Slavko Petrović

Serbian football manager (born 1958) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Slavko Petrović (Serbian Cyrillic: Славко Петровић; born 10 August 1958) is a Serbian professional football manager and former player.

Date of birth (1958-08-10) 10 August 1958 (age 67)
Place of birth Belgrade, FPR Yugoslavia
Position Goalkeeper
1968–1972 Bežanija
Quick facts Personal information, Date of birth ...
Slavko Petrović
Petrović as Zalaegerszegi manager in 2007
Personal information
Date of birth (1958-08-10) 10 August 1958 (age 67)
Place of birth Belgrade, FPR Yugoslavia
Position Goalkeeper
Youth career
1968–1972 Bežanija
1972–1979 Red Star Belgrade
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1979 Red Star Belgrade 0 (0)
1980 Fortuna Düsseldorf 0 (0)
1980–1981 Rot-Weiss Essen 0 (0)
1981–1982 Wormatia Worms
1982–1987 Olympia Lampertheim
1987–1990 Amicitia Viernheim
Managerial career
1992–1996 Alemannia Groß-Rohrheim
1996–1997 Amicitia Viernheim
1997–1998 Karlsruher SC (assistant)
1998–1999 Darmstadt 98
1999–2001 Carl Zeiss Jena
2002–2003 Fortuna Düsseldorf
2005 Waldhof Mannheim
2007–2008 Zalaegerszegi
2011 Borac Čačak
2011 Rad
2011–2012 Borac Čačak
2014–2016 Radnik Bijeljina
2016–2017 Željezničar
2017–2018 Sloboda Tuzla
2020 Radnik Bijeljina
2020–2021 Olimpik
2022 Spartak Subotica
2024 Tuzla City
* Club domestic league appearances and goals
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Playing career

Petrović was a goalkeeper at Red Star Belgrade. Although he made no league appearances for them, he went to Germany, where he spent most of his career playing with Fortuna Düsseldorf, Rot-Weiss Essen and Wormatia Worms.[1] He won the 1979–80 DFB-Pokal while playing for Fortuna Düsseldorf.

Managerial career

Early career

During the late 1990s, Petrović became a manager in Germany, getting the job of assistant manager at Karlsruher SC in 1997 after coaching Alemannia Groß-Rohrheim and Amicitia Viernheim earlier.[2] In the following season, he moved to SV Darmstadt 98 where he became the main manager. Until 2006, he was the manager of Carl Zeiss Jena, Fortuna Düsseldorf and Waldhof Mannheim. During the season 2007–08, he was coaching Zalaegerszegi in Hungary.

In January 2011, Petrović returned to Serbia and became the manager of SuperLiga club Borac Čačak. At the start of the 2011–12 season, he became the coach of Rad.

Radnik Bijeljina

On 5 September 2014, Petrović became the new manager of Bosnian Premier League club Radnik Bijeljina.[3] He won the Bosnian cup with Radnik in the 2015–16 season, making that the club's highest achievement in its history.[4]

Željezničar

2016–17 season

Petrović managing Željezničar at Grbavica Stadium in April 2017

Petrović replaced Miloš Kostić as Željezničar manager after a terrible start to the 2016–17 season where the club was winless in four consecutive matches, three of which were lost (two at home) and without scoring a single goal. Since Petrović arrived, he guided the club to the 2017–18 UEFA Europa League Second qualifying round, having lost only two games in the league out of 25 games played (scoring 2.16 goals per game).[5] At one point the club managed to stay top of the league for five weeks, but ultimately finished second overall due to a dubious penalty decision in injury time (game Radnik Bijeljina vs Zrinjski Mostar 1–2; while at the same time Sarajevo beat Željezničar in the Sarajevo derby 1–0), allowing Zrinjski to overtake Željezničar and win the Bosnian championship; a first domestic title for, Zrinjski manager at the time, Blaž Slišković, with Željezničar a point behind.[6]

Throughout the league, Željezničar played simultaneously in the 2016–17 Bosnian Cup, where they were eliminated in the semifinals stage to the eventual cup winner Široki Brijeg. Under Petrović, Željezničar forward Ivan Lendrić finished as top goalscorer of the league with 19 scored goals.

