FK Borac Čačak





















































Borac Čačak
Borac Čačak.svg
Full name Fudbalski klub Borac Čačak
Nickname(s)
Zebre (The Zebras)
Founded 1 May 1926; 92 years ago (1926-05-01)
Ground
Čačak Stadium
Čačak, Serbia
Capacity 8,000[1]
President
Serbia Milenko Kostić
Head coach Vladimir Stanisavljević
League Serbian First League
2017–18
Serbian SuperLiga, 16th (relegated)
Website Club website

















Home colours














Away colours




Current season

Fudbalski klub Borac Čačak (Serbian Cyrillic: Фудбалски клуб Борац Чачак), or simply Borac Čačak, is a professional football club based in Čačak, Serbia. The word Borac in translation means fighter in English. Mainly because of the horizontal stripes, Borac's nickname is Zebre (Zebras).




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Recent years




  • 2 Crest and Colors


  • 3 Honours


  • 4 UEFA competitions


  • 5 Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors


  • 6 Current squad


    • 6.1 Youth & reserves


    • 6.2 Out on loan




  • 7 Notable former players


  • 8 Coaching history


  • 9 References


  • 10 External links





History


At the end of World War I, football began to be played in Čačak. According to some sources the first football match took place in 1920. Six years later, a group of union workers who organized on May 1, 1926 founded the club. Initially, the uniform was red and later was changed to red-and-white. The first president of the club was a carpenter, Jovan Jolović. On August 6, 1932 FK Borac had its first night match under stadium floodlights, with the Arsenal football club. Before World War II the club's biggest success was winning 1st place in the West Morava district league in 1934.


After a break during World War II, the club started up again and in 1946 played in the qualifications for the Yugoslav First League against Red Star Belgrade but lost. Its next achievement was to win the Serbian Cup in 1958 (regional Yugoslav Cup back then) and four years later won promotion to the Yugoslav Second League. The first play-off match against OFK Titograd was lost 1–3, but in the home match on July 15, 1962, with six goals in the second half, FK Borac secured a promotion to the Second Federal League.


For many years Borac played in the Second Federal League but the dream of the promotion to the First League of FR Yugoslavia came through in 1994 when Borac got promoted for the first time. Previously Borac had failed in three attempts to make it to the top flight, losing play-off matches in 1970, 1971, and 1973. The club has been relegated three times since first making the Yugoslav First League but they have also three times managed to win promotion back to the top league, most recently in 2003.



Recent years


In the 2005–06 season, Borac finished in 7th place, the club's highest finish ever, which they surpassed in 2007–08, when they finished 4th, thereby securing a place in European competition for the first time. In the 2008–09 UEFA Cup, Borac defeated Dacia Chișinău from Moldova 4–2 on aggregate in the first qualifying round, and Lokomotiv Sofia from Bulgaria 2–1 on aggregate in the second qualifying round. Dutch giants Ajax denied Borac entry into the group stage by defeating them twice, 1–4 in Belgrade and 0–2 in Amsterdam. During the 2013–14 Serbian First League season, Borac won promotion to the Serbian SuperLiga late in the season as runners-up over Metalac Gornji Milanovac, with whom they were tied on points. However, because of the results in their matches against Metalac (0–1 away and 0–0 home), Borac placed above Metalac. On August 2, in the 2014 Memorial Živorad Stanković Bia, Borac for the second time in their history played a night match under floodlights, defeating Metalac 1–0 at the reconstructed Čačak stadium.



Crest and Colors


The club's colours are red and white.







Honours


  • Serbian Cup:


Runner-up: 2011–12

  • Second League FRY/SCG (3):


1993–94, 1998–99, 2002–03 (Group West)


UEFA competitions


  • Qualified for Europe in 1 season






































Season
Competition
Round
Country
Club
Home
Away
Aggregate

2008–09

UEFA Cup
QR1

Moldova

Dacia Chișinău
3–1
1–1

4–2
QR2

Bulgaria

Lokomotiv Sofia
1–0
1–1

2–1
R1

Netherlands

Ajax
1–4
0–2

1–6


Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors













Period
Kit Manufacturer
Shirt Sponsor
2008–present
NAAI

Škoda


Current squad


As of 11 September 2018

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




























































































No.

