- Miodrag Božović
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Miodrag Božović
Coaching Amkar in 2011Personal information Date of birth 22 June 1968 Place of birth Mojkovac, SFR Yugoslavia Height 1.95 m (6 ft 5 in) Playing position Manager (former Defender) Club information Current club FC Amkar Perm Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1986–1992 Budućnost Titograd 107 (6) 1992–1994 Red Star Belgrade 52 (1) 1994–1996 Pelita Jaya 1996–1997 APOP Kinyras Peyias 1997–1998 RKC Waalwijk 19 (1) 1998 Avispa Fukuoka 8 (0) 1999 RBC Roosendaal 5 (0) National team 1990 Yugoslavia U-21 1 (0) Teams managed 2000–2001 FK Beograd 2001–2002 Consadole Sapporo 2002–2003 Borac Čačak 2003–2004 Hajduk Beograd 2004–2005 AEP Paphos FC 2005–2006 Borac Čačak 2006–2007 Budućnost Podgorica 2007 FK Grbalj 2007 Borac Čačak 2008 Amkar Perm 2009 FC Moscow 2010–2011 Dynamo Moscow 2011– Amkar Perm * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Miodrag Božović (Cyrillic: Миодраг Божовић; born 22 June 1968) is a Montenegrin football manager and former player. He manages FC Amkar Perm in the Russian Premier League.
Contents
Playing career
Božović has played for Yugoslav teams FK Budućnost Podgorica and Red Star Belgrade, Dutch clubs RKC Waalwijk and RBC Roosendaal, as well as in Indonesia, Cyprus and Japan. He represented his U-21 national side once.
During his playing career Božović won Yugoslav Cup with Red Star Belgrade.
Managerial career
As a coach he had a successful spell in Budućnost in 2006-2007 season, when his team was leading in Montenegrin First League, but he resigned in February 2007, due to the disagreement with the board.[1] Božović also was successful in Borac Čačak, as he made a competitive team out of a humble club.
Russian side FC Amkar Perm qualified for the UEFA Europa League for the first time in club's history under his management. Next season, his new club FC Moscow was among the leaders in the Russian Premier League for long stretches, before fading in the end of the season and falling out of European qualification. In early 2010, FC Moscow dropped out of the Premier League due to financial considerations, and Božović became a free agent.
On 27 April 2010, Božović signed a three-year contract with FC Dynamo Moscow.[2]
After the game against his former club, Amkar, he was questioned in the flash interview, did he feel that he was playing against the team he had built himself. His answer was: "I feel I was playing against players who made me a coach." [3]
He resigned from Dynamo on 21 April 2011 after losing in a Russian Cup quarterfinal against FC Rostov (winning the Cup was the last hope for Dynamo to qualify for UEFA Europa League).[4]
In Serbia Božović was nicknamed Grof (the Count or Earl), because of his orderly and elegant appearance.[5]
Club statistics
Club performance League Cup League Cup Total Season Club League Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Japan League Emperor's Cup J. League Cup Total 1998 Avispa Fukuoka J. League 1 8 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 Country Japan 8 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 Total 8 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 References
- ^ "Bozovic shock in Montenegro", uefa.com
- ^ "НОВЫМ ГЛАВНЫМ ТРЕНЕРОМ «ДИНАМО» СТАЛ МИОДРАГ БОЖОВИЧ" (in Russian). FC Dynamo Moscow official site. 27 April 2010. http://www.fcdynamo.ru/material.php?id=5089. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
- ^ "Браво, Миодраг!", Express Yourself (russian)
- ^ "Футбольный клуб "Динамо" подтвердил отставку Божовича". RIA Novosti. 21 April 2011. http://sport.rian.ru/sport/20110421/366831434.html.
- ^ "Mysterious Count", Sovetsky Sport (russian)
External links
FC Amkar Perm – current squad 3 Mijailović · 4 Fedoriv · 5 Grishin · 6 Blažić · 7 Peev · 8 Volkov · 10 Topchu · 11 Đalović · 13 Novaković · 14 Sirakov · 15 Mijić · 17 Vassiljev · 18 Burmistrov · 19 Kolomeytsev · 20 Molodtsov · 21 Belorukov · 22 Sekretov · 23 Cherenchikov · 24 Popov · 25 Garashchenkov · 33 Knežević · 39 Mikhalyov · 40 Paderin · 42 Narubin · 43 Tyukalov · 50 Smirnov · 60 Valikayev · 77 Tsiskaridze · 83 Dzhioyev · 88 Khamutowski · Manager: Božović
Sergei Balakhnin (Rostov) · Kurban Berdyev (Rubin) · Miodrag Božović (Amkar) · Stanislav Cherchesov (Terek) · Dmitri Cheryshev (Volga) · José Couceiro (Lokomotiv Moscow) · Andrei Gordeyev (Anzhi) · Valery Karpin (Spartak Moscow) · Andrey Kobelev (Krylia Sovetov) · Slavoljub Muslin (Krasnodar) · Sergei Perednya (Tom) · Dan Petrescu (Kuban) · Roberto Carlos (Anzhi) · Sergei Silkin (Dynamo) · Leonid Slutskiy (CSKA) · Luciano Spalletti (Zenit) · Sergei Tashuyev (Spartak Nalchik)
FC Dynamo Moscow – managers Kvashnin (1936) · Dubinin (1937) · Tovarovsky (1938) · Dubinin (1939) · Teterin (1939) · Korchebokov (1939) · Arkadyev (1940–44) · Korchebokov (1944) · Yakushin (1944–50) · Dubinin (1950–51) · Semichastny (1952–53) · Yakushin (1953–60) · Blinkov (1961) · Ponomarev (1962–65) · Solovyov (1965–66) · Beskov (1967–72) · Kachalin (1973–74) · Sevidov (1975–79) · Tsarev (1979c) · Mozer (1979c) · Goryansky (1980) · Solovyov (1980–83) · Ivanov (1983) · Sevidov (1983–85) · Malofeyev (1985–87) · Byshovets (1987–90) · Altman (1990–91) · Gazzaev (1991–93) · Golodets (1993c) · Beskov (1994–95) · Golodets (1995–98) · Yartsev (1998–99) · Petrushin (1999) · Gazzaev (2000–01) · Novikov (2001–02) · Prokopenko (2002–03) · Hřebík (2003–04) · Bondarenko (2004c) · Romantsev (2004–05) · Kobelev (2005c) · Wortmann (2005) · Kobelev (2005c) · Syomin (2006) · Kobelev (2006–10) · Božović (2010–11) · Silkin (2011–)
(c) caretakerFC Amkar Perm – managers (c) caretakerFC Moscow – managers (c) caretakerCategories:- FK Budućnost Podgorica players
- Red Star Belgrade footballers
- Football managers in Cyprus
- Yugoslav footballers
- Montenegrin footballers
- Montenegrin football managers
- Expatriate footballers in Cyprus
- APOP Kinyras FC players
- Expatriate footballers in Japan
- Avispa Fukuoka players
- J. League Division 1 players
- 1968 births
- Living people
- FC Amkar Perm managers
- FC Moscow managers
- Expatriate footballers in Indonesia
- FC Dynamo Moscow managers
- FK Budućnost Podgorica managers
- Russian Premier League managers
- Expatriate football managers in Russia
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