Croatian footballer (1912–2000)
Aleksandar Živković (25 December 1912[1] – 25 February 2000) 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 .[citation needed ]
Club career
He was one of the top goalscorers in the Royal Yugoslavian championship with 34 goals from 1929 to 1935,[2]
International career
Živković was capped 15 times for the Yugoslavia national team and once for the Croatia national team in 1940.
Živković was one of seven Croatian players to boycott the Yugoslavia national team at the 1930 FIFA World Cup after the Football Association of Yugoslavia was moved from Zagreb to Belgrade . Živković made his international debut on 2 August 1931 (aged 18 years 7 months 8 days) against Czechoslovakia and scored the opening goal of a 2–1 win.[3] Živković was the top scorer at the 1932 Balkan Cup , with five goals.[4] He was also part of the Yugoslavia team that won the 1935 Balkan Cup , contributing with 2 goals.[5] With 10 goals in the Balkan Cup, he is the shared third all-time top goal scorer in the competition's history , alongside Asen Panchev who also has 10, and only behind Bulgaria's Ljubomir Angelov (14) and Romania's Iuliu Bodola (15).
After retirement
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 .[6]
International goals
Yugoslavia score listed first, score column indicates score after each Živković goal.
List of international goals scored by Aleksandar Živković[7]
#
Date
Venue
Opponent
Score
Result
Competition
1.
2 August 1931
Stadion SK Jugoslavija , Belgrade , Yugoslavia
Czechoslovakia
1 –0
2–1
Friendly
2.
26 June 1932
Beogradski SK Stadium , Belgrade , Yugoslavia
Greece
5 –1
7–1
1932 Balkan Cup
3.
6 –1
4.
30 June 1932
Beogradski SK Stadium , Belgrade , Yugoslavia
Bulgaria
1 –3
2–3
5.
2 –3
6.
4 July 1932
Beogradski SK Stadium , Belgrade , Yugoslavia
Romania
2 –0
3–1
7.
9 October 1932
Stadion Letná , Prague , Czechoslovakia
Czechoslovakia
1 –1
1–2
Friendly
8.
3 June 1933
Stadionul ONEF , Bucharest , Romania
Greece
3 –1
5–3
1933 Balkan Cup
9.
5 –2
10.
7 June 1933
ONEF Stadium , Bucharest , Romania
Bulgaria
2 –0
4–0
11.
1 April 1934
Beogradski SK Stadium , Belgrade , Yugoslavia
Bulgaria
2 –1
2–3
Friendly
12.
3 August 1930
Yunak Stadium , Sofia , Bulgaria
Greece
1 –0
6–1
1935 Balkan Cup
13.
4 –1
14.
18 August 1935
Stadion Wojska Polskiego , Warsaw , Poland
Poland
1 –2
3–2
Friendly
15.
2 –2
Honours
Yugoslavia
Individual
Balkan Cup top scorer: 1932 with 5 goals
References
Sources
Nogometni leksikon (2004, in Croatian )
Barreaud, Marc (1998). Dictionnaire des footballeurs étrangers du championnat professionnel français (1932–1997) . L'Harmattan, Paris. ISBN 2-7384-6608-7 .
External links