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Yugoslavia men's national handball team

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National handball team
YugoslaviaSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Shirt badge/Association crest
Information
NicknameBlues
AssociationHandball Federation of Yugoslavia
Colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
1st
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
2nd
Results
Summer Olympics
Appearances5 (First in1972)
Best result1st (1972 and 1984)
World Championship
Appearances10 (First in1958)
Best result1st (1986)
Last updated on Unknown.
Yugoslavia men's national handball team
Medal record
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place1972 MunichTeam
Gold medal – first place1984 Los AngelesTeam
Bronze medal – third place1988 SeoulTeam
World Championship
Gold medal – first place1986 Switzerland
Silver medal – second place1982 West Germany
Bronze medal – third place1970 France
Bronze medal – third place1974 East Germany
Mediterranean Games
Gold medal – first place1967 Tunis
Gold medal – first place1975 Algiers
Gold medal – first place1979 Split
Gold medal – first place1983 Casablanca
Gold medal – first place1991 Athens
EURO Tournaments
Gold medal – first placeEURO World Cup 1971 Stockholm
Gold medal – first placeEURO World Cup 1974 Stockholm
Bronze medal – third placeEURO Supercup 1981 Dortmund
Bronze medal – third placeEURO Supercup 1983 Dortmund
Bronze medal – third placeEURO World Cup 1984 Stockholm
Silver medal – second placeEURO World Cup 1992 Stockholm

TheYugoslavia national handball team was the nationalhandball team ofYugoslavia. It was organized by theHandball Federation of Yugoslavia.The Yugoslav national handball team was made up of a handball players from the separate regions of the then SFR Yugoslavia (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia).

History

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The Handball Federation of Yugoslavia (RSJ) was founded on December 17, 1949 in Belgrade by merging republican and provincial federations, and became a member of the International Handball Federation (IHF) in 1950.

Field handball first match

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The first international match, played on June 19, 1950 at the stadium in Kranchevicheva Street in Zagreb, against Belgium. Yugoslavia won 18:3 playing with nine players from Zagreb and one each from Sarajevo and Split.Small handball was played publicly for the first time in Yugoslav territories on February 24, 1950, in the Fair hall (today the Technical Museum) on Savska aley in Zagreb. It was the first public handball match played in the hall.

Indoor Handball

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In the beginning, small handball was mainly played on open courts, and later more and more in halls. The possibility of playing in the hall and in a smaller space enabled continuous changes in the situation on the field and better contact with the spectators. That's why small handball was quickly accepted, and thus slowly supplanted big handball, which was played less and less.Until 1953, all official handball competitions in Yugoslavia were in large handball, and since then national championships in small handball have also been held. The main limiting factor in the further development of handball was football fields, whose administrations were reluctant to approve the holding of training sessions and matches. Big handball stopped being played officially in 1958. The only remaining handball, there was no longer any need to call it small handball, but simply - handball.

Slobodan Kuzmanovski scored 400 goals in 150 matches for the national team

Modern Handball

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Yugoslavia played its first international small handball match in 1956 at the Tashmaidan Stadium in Belgrade against Sweden, the current world champions at the time. A draw was reached 6:6, and due to cloud cover the match was declared invalid. Yugoslav handball began to rise in the early 1970s reaching its height until 1990. At the time it was the most-winning handball team in the world, winning three medals at theOlympic Games, four at theWorld Championships, five at theMediterranean Games, one at the Goodwill Games, three at the World Handball Cups and two at the Handball Super Leagues.[citation needed] The biggest successes are the gold medals at the1972[1] and1984 Olympic Games,[2] as well as the gold medal at the1986 World Championship. The team ceased to exist after the split of Yugoslavia in June 1991. Three former Yugoslav republics have since gone on to win medals at major competitions:Croatia fifteen,Serbia four andSlovenia two. In the period from 2003 to 2020, Croatia was considered one of the best teams in international handball, winning the gold medal at the2004 Summer Olympics and the2003 World Championship, in addition to consistently earning major championship medals.

Accomplishments

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Yugoslav team with the bronze medal at the 1988 Olympics

Summer Olympics

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YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGAGD
Nazi Germany1936didn't have indoor handball team
West Germany1972Final1st place, gold medalist(s)660012289+33
Canada1976Fifth place game5th6501131112+19
Soviet Union1980Fifth place game6th6402155116+39
United States1984Final1st place, gold medalist(s)651014193+48
South Korea1988Bronze medal game3rd place, bronze medalist(s)6411143132+11
Spain1992Qualified for the 1992 Summer Olympics but banned due to UN sanctions
TotalQualified: 6/6302424692542+120

World Championship

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Yugoslav team after winning the 1986 World Championship
YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGAGD
Nazi Germany1938didn't have indoor handball team
Sweden1954
Germany1958Main Round8th620410196+5
West Germany1961Preliminary Round9th20022932-3
Czechoslovakia1964Main Round6th622210296+6
Sweden1967Quarterfinal7th6402136110+26
France1970Semifinal3rd place, bronze medalist(s)631211980+39
East Germany1974Semifinal3rd place, bronze medalist(s)650113497+37
Denmark1978Main Round5th641110896+12
West Germany1982Final2nd place, silver medalist(s)7412183155+28
Switzerland1986Final1st place, gold medalist(s)7700168145+23
Czechoslovakia1990Main Round4th7403169156+13
TotalQualified: 10/10593551912491063+186

World Outdoor Championship

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EURO Tournaments

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World Cup(European Tournament)

The World Cup was a handball tournament for men's national teams that was held from 1971 to 2010 in Sweden, partly in Norway in 1999 and partly in Germany in 2006. The event took place irregularly, most recently in even years, alternating with the Supercup tournament in Germany. The Norwegian oil company Statoil has been the sponsor since 2004, and the cup competition has since been called the Statoil World Cup. The World Cup was considered a mini European Cup because, in addition to hosts Sweden, the best seven teams from the previous World Cup which were all European were invited at times. Due to declining audience interest, the event was discontinued in 2010.