2017–18 season

Petrović received support to remain as Željezničar for the next season.[7] However just one day before the start of the season and the league match against GOŠK Gabela, Petrović was sacked.[8]

Sloboda Tuzla

In September 2017, Petrović was named the new manager of Sloboda Tuzla, after Vlado Jagodić left the club.[9] He led Sloboda to the 2017–18 Bosnian cup semi-final, where the club lost to eventual cup winners Željezničar. Petrović also led Sloboda to a 10th-place finish in the league. Before the beginning of the 2018–19 season, Petrović left Sloboda.[10]

Return to Radnik Bijeljina

On 13 January 2020, Petrović returned to Radnik Bijeljina 3+12 years after leaving the club back in the summer of 2016.[11] In his first game back, Petrović's team drew against his former club Željezničar 0–0 in a league match on 22 February 2020.[12] His first win since his return to Radnik came on 7 March 2020, a 5–1 home win against Zvijezda 09.[13] Petrović decided to leave Radnik on 16 November 2020, saying that pressure and constant threats from fans forced him to make that decision.[14]

Olimpik

On 12 December 2020, Petrović became the new manager of Olimpik.[15] In his first league game as Olimpik manager, Petrović's team beat fis former club Radnik Bijeljina on the same day that he became manager.[16] After the end of the 2020–21 season and Olimpik's relegation, Petrović left the club.[17]

Spartak Subotica

On 18 April 2022, Petrović was appointed manager of Serbian SuperLiga side Spartak Subotica.[18] He successfully led the club to safety from relegation in the remainder of the season.[19] On 20 September 2022, Petrović left Spartak by mutual consent.[20]

Tuzla City

On 8 January 2024, Petrović returned to the Bosnian Premier League, becoming manager of relegation threatened Tuzla City.[21] His first match in charge was against Velež Mostar in the Bosnian Cup on 9 February 2024, which ended in a 3–2 defeat.[22] Following two more league defeats to Borac Banja Luka and Posušje, Petrović recorded his first win as Tuzla City manager on 2 March 2024, a 2–0 home victory against Zvijezda 09.[23] Following a 5–1 home defeat to Sarajevo on 29 March, he terminated his contract and left the club on 31 March.[24]

Managerial statistics

As of match played 29 March 2024[25]
More information Team, From ...
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team From To Record
G W D L Win %
Darmstadt 98 1 July 1998 30 September 1999 13436030.77
Carl Zeiss Jena 29 November 1999 19 May 2001 55221221040.00
Fortuna Düsseldorf 1 July 2002 5 May 2003 3314109042.42
Waldhof Mannheim 7 January 2005 22 December 2005 3414713041.18
Zalaegerszegi 1 July 2007 30 April 2008 2711511040.74
Borac Čačak 10 January 2011 30 May 2011 15654040.00
Rad 31 May 2011 18 September 2011 9414044.44
Borac Čačak 3 October 2011 26 March 2012 16457025.00
Radnik Bijeljina 5 September 2014 23 August 2016 72282024038.89
Željezničar 24 August 2016 23 July 2017 3621105058.33
Sloboda Tuzla 11 September 2017 8 June 2018 2910811034.48
Radnik Bijeljina 13 January 2020 16 November 2020 19478021.05
Olimpik 12 December 2020 30 June 2021 15438026.67
Spartak Subotica 18 April 2022 20 September 2022 17557029.41
Tuzla City 8 January 2024 31 March 2024 6114016.67
Total 396152102142038.38
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Honours

Player

Fortuna Düsseldorf[1]

Manager

Radnik Bijeljina[26]

References

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