Jump to content

1990–91 NK Dinamo Zagreb season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dinamo Zagreb
1990–91 season
PresidentJosip Šoić
ManagerJosip Kuže
(until 1 October 1990)
Zdenko Kobeščak
Vlatko Marković
1. Federal League2nd place
Marshal Tito CupQuarter-finals
UEFA CupFirst round
Top goalscorerLeague: Davor Šuker (22)
All: Davor Šuker (25)
Highest home attendance17,052 vs Partizan
(17 March 1991)
Lowest home attendance1,445 vs Radnički Niš
(5 December 1990)
Average home league attendance6,040

The 1990–91 season was Dinamo Zagreb's 45th season in the Yugoslav First League. It proved to be their last season played in the Yugoslav league system. Following the season's completion and due to the breakup of Yugoslavia, Croatian clubs, including Dinamo, decided to leave the league to form Prva HNL.[1]

Dinamo Zagreb finished runners-up in the league, with ten points behind champions Red Star Belgrade.[1] In their last appearance in the Yugoslav Cup Dinamo have beaten Borac Bosanski Šamac in the round of 32 (7–0) and FK Sarajevo in the round of 16 (5–1 on aggregate) before reaching the quarter-finals where they were knocked out by Borac Banja Luka (2–3 on aggregate).[2]

In European competitions Dinamo were drawn to play Italy's Atalanta in the 1990–91 UEFA Cup. After a goalless draw in Bergamo in the first leg, the return leg at Maksimir ended in a 1–1 draw, with Atalanta going through on away goals rule.[3]

Players

[edit]

Squad

[edit]

The following is the full list of players who appeared in league matches for Dinamo in the 1990–91 season.[4]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
--- GK Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Miralem Ibrahimović
--- GK Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Dražen Ladić
--- DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Željko Cupan
--- DF Costa Rica CRC Rónald González Brenes
--- DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Slavko Ištvanić
--- DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Zvonko Lipovac
--- DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Damir Lesjak
--- DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Zoran Mamić
--- DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Andrej Panadić
--- DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Saša Peršon
--- DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Željko Petrović
--- DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Muhamed Preljević
--- MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Dražen Besek
--- MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Zvonimir Boban
No. Pos. Nation Player
--- MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Josip Gašpar
--- MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Mladen Mladenović
--- MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Draženko Prskalo
--- MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Kujtim Shala
--- MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Vjekoslav Škrinjar
--- MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Dževad Turković
--- MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Gregor Židan
--- FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Željko Adžić
--- FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Stjepan Deverić
--- FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Primož Gliha
--- FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Miljenko Kovačić
--- FW Costa Rica CRC Hernán Medford
--- FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Alen Peternac
--- FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia YUG Davor Šuker

First Federal League

[edit]

