Bosnia and Herzegovina Greatest All-Time Team

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Bosnia and Herzegovina Greatest All-Time Team


Bosnia and Herzegovina World Cup 2014
        
Please also see my All-Time World Cup Team Index.

Yugoslavia World Cup 2018
Macedonia/Montenegro/Kosovo,
Serbia Croatia,
Yugoslavia World Cup 1994

In 2014, I create an all-time Yugoslavian team that featured players from all the former republics.  Later I created an all-time team for Croatia and Serbia Then, I also posted an all-time Yugoslavian team, excluding players from Croatia and Serbia.  In 2019, I decided to create individual all-time team for Slovenia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.  Both countries have qualified for the World Cup Finals after the breakup of Yugoslavia.  My All-time Yugoslavian team, excluding players from Croatia and Serbia became Macedonia/Montenegro/Kosovo.

Bosnia and Herzegovina have seen a steady rise in their fortunes on the international football stage in recent times.  From 1920 to 1992, the players lined up for Yugoslavia. After its independence, Bosnia and Herzegovina have to wait until the 1998 FIFA World Cup qualifiers to compete for a place in a major competition.  Bosnia and Herzegovina finally qualified for the 2014 World Cup.

This is my all-time team for Bosnia and Herzegovina. If there were an All-Time World Cup, this would be the 23 players I would bring to the tournament.  

Team
GK: Ivan Ćurković (Yugoslavia)
Curkovic played as a goalkeeper for Velež Mostar, Partizan and Saint-Étienne. Ćurković was a goalie of outstanding quality who played for AS Saint-Étienne during the 1970s and early1980s and was instrumental in the successful runs of Saint-Étienne's football club to the top of the French League and to the finals of the European Cup in the 1975–76 season. He played alongside French legend Michel Platini from 1978 to 1981.  Capped 19 times for Yugoslavia.

GK: Asmir Begovic (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
The Begović family fled the Bosnian War to Germany and moved Canada when Asmir was 10 years old. He grew up in Canada and played for their youth team before switching to play for Bosnia and Herzegovina senior team. He helped Bosnia and Herzegovina to qualify for the WC in 2014.  Professionally, he started with Portsmouth. He spent most of his career with Stoke City in England. He was used as a backup for Chelsea.
Asmir Begovic
GK: Enver Marić (Yugoslavia)
Enver Marić started his career playing for FK Velež Mostar from 1967 to 1976, for who he played a record 600 games in his nine-year stint. Marić then went on to play for German club FC Schalke 04 from 1976 to 1978 and the Yugoslavia national team at the 1974 FIFA World Cup. He was capped 32 times for Yugoslavia in the period from 1972 to 1976.

RB: Branko Stanković (Yugoslavia)
Branko Stanković was best remembered for his career with Red Star Belgrade, where he won 4 league titles and established himself as one of the best defender in Yugoslavian football history.  He participated at two World Cups(1950 and 1954) and twice at Olympic Games. Stanković is one of the most elegant defense players of his time. Because of his playing style, he earned his nickname Ambassador. 

RB: Mensur Mujdža (Bosnia and Herzegovina) 
Mujdža began his career with his hometown team Zagreb.  In 2009,  he transferred to Bundesliga club SC Freiburg, where he played until 2016.  He signed with Kaiserslautern, but in injury forced to retire from football.  Mujdža represented Croatia on various youth levels, but he represented Bosnia and Herzegovina at the senior level.

CB:  Josip Katalinski  (Yugoslavia) 
Josip Katalinski was capped 41 times for Yugoslavia.  He went to European Championship in 1976.  He scored the winning goal for the game against Spain that helped Yugoslavia to qualify for the World Cup Finals in 1974.  He played for FK Željezničar from 1965 to 1975. He made more than 250 league appearances, and although he was a defender, he scored 48 league goals. In 1975, he joined Nice in France. 
Josip Katalinski
CB: Faruk Hadžibegić (Yugoslavia)
Faruk Hadžibegić was capped 61 times for Yugoslavia from 1982 to 1992.  He went to the WC Finals in 1990.  He is the second most capped Bosian player for Yugoslavian national team and and fifth overall most capped player for the Yugoslavia national football team (61 caps  During his career he played for FK Sarajevo, Real Betis, FC Sochaux and Toulouse FC.

