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词条 Aleksandar Živković (footballer, born 1912)
释义

  1. References

  2. Sources

{{Infobox football biography
| name = Aleksandar Živković
| image =
| fullname = Aleksandar Živković
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1912|12|25}}
| birth_place = Orašje, Austria-Hungary
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|2000|02|25|1912|12|25}}
| death_place = Zagreb, Croatia
| height =
| currentclub =
| clubnumber =
| position = Striker
| years1 = 1928–31 | years2 = 1931–32 | years3 = 1932–35 | years4 = 1935–38 | years5 = 1938 | years6 =1938–39
| clubs1 = Concordia Zagreb | clubs2 = Grasshopper Club Zürich | clubs3 = Građanski Zagreb | clubs4 = RCF Paris | clubs5 = CA Paris | clubs6 =FC Sochaux-Montbéliard
| caps1 = | goals1 = | caps2 = | goals2 = | caps3 = | goals3 = | caps4 = | goals4 = | caps5 = | goals5 = | caps6 = | goals6 =
| nationalyears1 = 1931–35 | nationalyears2 =1940
| nationalteam1 = Kingdom of Yugoslavia | nationalteam2 =Banovina of Croatia
| nationalcaps1 = 15 | nationalgoals1 = 15 | nationalcaps2 = 1 | nationalgoals2 = 0
}}

Aleksandar Živković (25 December 1912[1] in Orašje – 25 February 2000 in Zagreb) was a Croatian footballer. Domestically he played for Croatian clubs Concordia Zagreb and Građanski Zagreb while abroad he played for Grasshopper Club Zürich and RCF Paris, CA Paris and FC Sochaux-Montbéliard.{{cn|date=December 2016}}

One of the top goalscorers in the Royal Yugoslavian championship with 34 goals from 1929-35,[2] Živković was capped 15 times for the Yugoslavian national team and once for the Croatian national team in 1940.

Živković was one of seven Croatian players to boycott the Yugoslavian national team at the 1930 FIFA World Cup after the Football Association of Yugoslavia was moved from Zagreb to Belgrade. Živković was the top scorer at the 1932 Balkan Cup, with five goals.[3]

During the Second World War, Živković had served as a diplomat in the Independent State of Croatia's embassies in Berlin and Budapest. In 1945, after the war, he migrated to South Africa, where he lived until 1993, when he moved back to the newly independent Republic of Croatia. He died in Zagreb in 2000, aged 87, and was interred in Mirogoj cemetery.[4]

References

1. ^Aleksandar Živković
2. ^Yugoslavia - List of Topscorers
3. ^Balkan Cup (for Nations), rsssf.com; accessed 9 December 2016.
4. ^Aleksandar Živković profile {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110718134709/http://www.gradskagroblja.hr/Trazilica/MapPreview.aspx?CemeteryID=1&Field=75&DeptID=1&PersonID=218709 |date=18 July 2011 }}, gradskagroblja.hr; accessed 9 December 2016.

Sources

  • Nogometni leksikon (2004, in Croatian)
  • {{Cite book|author=Barreaud, Marc|title=Dictionnaire des footballeurs étrangers du championnat professionnel français (1932-1997)|year=1998|publisher=L'Harmattan, Paris|isbn=2-7384-6608-7}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2010}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Zivkovic, Aleksandar}}

21 : 1912 births|People from Orašje|2000 deaths|People of the Independent State of Croatia|Croatian footballers|Croatia international footballers|Yugoslav footballers|Yugoslavia international footballers|HŠK Građanski Zagreb players|Grasshopper Club Zürich players|Racing Club de France football Colombes 92 players|FC Sochaux-Montbéliard players|Yugoslav First League players|Ligue 1 players|Ligue 2 players|Croatian expatriate footballers|Expatriate footballers in Switzerland|Expatriate footballers in France|Croatian emigrants to South Africa|Burials at Mirogoj Cemetery|Association football forwards

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