Matches

[edit]
M Date Opponents Venue Result Score
F–A
Dinamo scorers Attendance Ref
1 5 August 1990 Budućnost A L 0–1 3,606 [5]
2 12 August 1990 Velež H (N) W 2–1 Šuker (2) 2,944 [5]
3 19 August 1990 Rijeka A D 0–0 (1–3 p) 3,301 [5]
4 26 August 1990 Borac Banja Luka H W 2–1 Mladenović, Medford 9,168 [5]
5 1 September 1990 Partizan A L 1–2 Šuker 12,483 [5]
6 15 September 1990 Zemun H W 2–0 Šuker (2) 7,825 [5]
7 26 September 1990 Vojvodina A L 1–3 Šuker 4,500 [5]
8 29 September 1990 Osijek H D 1–1 (6–7 p) Boban 3,894 [5]
9 7 October 1990 Sarajevo A D 0–0 (5–4 p) 1,629 [5]
10 13 October 1990 Hajduk Split H D 1–1 (4–3 p) Šuker 13,229 [5]
11 21 October 1990 Spartak Subotica A D 0–0 (4–2 p) 1,600 [5]
12 4 November 1990 Sloboda Tuzla H W 3–1 Boban (2), Medford 2,131 [5]
13 18 November 1990 Red Star A L 1–3 Petrović 18,130 [5]
14 25 November 1990 Rad H W 2–1 Mladenović, Prskalo 2,267 [5]
15 2 December 1990 Proleter Zrenjanin A L 1–3 Medford 4,800 [5]
16 5 December 1990 Radnički Niš H W 2–0 Šuker, Boban 1,445 [5]
17 9 December 1990 Željezničar A W 3–1 Preljević, Cupan, Mladenović 1,404 [5]
18 16 December 1990 Olimpija H W 3–0 Šuker (pen.), Boban, Mladenović 3,117 [5]
19 17 February 1991 Budućnost H W 6–0 Šuker (pen.), Boban, Shala (2), Mladenović, Adžić 3,650 [5]
20 24 February 1991 Velež A W 2–1 Boban, Škrinjar 5,085 [5]
21 3 March 1991 Rijeka H W 3–1 Adžić, Shala, Boban 7,837 [5]
22 10 March 1991 Borac Banja Luka A D 1–1 (5–6 p) Boban 6,607 [5]
23 17 March 1991 Partizan H D 0–0 (4–3 p) 17,052 [5]
24 22 March 1991 Zemun A D 1–1 (7–6 p) Petrović 1,370 [5]
25 7 April 1991 Vojvodina H D 2–2 (7–6 p) Židan, Šuker 4,971 [5]
26 14 April 1991 Osijek A L 1–2 Šuker 7,589 [5]
27 21 April 1991 Sarajevo H W 8–1 Šuker (2), Boban (3), Gašpar, Shala, Mladenović 4,208 [5]
28 27 April 1991 Hajduk Split A W 2–1 Šuker (2) 28,000 [5]
29 5 May 1991 Spartak Subotica H W 3–1 Šuker (2), Boban 3,842 [5]
30 11 May 1991 Sloboda Tuzla A W 3–0 Gliha, Deverić, Boban 972 [5]
31 18 May 1991 Red Star H W 3–2 Šuker (pen.), Gašpar, Židan 14,546 [5]
32 26 May 1991 Rad A W 2–0 Šuker, Boban 1,100 [5]
33 2 June 1991 Proleter Zrenjanin H W 4–1 Šuker (2), Shala, Deverić 4,964 [5]
34 5 June 1991 Radnički Niš A D 1–1 (4–5 p) Adžić 6,500 [5]
35 9 June 1991 Željezničar H W 2–1 Shala (2) 1,580 [5]
36 16 June 1991 Olimpija A W 3–1 Boban, Shala, Gliha 1,606 [5]

Standings

[edit]
Pos Team Pld W PKW PKL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Red Star Belgrade (C) 36 25 4 2 5 88 35 +53 54 Qualification for European Cup first round
2 Dinamo Zagreb[a] 36 20 6 4 6 72 36 +36 46 Qualification for UEFA Cup first round
3 Partizan 36 18 5 3 10 62 36 +26 41
4 Proleter Zrenjanin 36 17 1 3 15 50 49 +1 35 Qualification for Intertoto Cup
5 Borac Banja Luka 36 14 7 4 11 42 38 +4 35
Source: rsssf.org
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champion
Notes:
  1. ^ After the season, Croatian and Slovenian clubs left the Yugoslav federation and formed their own leagues. Dinamo Zagreb, Hajduk Split, Osijek and Rijeka joined 1992 Prva HNL, while Olimpija joined 1991–92 Slovenian PrvaLiga.

Results summary

[edit]
Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
36 20 10 6 72 36  +36 50 14 4 0 49 15  +34 6 6 6 23 21  +2

Last updated: 2 October 2024.
Source: rsssf.org

Marshal Tito Cup

[edit]
Round Date Opponents Venue Result Score
F–A
Scorers Attendance Ref
R32 8 August 1990 Borac Bosanski Šamac A W 7–0 [6]
R16 (1st leg) 15 August 1990 Sarajevo H (N) W 1–0 [6]
R16 (2nd leg) 22 August 1990 Sarajevo A W 4–1 [6]
QF (1st leg) 10 October 1990 Borac Banja Luka A L 2–3 [6]
QF (2nd leg) 21 November 1990 Borac Banja Luka H D 0–0 [6]

Europe

[edit]
Round Date Opponents Venue Result Score
F–A
Scorers Attendance Ref
R1 (1st leg) 19 September 1990 Italy Atalanta A D 0–0 29,033
R1 (2nd leg) 3 October 1990 Italy Atalanta H D 1–1 Boban 54' 19,488

Players

[edit]

Dinamo used a total of 28 players during the 1990–91 season, and there were 15 different goalscorers for the club. The club played 41 competitive matches this season (36 in the league, 3 in the national cup, and 2 in the UEFA Cup). Five players were named in the starting lineup 30 or more times.