CB: Mirsad Hibić (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Hibić had been a prolific part of the Bosnia and Herzegovina national team since its inception, having been capped 35 times, 14 as captain. At club level, he played for NK Čelik Zenica and Hajduk Split.  In 1996, he moved to Sevilla FC, and then, he joined Atlético Madrid in 2000  before retiring in January 2004.

CB: Emir Spahić (Bosnia and Herzegovina) 
Emir Spahić was the captain of Bosnia and Herzegovina at the 2014 World Cup Finals.  He had played 94 times for the national team.  Over the course of his club career, Spahić played for Zagreb, Shinnik Yaroslavl, Lokomotiv Moscow, Sevilla, Anzhi Makhachkala, Montpellier, Bayer Leverkusen, Hamburger SV, etc.  He is a first cousin of fellow national team player Edin Džeko.

LB:  Mirsad Fazlagić (Yugoslavia)
Mirsad Fazlagić played 450 matches for FK Sarajevo in the Yugoslavian First League.   He made 19 appearances for Yugoslavia. He is especially known internationally for being the captain of Yugoslavia during the 1968 European Football Championship, where they came second by barely losing to the home side Italy after a two-legged final in Rome. 
Mirsad Fazlagić
LB: Sead Kolašinac (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Born in Germany, Sead Kolašinac had represented Germany at the youth level, but he chose to play for Bosnia and Herzegovina since 2013.  He represented his country at the 2014 World Cup Finals.  From 2012 to 2017, he played for Schalke 04.  He was named the Bundesliga Team of the Year twice.  In 2018, he moved to play for Arsenal.

DM: Elvir Rahimić (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Rahimić played with Slaven Živinice, NK Bosna, Interblock Ljubljana, SK Vorwärts Steyr and FC Anzhi Makhachkala before he moved to CSKA Moscow. His greatest accomplishment during his 12-year spell with the club has been winning the 2005 UEFA Cup.  He served a season there as a player-coach.  He played 40 times for Bosnia and Herzegovina between 2007 and 2013.

CM: Miralem Pjanić (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Miralem Pjanić started his career at Metz in France.  He signed for Lyon in 2008 before signing for Roma in 2011. In 2016. Pjanić joined Juventus.  He was named Serie A Team of the Year for 2015–16, 2016–17 and 2017–18 seasons.  Pjanić made his senior international debut for Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2008, earning over 90 caps and scoring 15 goals since. He went to the 2014 World Cup.  He had represented Luxembourg at youth levels.
Miralem Pjanić 
CM: Mehmed Baždarević (Yugoslavia/Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Mehmed Baždarević collected 54 caps and scored 4 goals for Yugoslavia between 1983 and 1992, and another 2 caps for Bosina and Herzegovina after the breakup of Yugoslavia.  However, the team was not recognised by FIFA until 1995 in part due to the Bosnian War.  He went the Euro 1984 held in France.  He played for FK Željezničar Sarajevo and went to the UEFA semifinal in 1985.

RW/RB: Hasan Salihamidžić (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Hasan Salihamidžić is best remembered for playing 9 seasons with Bayern Munich.  With Bayern, he won the 2001 Champions' League final, scoring one of the penalties in the shootout win in the Final. He also played for Juventus and Wolfsburg. At the international level, he earned 43 caps and scored six goals for the Bosnia and Herzegovina national team. He is regarded by many as one of the most successful Bosnian football players in recent times.
Hasan Salihamidžić 

AM/SS: Blaž Slišković (Yugoslavia/Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Slišković had a good career with Hajduk Split and Marseille. In 2011, he was chosen in the "Hajduk Split Best 11 of all-time. He also played for FK Velež Mostar, Hajduk Split, Pescara, RC Lens, FC Mulhouse, Rennes, NK Hrvatski Dragovoljac and HŠK Zrinjski.  In 1985, he was named the Yugoslav Footballer of the Year.  He was capped 26 times for Yugoslavia.  He missed the 1982 World Cup Finals and Euro 1983.  In 1993, he played three matches for Bosnia and Herzegovina.

