Croatian footballer
Milan Antolković (Croatian pronunciation: [mǐlan antǒːlkoʋitɕ] ; 27 September 1915 – 27 June 2007) was a Croatian and Yugoslav football player and manager. Antolković spent most of his playing career with his hometown club Građanski Zagreb in the 1930s and 1940s, with whom he won two Yugoslav championships (1936–37 and 1939–40).
He was capped eight times for Yugoslavia (1937–39). During World War II he also played for the wartime Independent State of Croatia team (1941–43) and won another national title in 1943.
After the war, he became closely involved with Dinamo Zagreb , where he had five managing spells in the period from 1952 to 1965. With Dinamo he won two Marshal Tito Cups (1960, 1963) and reached the 1963 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup final . He later had managing spells at the Austrian club Schwarz-Weiß Bregenz , German club SC Tasmania 1900 Berlin , and back in Yugoslavia at second-tier club NK Osijek , before retiring in 1973.
Player
He began his career with NK Maksimir before moving to Građanski Zagreb in 1932. He also had a short spell with SK Bata Borovo in 1933. He played with Građanski as a striker until its disbanding in 1945.
During his international career with the Kingdom of Yugoslavia he was capped 8 times, scoring one goal. During the existence of the Independent State of Croatia he was capped for the Croatia national team 10 times, scoring three goals.[ 1]
Managerial
He was later a manager. His most famous managerial work may have been with Dinamo Zagreb with whom he won the Yugoslav Cup in 1960 and took to the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup finals in 1963. He won the Franjo Bučar State Award for Sport in 2003. He also coached SW Bregenz [ 2] and SC Tasmania 1900 Berlin .[ 3]
Table tennis career
He played for the Yugoslav national table tennis team during the 1933 Swaythling Cup .[ 4]
References
External sources
Ugrinić (1920 –24)
Sekulić (1924 )
Zinaja (1924 –25)
Pandaković (1926 –30)
Simonović (1930 –32)
Veljković (1933 )
Simonović (1933 –34)
Šuste , Miodragović & Pleše (1934 –35)
Simonović (1935 )
Simić (1936 )
Popović (1937 –38)
Simonović (1939 )
Popović (1939 )
Simonović (1939 –40)
Popović (1940 –41)
Arsenijević & Tirnanić (1946 –48)
Arsenijević (1948 –52)
Arsenijević , Tirnanić , Lemešić (1952 –54)
Pešić , Tirnanić , Lemešić , Wölfl & Ćirić (1954 )
Tirnanić (1955 –58)
Nikolić , Tirnanić & Lovrić (1959 –61)
Lovrić , Mihajlović & Ruševljanin (1961 –63)
Lovrić & Ruševljanin (1963 –64)
Lovrić (1964 )
Tirnanić , Antolković , Miljanić & Gegić (1965 )
Tirnanić , Antolković & Miljanić (1966 )
Tirnanić & Miljanić (1966 )
Tirnanić , Miljanić , Mitić , Boškov & Stanković (1966 )
Mitić (1967 –70)
Boškov (1971 –73)
Miljanić , Ribar , Rebac , Ivić & Ćirić (1973 –74)
Mladinić (1974 –76)
Toplak (1976 –77)
Valok , Vilotić & Zec (1977 )
Vilotić (1978 )
Luštica (1978 )
Mladinić (1978 )
Jerković (1978 )
Miljanić (1979 –82)
Veselinović (1982 –84)
Milutinović (1984 –85)
Toplak & Osim (1986 )
Osim (1986 –92)
Čabrinović (1992 )
1990s 2000s
Miloš Marković , Matija Ljubek (2000)
Zlatko Šimenc , Slavko Podgorelec (2001)
Žarko Dolinar , Krešimir Ćosić , Dražen Petrović (2002)
Milan Antolković , Vicko Lučić (2003)
Miro Mihovilović , Antun Vrdoljak (2004)
Irislav Dolenec , Vicko Šoljan (2005)
Nikola Jurković , Stjepan Korbar , Veljko Rogošić (2006)
Miroslav Blažević , Ante Pavlović , Žarko Susić (2007)
Ivo Cipci , Željko Mataja , Josip Modrić (2008)
Zdravko Baršnik , Ivan Janjić , Renato Vučetić (2009)
2010s
Josip Čorak , Darko Dujmović , Velimir Kljaić (2010)
Ivan Fattorini , Dragan Milanović , Vinko Tomljanović (2011)
Ivan Ivančić , Marinko Mikulandra , Ratko Rudić (2012)
Jozo Alebić , Erna Hawelka Rađenović , Fredi Kramer (2013)
Vinko Bajrović , Anto Ćavar , Giuseppe Giergia (2014)
Gojko Arneri , Đurđica Bjedov , Janko Goleš (2015)
Ivo Vidović * , Jelica Pavličić-Štefančić , Luciano Sušanj (2016)
Zdenko Zorko , Zdravko Hebel * , Zina Urlić (2017)
Vladimir Janković , Milka Babović , Mate Parlov * (2018)
Zdenko Kobeščak , Duško Antunović * , Zdravko Malić (2019)
2020s * – posthumously