Yugoslav Football Clubs - Post-War Clubs (Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia)

Post-War Clubs (Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia)

Club Year City Description Dissolution
FK Kozara Bosanska Gradiška 1945 Kozara, Bosnia N/A N/A
FK Sarajevo 1946 Sarajevo, Bosnia N/A N/A
NK Iskra Bugojno 1947 Bugojno, Bosnia N/A N/A
FK Budućnost Banovići 1947 Banovići, Bosnia N/A N/A
NK Posušje 1950 Posušje, Herzegovina N/A N/A
FK Mladost Lučani 1952 Lučani, Serbia N/A N/A
NK Bosna Visoko 1953 Visoko, Bosnia Created by merging NK Radnički and NK Jadran N/A
NK Brotnjo 1955 Čitluk, Herzegovina N/A N/A
FK Rad Beograd 1958 Belgrade, Serbia N/A N/A
FK Mladost Gacko 1970 Gacko, Bosnia N/A N/A

Read more about this topic:  Yugoslav Football Clubs

Famous quotes containing the words post-war, clubs, federal and/or republic:

    Much of what Mr. Wallace calls his global thinking is, no matter how you slice it, still “globaloney.” Mr. Wallace’s warp of sense and his woof of nonsense is very tricky cloth out of which to cut the pattern of a post-war world.
    Clare Boothe Luce (1903–1987)

    We shall exchange our material thinking for something quite different, and we shall all be kin. We shall all be enfranchised, prohibition will prevail, many wrongs will be righted, vampires and grafters and slackers will be relegated to a class by themselves, stiff necks will limber up, hearts of stone will be changed to hearts of flesh, and little by little we shall begin to understand each other.
    —General Federation Of Women’s Clubs (GFWC)

    There are always those who are willing to surrender local self-government and turn over their affairs to some national authority in exchange for a payment of money out of the Federal Treasury. Whenever they find some abuse needs correction in their neighborhood, instead of applying the remedy themselves they seek to have a tribunal sent on from Washington to discharge their duties for them, regardless of the fact that in accepting such supervision they are bartering away their freedom.
    Calvin Coolidge (1872–1933)

    I date the end of the old republic and the birth of the empire to the invention, in the late thirties, of air conditioning. Before air conditioning, Washington was deserted from mid-June to September.... But after air conditioning and the Second World War arrived, more or less at the same time, Congress sits and sits while the presidents—or at least their staffs—never stop making mischief.
    Gore Vidal (b. 1925)