EURO - World Cup Swedish TournamentRoundPosition
Sweden EURO World Cup 1971 StockholmChampions1st place, gold medalist(s) of 8
Sweden EURO World Cup 1974 StockholmChampions1st place, gold medalist(s) of 8
Sweden EURO World Cup 1979 Stockholm7th place7th of 8
Sweden EURO World Cup 1984 Stockholm3rd place3rd place, bronze medalist(s) of 8
Sweden EURO World Cup 1988 Stockholm5th place5th of 8
Sweden EURO World Cup 1992 StockholmRunner up2nd place, silver medalist(s) of 8
Total2/62 Titles
EURO Supercup

The Supercup was a handball tournament for men's national teams that was held every two years in the Federal Republic of Germany from 1979 to 2015 - since 1983 usually between the end of October and the beginning of November. The first tournament was held in December 1979, the second was played in early February 1981, the 1997 competition was postponed to March 1998. Previous Olympic champions, world champions and European champions were initially invited. Because of this high-caliber group of participants, it was sometimes referred to as the Mini European Cup. Most recently it took place alternating with the Statoil World Cup. The Supercup goes back to a suggestion by the then national coach Vlado Stenzel. It was held for the last time in 2015 due to a lack of spectator interest.

EURO - Supercup German TournamentRoundPosition
Germany EURO Supercup 1979 Dortmund4th place4th of 8
Germany EURO Supercup 1981 Dortmund3rd place3rd place, bronze medalist(s) of 8
Germany EURO Supercup 1983 Dortmund3rd place3rd place, bronze medalist(s)of 8
Germany EURO Supercup 1985 Dortmund5th place5th of 8
Germany EURO Supercup 1987 Dortmund5th place5th of 8
Germany EURO Supercup 1989 Dortmund4th place4th of 8
Germany EURO Supercup 1991 Frankfurt6th place6th of 6
Total0/70 Titles

Mediterranean Games

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GamesRoundPosition
Tunisia1967 TunisChampions1st of 4
Turkey 1971 İzmirTournament canceled
Algeria 1975 AlgiersChampions1st of 5
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1979 SplitChampions1st of 7
Morocco 1983 CasablancaChampions1st of 8
Syria 1987 LatakiaDidn't Participate
Greece 1991 AthensChampions1st of 8
Total5/55 Titles

Player statistics

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Most appearances

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100+

#NameMatchesPositionYearsNationality
1Hrvoje Horvat231CBCRO
2Momir Rnić217PSRB
3Goran Perkovac192OBCRO
4Mile Isaković190WSRB
5Veselin Vujović183OBMNE
6Branislav Pokrajac180WSRB
7Zlatan Arnautović157GKBIH
8Slobodan Kuzmanovski150OBMKD
9Pavle Jurina140OBCRO
10Zdravko Rađenović137CBSRB
11Mirko Bašić133+GKCRO
12Abas Arslanagić125GKBIH
13Zdravko Zovko119WCRO
14Milan Kalina100+CBSRB
15Tonči Peribonio100+GKCRO
16Zlatko Saračević100+OBBIH
17Zlatko Portner98+CBSRB

Top scorers

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300+

#NameGoalsAveragePositionYearsNationality
1Veselin Vujović7384.03OBMNE
2Mile Isaković7343.86WSRB
3Hrvoje Horvat6212.69CBCRO
4Branislav Pokrajac5102.83WSRB
5Nedeljko Jovanović4332.81CBSRB
6Momir Rnić4111.89PSRB
7Slobodan Kuzmanovski4002.67OBMKD
8Zdravko Rađenović3692.69CBSRB
9Zlatko Portner3553.62CBSRB

Coaches

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PeriodRepublic
Nationality
Coach
1951–1967 CroatiaIvan Snoj
1967 CroatiaIrislav Dolenec
1967–1972 CroatiaVlado Stenzel
1974 CroatiaJosip Milković
1975–1976 CroatiaIvan Snoj
1978 CroatiaZdravko Matulić
1979 CroatiaZlatko Žagmešter
1978–1980 SerbiaJezdimir Stanković
1980–1984 SerbiaBranislav Pokrajac
1984–1986 SerbiaZoran Živković
1986–1988 Bosnia and HerzegovinaAbas Arslanagić
1989–1991 SerbiaJezdimir Stanković

Squads

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Yugoslavia squads
Olympic Games
World Championships
Goodwill Games
Mediterranean Games

Succeeding national teams

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TeamFederation
 Bosnia and HerzegovinaHandball Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
 CroatiaCroatian Handball Federation
 KosovoHandball Federation of Kosovo
 North MacedoniaMacedonian Handball Federation
 MontenegroHandball Federation of Montenegro
 SerbiaHandball Federation of Serbia
 SloveniaHandball Federation of Slovenia
 Yugoslavia
 Serbia and Montenegro
Defunct

References

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  1. ^"Olympedia – Handball at the 1972 Summer Olympics".www.olympedia.org. Retrieved10 June 2025.
  2. ^"Los Angeles 1984 Handball Results".olympics.com. Retrieved10 June 2025.
Men's nationalhandball teams of Europe (EHF)
Current teams
Defunct teams
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