse Vault

  • Jože Kolman

Men's Parallel Bars

  • Jože Kolman

Men's Horizontal Bar

  • Jože Kolman

Men's Rings

  • Jože Kolman

Men's Pommelled Horse

  • Jože Kolman

Rhythmic Gymnastics

Women's Individual

  • Milena Reljin
  • Dara Terzić

Handball

Men's team competition

  • Preliminary round (group A)
    • Lost to Soviet Union (18–24)
    • Defeated United States (31–23)
    • Defeated Algeria (23–22)
    • Tied Iceland (19–19)
    • Defeated Sweden (25–21)
  • Bronze Medal Match
    • Defeated Hungary (27–23) → Bronze Medal
  • Team roster
  • Head coach: ???

Women's Team Competition

  • Team roster
  • Svetlana Anastasovska
  • Slavica Đukić
  • Dragica Đurić
  • Mirjana Đurica
  • Zita Galic
  • Ljubinka Janković
  • Nataša Kolega
  • Mirjana Krstić
  • Ljiljana Marković
  • Svetlana Mičić
  • Ljiljana Mugoša
  • Svetlana Mugoša
  • Dragana Pešić
  • Slavica Rinčić
  • Desanka Stojanović

Judo

Men's Half-Lightweight

  • Dragomir Bečanović

Men's Half-Middleweight

  • Filip Leščak

Men's Middleweight

  • Ivan Todorov

Men's Heavyweight

  • Dragomir Kusmuk

Rowing

Men's coxless pair
  • Bojan Prešern
  • Sadik Mujkič
Men's coxed pair
  • Janez Ambrožič
  • Milan Janša
  • Sašo Mirjanič
Men's coxed four
  • Sead Marušić
  • Lazo Pivač
  • Zlatko Celent
  • Vladimir Banjanac
  • Darko Varga

Sailing

Division II

  • Roland Milošević

Shooting

Men
Athlete Event Qualification Final
Score Rank Score Rank
Rajmond Debevec 10 m air rifle 585 25 did not advance
Goran Maksimović 50 m rifle three positions 1173 8 Q 1271.5 8
50 m rifle prone 596 11 did not advance
10 m air rifle 594 OR 1 Q 695.6 OR
Srećko Pejović 50 m rifle three positions 1165 21 did not advance
50 m rifle prone 588 47 did not advance
Women
Athlete Event Qualification Final
Score Rank Score Rank
Mladenka Maleniča 50 m rifle three positions 570 28 did not advance
10 m air rifle 387 22 did not advance
Jasna Šekarić 25 m pistol 591 OR 1 Q 686
10 m air pistol 389 2 Q 489.5 OR

Swimming

Men's 400 m Freestyle

  • Darjan Petrič
  • Heat – 3:56.94 (→ did not advance, 20th place)
  • Igor Majcen
  • Heat – 3:58.90 (→ did not advance, 28th place)

Men's 1500 m Freestyle

  • Darjan Petrič
  • Heat – 15:16.99
  • Final – 15:37.12 (→ 8th place)
  • Igor Majcen
  • Heat – 15:29.16 (→ did not advance, 18th place)

Women's 200 m Breaststroke

  • Anamarija Petričević
  • Heat – 2:40.80 (→ did not advance, 32nd place)

Women's 200 m Individual Medley

  • Anamarija Petričević
  • Heat – 2:19.38
  • Final – 2:19.63 (→ 13th place)

Women's 400 m Individual Medley

  • Anamarija Petričević
  • Heat – 4:54.17 (→ did not advance, 17th place)

Table tennis

Men's Singles Competition

Men's Doubles Competition

Women's Singles Competition

  • Jasna Fazlić
  • Gordana Perkučin

Women's Doubles Competition

  • Jasna Fazlić, Gordana Perkučin

Tennis

Men's Singles Competition

Men's Doubles Competition

Women's Singles Competition

Water polo

Men's Team Competition

  • Preliminary round (group B)
  • Lost to United States (6–7)
  • Defeated Hungary (10–9)
  • Defeated Greece (17–7)
  • Defeated Spain (10–8)
  • Defeated China (17–7)
  • Semi Finals
  • Defeated West Germany (14–10)
  • Final
  • Defeated United States (9–7) → Gold Gold Medal
  • Team roster

Wrestling

Greco-Roman

  • Zoran Galović
  • Nandor Sabo
  • Franc Podlesek
  • Goran Kasum
  • Bernard Ban
  • Jožef Tertei

Men's Freestyle

  • Šaban Trstena
  • Zoran Šorov
  • Šaban Sejdi
  • Čedo Nikolovski

References

  1. "Yugoslavia at the 1988 Seoul Summer Games". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  2. Yugoslavia at the 1988 Summer Olympics
  3. "1988 Olympic Games : Tournament for Men". FIBA. Retrieved 30 July 2018.
  4. "1988 Olympic Games : Tournament for Women". FIBA. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.