The leading player in appearances was goalkeeper Dražen Ladić, who started 35 out of 36 league matches. The leading goalscorers in the league were Davor Šuker (22) and Zvonimir Boban (16), who finished second and third in the 1990–91 season goalscoring table, behind only Crvena Zvezda's Darko Pančev (34) who also won the European Golden Shoe for that season.

Boban scored the club's only hat-trick of the season, in a 8–1 thrashing of FK Sarajevo at Maksimir, in April 1991. Šuker had six braces in the league, with Kujtim Shala scoring two braces, and Boban one.

Dinamo was the second-highest goalscoring team in the league in 1990–91, producing 88 goals in 36 matches (2.44 per game) and had shared third-best defense, conceding 36 goals, including 10 clean sheets.

A feature of the Yugoslav league in this period were penalty shoot-outs, played in case of tied results at the end of regular time, with only the winning team earning a point. The rule was introduced to encourage attacking football and combat allegations of match-fixing. In the 1990–91 season Dinamo had ten draws in the league, and went on to win six of these shoot-outs.

In 1990–91 Dinamo were undefeated at Maksimir across all competitions, recording 13 wins and 4 draws in 17 league matches at home, winning 29 points (26 for straight wins plus 3 penalty kick wins) out of the maximum 34 (85.3%). In the cup, Dinamo played five matches, one of them at home, a 0–0 draw vs. Borac Banja Luka in the second leg of the quarter-finals in November 1990.

This does not include two "home" matches which FSJ ordered to be played outside of Zagreb due to the pitch invasion and violent rioting in the abandoned home game vs Red Star at the end of the previous season, in May 1990. Dinamo played these two matches at Stadion Kantrida in Rijeka in August: the 2–1 league win against Velež on 12 August, and the 1–0 win against Sarajevo in the Marshal Tito Cup three days later.

In Europe Dinamo held Italy's Atalanta to a 1–1 draw at Maksimir in the UEFA Cup, only getting knocked out due to the away goals rule.

Boban scored the club's only European goal of the season, against Italian club Atalanta in the return leg of the first round of the UEFA Cup at Maksimir in October 1990. At the end of the season Boban was transferred to Milan, where he would spend the following decade, while Šuker was sold to Sevilla in Spain, where he would soon become one of the league's top scorers of the early 1990s.

Before the season, Dinamo's Šuker and Panadić had been part of the Yugoslavia squad under national manager Ivica Osim at the 1990 FIFA World Cup played in Italy in July 1990. Just before that summer's tournament, Yugoslavia played a friendly at Dinamo's Stadion Maksimir in June 1990, in a controversial match which proved to be the last game played by Yugoslavia in Zagreb or anywhere else in Croatia.

Nevertheless, during the 1990–91 season the following Dinamo players earned full international caps for Yugoslavia: Petrović (1) Boban (4), Ladić (2), Šuker (2). The last Yugoslavia match to feature players from Croatian clubs was a Euro 1992 qualifier against Faroe Islands, played in Belgrade in May 1991. Petrović, who also left for Sevilla along with Šuker at the end of season, later earned 16 caps for FR Yugoslavia (later renamed "Serbia and Montenegro"), while Ladić, Boban and Šuker went on to become stalwarts in the star-studded Croatia national football team which reached the quarter-final at the UEFA Euro 1996 in England and the semi-final at the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France.

Squad statistics

[edit]
Key

Numbers indicate starting appearances + appearances as substitute.
Goals column shows total goals, numbers in brackets indicate penalties scored in regular time, excluding penalty shoot-outs in case of ties.
Players with name struck through and marked † left the club during the playing season.
Age as of 6 August 1990, first matchday of the season.

