Gashi je napisao/la:
ian wright je napisao/la:
@gashi
mislim da situacija s Belodedicem nije bila toliko jednostavna... cini mi se da je on pobjegao preko granice nesto prije revolucije u Rumunjskoj, pa je Zvezda dugo cekala na dopustenje od rumunjskog saveza da smije igrat za nju.
Nije odmah zaigrao, imao je par mjeseci pauze sigurno
Belodedic je inace kao igrac Steaue i time clan vojnog kluba u prvom trenutku bio od strane rumunjskog suda osudjen na smrt zbog dezertiranja i veleizdaje
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Opet krivo...
Na linkovima almanaha YU fudbal koji si sam postavio nekoc na ovom zboristu
http://www.hrsport.net/SportnetKlub/Tema.aspx?fID=1&tID=184220&page=5 pise da je Belodedici za Zvezdu igrao 14 ogleda u proljetnom dijelu. Kako je proljetni dio imao 15 kola (jesenski 19) a utakmica s Dinamom nije odigrana, to znaci da je rumunjsko-srpski Vlah odigrao SVE utakmice u proljetnom dijelu prvenstva za jedan od 4 stuba srpstva.
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dobro se sjecam da je Belodedic par mjeseci pauzirao, nije odmah mogao igrati
bas sam nedavno citao nekakav clanak o njemu u Guardianu, evo kako je doslo do bijega u Jugoslaviju:
Generally, though, Belodedici was less happy. "I didn't like the
regime," he says. "I didn't like the way the players were treated after
the European Cup victory. Old players weren't treated as well as they
had been before. They weren't allowed to go abroad. I decided to go to
the team I loved most – Red Star; I could have gone to Italy, but
something told me to go to Belgrade. I didn't have a clue that there
would be a revolution after a year."
He resolved to flee,
but that required significant planning. "When the players left for
international games they were given passports in the airport and when we
came back they were taken from us again," he explains. "I asked
Valentin Ceausescu and the president of Steaua, Ion Alecsandrescu – he
was the general who ran the club – for a passport. They asked why I
wanted it and I told them that my mother had a permit to cross into
Yugoslavia to visit her family and I wanted to go for a week to take her
and then come back. I drove across the border. On the other side of the
river, we waited for my sister. It was a foggy morning and at that time
of year the river is low, so the soldiers patrolled there. But we knew
when they patrolled and with the help of a friend my sister got across."
That
was the first step, but Belodedici still had to be accepted in
Yugoslavia. "The Yugoslavs told me there would be no problem giving me
political asylum," he says. "I was afraid because I had a military rank –
every player from Steaua was in the army." Technically that made
Belodedici a deserter, and it was for that reason that he received a
10-year jail sentence – a verdict rescinded after the revolution of
1989.
He went to watch a Red Star match, paying particular
attention to Bosko Gurovski, who was by then playing as libero. He was a
legend of the club, but was probably past his peak by then. "I knew how
he played; I wasn't worried," Belodedici said. "I knew the team. I'd
watched them from childhood and they always had problems at libero. I
came to Belgrade with a military discipline – they always commented on
my discipline."
Afterwards, Belodedici went to the office
of the club's sporting director. "I knocked at the door and asked if
they wanted a player," he says. "I explained who I was and where I'd
come from. I had to explain six times. He looked at me and he couldn't
understand. But then he suddenly realised who I was." An equivalent
today is hard to imagine – this was one of the best players in the world
turning up and saying "Any chance of a game?"
At first
there wasn't, as Fifa banned Belodedici for a year for breaking his
contract with Steaua (quite how legally binding that contract was
remains unclear). He helped Red Star to the title in 1989-90, and the
following year to the European Cup. His composure as a defender was
clearly seen in the buildup to Red Star's equaliser in the first leg of
the semi-final in Munich, his short pass out of defence feeding Robert
Prosinecki, whose pass down the line released Dragisa Binic, whose cross
was turned in by Darko Pancev.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/blog/2011/may/17/miodrag-belodedici-european-cup-football
sorry na dugackom tekstu, no vrijedi procitati... ispada da su u Zvezdi bili iznenadjeni kad je dosao i pitao "jel bi mogao igrat za vas?"
ajd, pitat cemo Srbe
sto se Rada tice, mozda i nije bilo matematicki sve gotovo, no bila je razocaranje strasno i osjecalo se da vise nema realnih sansi... trebalo je dobit sve do kraja i nadat se u nekakav Zvezdin totalni kolaps
[uredio ian wright - 03. kolovoza 2011. u 17:11]