Position
Player
1

Serbia

GK

Jovan Stanić
3

Serbia

DF

Aleksa Urošević
5

Serbia

MF

Nikola Tasić
8

Serbia

MF

Dušan Kuveljić
9

Serbia

FW

Nikola Tripković
10

Serbia

MF

Stefan Kovačević
12

Serbia

DF

Njegoš Janjušević
13

Serbia

DF

Jovica Vasilić
15

Serbia

FW

Lazar Marković
16

Serbia

MF

Nikola Šutić
17

Serbia

MF

Nemanja Radosavljević
18

Serbia

MF

Đorđe Savković
20

Serbia

MF

Stefan Fićović
























































































No.

Position
Player
21

Serbia

DF

Uroš Sekulić
22

Serbia

FW

Marko Ilić
24

Serbia

GK

Saša Mišić
25

Serbia

DF

Igor Nedeljković
26

Serbia

FW

Nemanja Perić
28

Serbia

FW

Tibor Berak
29

Serbia

GK

Jovan Ćalović
33

Serbia

FW

Nemanja Kovačević
35

Serbia

DF

Vladimir Otašević
41

Serbia

GK

Mateja Maslarević
43

Serbia

DF

Veljko Filipović
47

Serbia

MF

Stefan Bojović
49

Serbia

FW

Veljko Bogićević



Youth & reserves


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






































No.

Position
Player


Republic of Macedonia

FW

Destan Haciya


Serbia

MF

Stefan Janković


Serbia

DF

Srđan Pantelić


South Korea

MF

Jang Su-Мin




























No.

Position
Player


Ghana

FW

Kennedy Asamoah


Serbia

FW

Lazar Jolović


South Korea


Park Ji-soo



Out on loan


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












No.

Position
Player








No.

Position
Player


For recent transfers, see List of Serbian football transfers winter 2017–18. For summer transfers, see List of Serbian football transfers summer 2017.



Notable former players


Former players with senior national team appearances:[2]





  • Serbia Boban Dmitrović


  • Serbia Ivica Dragutinović


  • Serbia Jovan Gojković


  • Serbia Aleksandar Ignjatović


  • Serbia Radiša Ilić


  • Serbia Darko Lazović


  • Serbia Marko Lomić


  • Serbia Lazar Marković


  • Serbia Slobodan Marković


  • Serbia Nikola Milojević


  • Serbia Filip Mladenović


  • Serbia Miljan Mutavdžić


  • Serbia Ivan Stevanović


  • Serbia Milivoje Vitakić


  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Mario Božić


  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Rade Krunić


  • Chad Misdongarde Betolngar


  • Guinea-Bissau Bacar Baldé


  • Indonesia Ilija Spasojević


  • Kazakhstan Nenad Erić


  • Liberia Omega Roberts


  • Republic of Macedonia Darko Krsteski


  • Republic of Macedonia Stefan Spirovski


  • Montenegro Damir Čakar


  • Montenegro Vladimir Gluščević


  • Montenegro Milan Jovanović


  • Montenegro Rade Petrović


  • Montenegro Risto Radunović


  • Montenegro Darko Zorić


  • State of Palestine Javier Cohene


  • Sierra Leone Mustapha Bangura


  • Uganda Eugene Sseppuya


  • Zimbabwe Mike Temwanjera



For the list of all current and former players with Wikipedia article, please see: Category:FK Borac Čačak players.



Coaching history


A great number of coaches have passed through the club. Before the World War II the main coach was the former BSK Belgrade and national team player Dragomir Tošić. After 1945 the main coaches were Ivan Stevović, Dragoslav Filipović, Prvoslav Dragićević, Kosta Tomašević, Živorad Stanković, Vasilije Šijaković, Gojko Zec, Dragan Bojović, Momčilo Ilić, Žarko Nedeljković, among others. More recently, the club was managed by Dušan Radonjić, Slobodan Ostojić, Mihailo Kolarević, Dušan Marić, Milovan Đorić, Milovan Ćirković, Dušan Spasojević, Nenad Starovlah, Ivan Čančarević, Milorad Kosanović, Dimitrije Mitrović, Branko Smiljanić, Božidar Vuković, Slavenko Kuzeljević, Dušimir Vulović, Radovan Gudurić, Milutin Marušić, Miodrag Božović and Milovan Rajevac.[3]











References





  1. ^ [1]


  2. ^ FK Borac Čačak at National-Football-Teams.com


  3. ^ History at official website




External links




  • FK Borac Čačak official website. (in Serbian)

  • uefa.com – UEFA.com


  • Club profile and squad at Srbijafudbal

  • Team profile at JelenFootball


  • Borac Stats at Utakmica.rs











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