- Miodrag Ješić
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Miodrag Ješić
Миодраг ЈешићPersonal information Full name Miodrag Ješić Date of birth 30 November 1958 Place of birth Osečenica, SFR Yugoslavia Playing position Defender Club information Current club Shahrdari Tabriz (head coach) Youth career 1974-1976 Partizan Belgrade Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1976-1985 Partizan Belgrade 342 (81) 1985-1989 Altay 140 (61) 1989-1990 Trabzonspor 40 (9) 1990-1991 Partizan Belgrade 4 (0) 1992-1994 Altay 18 (2) National team 1980-1982 SFR Yugoslavia U-21 25 (0) 1982-1984 SFR Yugoslavia 8 (2) Teams managed 1992-1993 Obilić 1993-1994 Krajišnik Belgrade 1994-1995 Vršac 1995-1996 Radnički Beograd 1996-1997 Mladi Radnik Požarevac 1997-1998 Radnički Niš 1998-1999 OFK Beograd 1999-2000 Partizan Belgrade 2000-2001 Club Sportif Sfaxien 2002 Altay 2002-2004 Slavia Sofia 2004 Pegah Gilan 2004-2006 CSKA Sofia 2006-2007 Partizan Belgrade 2007 Shirin Faraz 2007-2008 Litex Lovech 2008 CS Otopeni 2008-2009 Budućnost Podgorica 2009-2010 Al Ittihad Tripoli 2010 Changsha Ginde 2011 Attahaddy Benghazi 2011- Shahrdari Tabriz * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Miodrag Ješić (Cyrillic: Миодраг Јешић; born 30 November 1958) is a Serbian football manager and a former footballer. He is the current Head coach of Shahrdari Tabriz.
Contents
Football career
Playing
Born on 30 November 1958 in Osečenica, Ješić played for Partizan Belgrade between 1974 and 1985,[1] taking part in 342 matches and scoring 81 goals.
For the Yugoslavia national football team, he played in 8 games and scored twice.
Between 1985 and 1989 he represented Altay SK, where he recorded 140 matches and 61 goals, and finished his career at Trabzonspor in 1989-90 with 40 matches and 9 goals.
He is immensely disliked amongst the Fenerbahçe supporters because they view him as responsible for an injury suffered by "Şeytan" Rıdvan Dilmen (Rıdvan the Devil) in 1990 during a league match between Fenerbahçe and Trabzonspor. Rıdvan never fully recovered despite undergoing sixteen operations, and eventually had to retire in 1995 at Fenerbahçe after painful years of injuries. Ješić had also accumulated a record number of bookings in his tenure in Turkish Süper Lig. Opponents claimed that he also injured many players in Turkey and gave him the nickname of "Kasap Jesic", which means "Jesic the Butcher"
Coaching
As a manager, Ješić began his career at FK Obilić in 1993, reaching a Yugoslav Cup final, and then managed several other Serbian teams, including OFK Beograd and his native Partizan, that, during his period at the helm, scored 111 goals in a single season, a club record. Won over FC Flora Estonia 6:0, 4:1, won over FC Rijeka Croatia 3:1, 3:0 in UEFA Cup.
Coaching Tunisian side Club Sportif Sfaxien in 2000-01 and winning the Arab Champions League, he was at the helm of Turkish club SK Altay in 2002 and moved to Bulgaria in 2002 to manage Slavia Sofia and then Iranian Pegah Gilan F.C., after which he became the manager of CSKA Sofia. During this period he became a Champion of Bulgaria and recorded a win over Liverpool in the UEFA Champions League qualifying phase, also eliminating Bayer Leverkusen in the UEFA Cup. Voted coach no. 1 for season 2004/2005 by Bulgarian sport newspaper.
In May 2006 he became the coach of FK Partizan, Belgrade for the second time in his coaching career. However, following a disappointing first half of the season, he left the club in January 2007.[2] Since November 2007 he was coaching Litex Lovech. With him Litex won Bulgarian national Cup.