Pos. Nat. Name DoB (Age) League Cup Europe Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
GK Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dražen Ladić (1963-01-01)1 January 1963 (aged 27) 35 0 0 2 0 42 0
DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Petrović (1965-11-13)13 November 1965 (aged 24) 32 2 0 2 0 39 2
FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Davor Šuker (1968-01-01)1 January 1968 (aged 22) 32 22 (5) 3 2 0 39 25
MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Mladen Mladenović (1964-09-13)13 September 1964 (aged 25) 28 6 3 2 0 32 9
DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Saša Peršon (1965-02-28)28 February 1965 (aged 25) 28 0 0 2 0 33 0
MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Zvonimir Boban (1968-10-08)8 October 1968 (aged 21) 26 16 0 2 1 30 17
DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Gregor Židan (1965-10-05)5 October 1965 (aged 24) 26+2 2 1 2 0 35 3
DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Slavko Ištvanić (1966-07-12)12 July 1966 (aged 24) 25+5 0 0 0+1 0 35 0
FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Kujtim Shala (1964-07-13)13 July 1964 (aged 26) 24 8 3 2 0 29 11
MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Adžić (1965-08-28)28 August 1965 (aged 24) 19+4 4 0 0 24 3
DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Muhamed Preljević (1964-06-16)16 June 1964 (aged 26) 19+2 1 0 0 0 0 21 1
DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Andrej Panadić (1969-03-09)9 March 1969 (aged 21) 18 0 0 2 0 23 0
FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Josip Gašpar (1973-03-15)15 March 1973 (aged 17) 13+2 1 0 0 0 0 15 2
MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Vjekoslav Škrinjar (1969-06-02)2 June 1969 (aged 21) 11+10 1 1 0 0 25 2
FW Costa Rica Hernán Medford (1968-05-23)23 May 1968 (aged 22) 10+4 3 0 0+2 0 19 3
DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Zvonko Lipovac (1964-10-09)9 October 1964 (aged 25) 10 0 0 1 0 14 0
MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Damir Lesjak (1967-03-31)31 March 1967 (aged 23) 8+3 0 0 1 0 15 0
MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Draženko Prskalo (1964-04-18)18 April 1964 (aged 26) 7+9 1 0 1 0 19 1
DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Cupan (1963-12-30)30 December 1963 (aged 26) 7+1 1 0 0 0 9 1
MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dražen Besek (1963-03-10)10 March 1963 (aged 27) 6+2 0 1 0 0 11 1
DF Costa Rica Rónald González (1970-08-08)8 August 1970 (aged 19) 4+1 0 0 0 1+1 0 7 0
FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Stjepan Deverić (1961-08-20)20 August 1961 (aged 28) 3+4 2 0 0 0 7 2
MF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Alen Peternac (1972-01-16)16 January 1972 (aged 18) 2+5 0 1 0 0 11 1
FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Primož Gliha (1967-10-08)8 October 1967 (aged 22) 1+1 2 0 0 0 2 2
GK Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Miralem Ibrahimović (1963-01-19)19 January 1963 (aged 27) 1 0 0 0 0 1 0
DF Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Zoran Mamić (1971-09-30)30 September 1971 (aged 18) 1 0 0 0 0 2 0
FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Miljenko Kovačić (1973-03-19)19 March 1973 (aged 17) 0+6 0 0 0 0 6 0
FW Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dževad Turković (1972-06-17)17 June 1972 (aged 18) 0+4 0 0 0 0 5 0
MF Canada Nick Dasovic (1968-12-05)5 December 1968 (aged 21) 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Kramarsic, Igor (20 March 2009). "Yugoslavia - List of Final Tables". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 7 August 2010.
  2. ^ Abbink, Dinant (6 June 2008). "Cup of Yugoslavia 1990/91". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 7 August 2010.
  3. ^ Ross, James M. (17 January 2008). "UEFA Cup 1990-91". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 7 August 2010.
  4. ^ Podnar, Ozren (2006). Dinamo svetinja: sve o najvećem hrvatskom klubu (in Croatian). Zagreb: VBZ. ISBN 953-201-585-X.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj "NK Dinamo". Almanah Yu-Fudbal 90-91 (in Serbo-Croatian). Belgrade: NIP Politika. October 1991. p. 8-9.
  6. ^ a b c d e "NK Dinamo". Almanah Yu-Fudbal 90-91 (in Serbo-Croatian). Belgrade: NIP Politika. October 1991. p. 98-99.
[edit]