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A red star, Sarajevo's first ever club crest from 1946 until 1947. Less than two years after liberation of Sarajevo from Nazi Germany, FK Sarajevo was established on 24 October 1946 as the result of a merger between local Sarajevo football clubs Udarnik (Vanguard) and Sloboda (Liberty), following an earlier joint meeting between the committees of said clubs and the Sarajevo sports society. [1]
FK Sarajevo, under the name Torpedo, played its first match on 3 November 1946 against Bratstvo Travnik, winning 6–0. [151] The club's first Yugoslav First League tie was a 2–2 draw against Ponziana Trieste on 25 August 1947.
1946 Anton Vlajčić 7 1947–48: Lav Mantula: 38 0 38 ... First Yugoslav Cup match: FK Sarajevo 3–1 Velež Mostar, Yugoslav Cup, 1st round, 4 November 1947.
The season was curtailed and the final standings (including Sarajevo as champions) were declared by a points-per-game ratio on 1 June 2020. [77] 15 ^ Sarajevo were deducted 3 points for having its players leave the pitch in protest of multiple officiating decisions during a Bosnian Cup game against Borac. [78]
FK Željezničar and FK Sarajevo are Sarajevo's most successful clubs. ... Sarajevo: 1946 SAŠK Napredak: 1994 Slavija: 1908 Unis Vogošća: 1948 FK Vrbanjuša: 1967
The history of the Sarajevo derby dates back to 1954, but the rivalry began eight years earlier. At the end of the World War II the three major clubs in Sarajevo, Đerzelez, SAŠK and Slavija, were disbanded by the new authorities [3] which formed FK Sarajevo in 1946.
This chronological list comprises all those who have held the position of club manager since the club's formation in 1946. In Sarajevo's history, 49 managers have so far managed the club, with some doing so on more than one occasion. The club's first manager was Josip Bulat, who led the team from 1 November 1946 to May 1947. [1]
He is particularly remembered for his defiance of the authorities over the creation of FK Sarajevo. When this team was created (as SD Torpedo) in 1946 by the merge of FK Udarnik and OFK Sloboda, several of the best players at FK Željezničar were ordered to play for the new club, to represent Sarajevo and Bosnia-Herzegovina at a national level.