In June 2008, he signed with Romanian Liga I debutant team CS Otopeni and following a series of defeats his agreement was terminated early on 18 August 2008.[3]
In September 2008, he signed a one year professional contract with Montenegrin First League team FK Buducnost Podgorica.
In July 2009, he signed a one-year contract with Libyan First League team Al Ittihad.[4] On 22 September 2009, Al Ittihad won the Libyan Super Cup, beating Tarsana 3:2.
On 16 June 2010, Ješić was appointed to the manager of Changsha Ginde replacing Hao Wei.[5]
On 19 June 2011, He was named as Shahrdari Tabriz F.C.'s new head coach replacing Hamid Derakhshan.[6]
- As of 30 October 2011
Nat Team From To Record G W D L Win % GF GA +/- Shahrdari Tabriz July 2011 Present 12 3 6 3 40% 13 17 -4 Total 12 3 6 3 40% 13 17 -4 References
- ^ "JEŠIČ Miodrag". Strukljeva.net. http://www.strukljeva.net/football/s_u_player.asp?id=2717. Retrieved 2010-02-13.
- ^ Milosavljevic, Zoran (2007-01-09). "Soccer-Former Yugoslavia defender Djukic named Partizan coach". Reuters. http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKL0991550720070109.
- ^ "Jesici, dat afară de la CS Otopeni!" (in Romanian). Gazeta Sporturilor. 2008-08-18. http://www.gsp.ro/fotbal/liga-1/jesici-dat-afara-de-la-cs-otopeni-93027.html.
- ^ "Ješić novi trener libijskog Al Itihada" (in Serbian). RTS. 2009-06-26. http://www.rts.rs/page/sport/sr/story/36/Fudbal/70093/Je%C5%A1i%C4%87+novi+trener+libijskog+Al+Itihada.
- ^ 金德队主帅发生更迭 郝伟请辞耶西奇继任(Chinese)
- ^ يسيچ سرمربي تيم فوتبال شهرداري تبريز شد
External links
- Miodrag Ješić's website
- (Serbian) Profile at Reprezentacija website (unaffiliated with the Football Association of Serbia).
FK Partizan – managers Glaser (1945) · Spitz (1946–51) · Pogačnik (1952–53) · Spitz (1953) · Ćirić (1953–54) · Spitz (1954–55) · Tomašević (1955–56) · Simonovski (1956–57) · Matekalo (1957) · Kalocsay (1957–58) · Spitz (1958–60) · Bobek (1960–63) · Simonovski (1963) · Valok (1963–64) · Matekalo (1964) · Atanacković (1964) · Valok (1965) · Gegić (1965–67) · Vilotić (1967) · Bobek (1967–69) · Vilotić (1969) · Simonovski (1969–70) · Zec (1970–71) · Vasović (1971–73) · Damjanović (1973–74) · Kaloperović (1974–76) · Miladinović (1976) · Mladinić (1977–78) · Matekalo (1979) · Miladinović (1979) · Duvančić (1979–80) · Kaloperović (1980–82) · Milutinović (1982–84) · Bjeković (1984–87) · Jusufi (1987–88) · Vukotić (1988–89) · Golac (1989–90) · Bjeković (1990) · Milutinović (1990–91) · Osim (1991–92) · Tumbaković (1992–99) · Ješić (1999–2000) · Tumbaković (2000–02) · Matthäus (2002–03) · Vermezović (2004–05) · Röber (2005–06) · Ješić (2006–07) · Đukić (2007) · Jokanović (2007–09) · Stevanović (2009–10) · Stanojević (2010–)
Categories:- Living people
- 1958 births
- Serbian footballers
- Yugoslav footballers
- Yugoslavia international footballers
- Association football defenders
- FK Partizan players
- Altay S.K. footballers
- Trabzonspor footballers
- Süper Lig players
- Expatriate footballers in Turkey
- Serbian expatriate footballers
- Serbian football managers
- FK Partizan managers
- FK Radnički Niš managers
- OFK Beograd managers
- PFC CSKA Sofia managers
- Serbian expatriates in Libya
- PFC Litex Lovech managers
- Expatriate football managers in Bulgaria
- Expatriate football managers in China
- Expatriate football managers in Iran
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