AM: Ivica Osim (Yugoslavia)
Ivica Osim was born in Bosnia of a mixed family in 1941. He played with FK Željezničar Sarajevo before moving aboard in 1970.  Apart from three months in Holland, he played mostly in France. In France, he played for Valenciennes, Sedan and again at Strasbourg. He was capped 16 times for Yugoslavia.  He reached the Final at Euro 1968.

AM: Safet Sušić (Yugoslavia)
Safet Sušić was one of the greatest Yugoslavian players.  He played for FK Sarajevo, Paris Saint-Germain and Red Star Saint-Ouen and internationally for Yugoslavia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. He was voted Paris Saint-Germain's best player of all time and the best foreign player of Ligue 1 of all time by France Football.  He represented Yugoslavia at the 1982 and 1990 World Cups, and at the European Championship 1984. In 1993, he played twice for Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Safet Sušić 
ST: Asim "Hase" Ferhatović (Yugoslavia)
Asim Ferhatović started his football career in 1948 with FK Sarajevo, for whom he made his first-team debut in 1952. Ferhatović remained with the club until his retirement in 1967, although he represented Fenerbahçe in the 1962–63 Turkish league season. He won a solitary cap for the Yugoslavia national team in 1961.

ST: Vedad Ibišević (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
In 2004, he joined PSG.  Then, he joined Alemannia Aachen, and in 2007, he moved to 1899 Hoffeneheim, where he played until 2012.  From 2012 to 2016, he played for Stuttgart. At the time of writing, he is with Hertha Berlin. In 2008, he won the Idol Nacije award(Bosnian Footballer of the Year). From 2007 to 2017, he has earned over 80 caps for Bosnia and Herzegovina. He was selected for the 2014 World Cup, where he scored Bosnia's first ever goal in a major tournament.

FW: Vahid Halilhodžić (Yugoslavia)
Regarded as one of the best Yugoslav players in the 1970s and 1980s, Halilhodžić had successful playing spells with Velež Mostar, and French clubs Nantes and Paris Saint-Germain before retiring in the mid-1980s. He also appeared for the Yugoslav national team and was part of the squads which won the 1978 European Under-21 Championship before earning 15 full international caps for Yugoslavia. 
Vahid Halilhodžić
ST: Zlatko Vujovic (Yugoslavia)
Born in Sarajevo, Vujović started his career with HNK Hajduk Split, making his first division debuts at just 18.  He was named Yugoslav Footballer of the Year in 1981 by the Večernji list daily. In 1986, both siblings moved to compete in France, first with FC Girondins de Bordeaux: in their first season both were undisputed starters in an eventual double.  He earned 70 caps for Yugoslavia.  He was the captain of the 1990 World Cup team.
 
ST: Edin Džeko (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Edin Dzeko is probably the most famous player for Bosnia and Herzegovina not from the era under Yugoslavia. He has played over 80 times for his country and scored 52 goals since 2007, becoming the highest Bosnia and Herzegovina goalscorer of all time. He led Bosnia and Herzegovina to qualify for the World Cup in 2014.  He had a great career with Wolfsburg and moved to Manchester City in 2011.  At the time of writing, he plays for Roma, helping the club to reach the semifinal of the Champions' League in 2018.

Edin Džeko 

Honorable Mention
Meho Kodro, Džemal Hadžiabdić, Edhem Šljivo, Sergej Barbarez, Franjo Vladić, Vedin Musić, Zlatan Bajramović, Vahidin Musemić, Josip Bukal, Elvir Baljić, Florijan Matekalo, Petar Manola, Milan Rajlić, Stanko Zagorac, Ibrahim Biogradlić, Muhamed Mujić, Vahidin Musemić, Muhamed Konjić,  Zoran Vujovic, Dusan Bajevic.

