Miloš Milutinović

Miloš "Milo" Milutinovic ( born February 5, 1933, Bajina Basta, Yugoslavia, † 28 January 2003 in Belgrade ) was a Yugoslavian football player and coach. He was top scorer of the first European Champion Clubs' Cup season.

Milutinovic began his career at FK Bor, 1951, he was captain of a youth team that won a UEFA tournament in France. Then moved the center forward to Partizan Belgrade for whom he played in the same year for the first time in the first Yugoslav league. In the 1955/56 season he was the first European Cup of Champions competition with eight goals scorer, and although Partizan failed to Real Madrid 0:4 / 3:0 in the quarter- finals. Milo scored in a 3-0 return leg win all three goals. A Yugoslav championship titles remained denied him, it was enough only for three times runner-up title (1954, 1956, 1958) as well as three cup victories (1952, 1954, 1957) where he was only the third success on the court. Between 1951 and 1958 he played 192 times for Partizan, scoring 183 goals.

In 1953 he made ​​his debut in the Yugoslav national team in a 5-2 victory over Wales, Milutinovic was there three times successfully. Miloš played in both the 1954 World Cup (3 games / 1 goal) as well as at the World Cup 1958 ( 3 games / no goal ). Overall, he completed 1953-1958 33 internationals when she met 16 times.

1958 moved to league rivals OFK Belgrade Milutinovic. In his first eight missions he scored nine goals before he had seriously ill and interrupting his career for two years.

After he was treated successfully in Munich, he continued in 1960 with FC Bayern Munich his career continued. There, however, he did not succeed in his earlier achievements to tie, not even in France, where he played from 1961. In RC Paris, he was runner-up in 1962 French before he trailed off his career in the season 1963/64, at Stade Français in Paris. In 1968 he was again made ​​a comeback for OFK Belgrade, where he was technical director in the meantime. In his last season he played 42 times, scoring 13 goals yet.

A year later he began his coaching career in the southern Serbian town of Leskovac. About Proleter Zrenjanin, he moved abroad to Atlas Guadalajara ( Mexico) and the Turkish top club Beşiktaş Istanbul. In 1981 he returned to Yugoslavia and initially led Velež Mostar Yugoslav Cup victory before he was Yugoslav champion in 1983 with Partizan Belgrade. From late 1984 to 1985, he coached the Yugoslav national football team before he again went to Turkey for two years in 1986. His last Traintertätigkeit he practiced in the 1990/91 season again at Partizan.

Miloš was the brother of Milorad, who also participated in the 1958 World Cup with Yugoslavia, and Bora Milutinovic, who supervised a total of five different teams in the World Cup finals.

  • National football team (Yugoslavia)
  • Yugoslav
  • Football coach (Yugoslavia)
  • Serb
  • Born in 1933
  • Died in 2003
  • Man
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