Squad Explanation
-- Safet Sušić, Edin Džeko and Hasan Salihamidžić are probably the greatest players from this country.  They are the obvious choices.  Josip Katalinski, Branko Stanković and Miralem Pjanić probably should be on this list as well.  I do not need to explain their inclusion. 
-- Branko Stanković and Josip Katalinski are on my Yugoslavia All-Time team.
-- Because ethnicity is a sensitive issue in the region, I use various criteria for eligibility.  Ethnicity, birth place, etc are used to determine players who played for the former Yugoslavia. For players after its independence, I used international representation as the main rule.  
-- Bosnia and Herzegovina qualified for their first ever major tournament in 2014 when they reached the World Cup Finals in Brazil. Edin Džeko, Mensur Mujdža, Miralem Pjanić, Sead Kolašinac and Asmir Begovic made this all-time team.
-- Yugoslavia came second at the 1968 European Championship. Mirsad Fazlagić was the captain of the team.
-- Yugoslavia reached the semi-final of the European Championship in 1960 and 1976.  No one from this area went to the 1960 tournament, but in 1976, Vahid Halilhodžić and Josip Katalinski were on the team.  
-- Ivan Ćurković had glorious career in France with Saint-Étienne.  Asmir Begovic helped the national team to qualifiy for the World Cup Finals.  Enver Marić starred for Yugoslavia in the 1970's as well as having a good club career in Germany.
-- Samir Handanović is also a Bosniak born in Slovenia, but he is ineligible because he opted to play for Slovenia.
-- Branko Stankovic is listed as a Bosnian Serb.  He was born in Sarajevo. Of course, he made this team.  But since ethnicity is a serious issue in the region, he is also listed on my Serbia all-time team.
-- I took Mensur Mujdža as his backup rightback.  He was a Bosniak born in Croatia.  He played for Bosnia and Herzegovina.
-- On leftback, I selected Sead Kolašinac and Mirsad Fazlagić over Džemal Hadžiabdić. Sead Kolašinac was in the Bundesliga Team of the Year twice.  As mentioned above, Mirsad Fazlagić captained Yugoslavia as they finished second at the 1968 European Championship.  Zoran Vujovic who was born in Sarajevo was also considered.
-- Muhamed Konjić who was a centerback was the first captain of the national team after independence, but I put him on honourable mention.  
-- Enver Hadžiabdić was the last defender cut.  I do not know his extra position, but his names had been mentioned frequently.
-- Hasan Salihamidžić was best remembered for playing 9 seasons with Bayern Munich.  He was the first star player from here to emerge after the end of Yugoslavia.
-- Zvjezdan Misimović is one of the greatest players from this country after its independence.  But I left him off because I have Blaž Slišković, Ivica Osim and Safet Sušić ahead of him.  Blaž Slišković was Yugoslav Player of the Year in 1985.  
-- The team does not have enough central midfielders.  Miralem Pjanić and Mehmed Baždarević are very good central midfielders, but the team still needed more backups.  So I took Elvir Rahimić. I also seriously considered Edhem Šljivo.
-- Miralem Pjanić is becoming one of the greatest players from this country. 
-- The team lacked a good left-side attacker or winger.
-- Muhamed Mujić can play in any of the attacking position, but I have no room for him.  
-- In July 2011, Zinedine Zidane named Blaz Slišković as one of his idols while growing up and included him in his "All Time Best 11" of Marseille.  I trusted Zidane's judgement.
-- Zlatan Ibrahimovic's father was a Muslim Bosniak, but of course, he is not eligible because he played for Sweden.  
-- Despite having only a single cap from Yugoslavia, Asim Ferhatović was considered among the greatest from Bosnia and Herzegovina.  He is a legend at FK Sarajevo.  Sarajevo's Asim Ferhatović Hase Stadium, the site of the Opening Ceremonies of the 1984 Winter Olympics and the home of FK Sarajevo, is named in his honour. The Bosnia and Herzegovina national team often used the stadium for their international matches in the past. It is also the largest stadium in Bosnia and Herzegovina.  
-- Zlatko and Zoran Vujovic were born in Bosnia and Herzegovina, but they were sometimes listed as Croats.  I put them on honorable mention.

Formation
Hasan Salihamidžić was known for his speed and skill.  So I am using him as a shuttler.  I do not know if Mehmed Baždarević can play on the left.





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