Competition: | Prva savezna liga |
Season: | 1965 - 66 |
Winners: | Vojvodina (1st title) |
Relegated: | Radnički Belgrade Trešnjevka |
Continentalcup1: | European Cup |
Continentalcup1 Qualifiers: | Vojvodina |
Continentalcup2: | Cup Winners' Cup |
Continentalcup2 Qualifiers: | OFK Belgrade |
Continentalcup3: | Inter-Cities Fairs Cup |
Continentalcup3 Qualifiers: | Dinamo Zagreb Red Star Belgrade Olimpija Ljubljana |
League Topscorer: | Petar Nadoveza (21) |
Prevseason: | 1964–65 |
Nextseason: | 1966–67 |
The 1965–66 Yugoslav First League season was the 20th season of the First Federal League (Prva savezna liga), the top level association football league of SFR Yugoslavia, since its establishment in 1946. Sixteen teams contested the competition, with Vojvodina winning their first national title.
Though the events under scrutiny had taken place fourteen months earlier, the beginning of the 1965-66 Yugoslav First League season and subsequently the rest of the campaign were marked by revelations of match fixing from May and June 1964, during the concluding weeks of the 1963-64 season.
In late August 1965, two weeks into the new league season, FK Željezničar, Hajduk Split, and NK Trešnjevka were found guilty of fixing matches from two seasons earlier at the end of the 1963-64 season. Their guilt was based on a written statement by the Željo goalkeeper Ranko Planinić who decided to come forward some 14 months after the fact. In his statement, Planinić claims on the record that his club threw matches against Hajduk and Trešnjevka towards the end of the 1963-64 season in return for financial compensation that those two relegation-threatened teams paid in order to avoid the drop. Specifically, Planinić claims that the match played on 31 May 1964 in Split when Hajduk beat Željezničar 4-0 was fixed, as well as the match on 7 June 1964 in Sarajevo when Željo and Trešnjevka tied 3-3. He was in Željo's goal for both matches.
Planinić made the information public in August 1965 by approaching the Večernje novine journalist Alija Resulović who in turn took Planinić's testimony in form of an interview and the piece was published by the paper, circulated in 100,000 copies at the time.[1] In his 2006 book Ona vremena, Resulović claims to have contacted FK Željezničar's president Nusret Mahić right before submitting the piece for print, informing him of Planinić's allegations, seeking comment, and even offering to sit on the information if he (Mahić) thinks it necessary.[1] Resulović further claims that Mahić's response was: "Publish it all! It's all a lie that Planinić concocted as revenge for being fined for an incident he caused at a training session".[1]
The explosive testimony immediately erupted in a nationwide scandal that became known as the 'Planinić Affair'. Yugoslav First League had been plagued by rumours of widespread match-fixing on multiple occasions over the preceding decade, however, this was the first occasion that a player came forward and substantiated those claims on the record.
On Friday, 27 August 1965, following a fifteen-hour investigative process, the Yugoslav FA's (FSJ) disciplinary body (disciplinski sud) presided over by Svetozar Savić handed out the following penalties:
Disciplinary body president Svetozar Savić also announced that the investigation had revealed that Željezničar was paid YUD1.5 million by Hajduk Split, and YUD4 million by Trešnjevka for these matches. Some of the money Trešnjevka paid was obtained from the Zagreb Fair where some of Trešnjevka's board members were employed at.[2] As a reference point, the price of a daily newspaper at the time was YUD40.
Furthermore, NK Hajduk Split, NK Trešnjevka, and FK Željezničar were relegated to the Yugoslav Second League's Western Division, effective immediately. The decision further entailed reorganization of the 1965–66 Yugoslav First League that was already two weeks into its run via reducing the number of clubs from 16 to 13 and voiding all the 1965-66 Yugoslav First League matches played by Hajduk, Trešnjevka, and Željezničar up to that point (6 matches in total).[3] It also meant expanding the 1965–66 Yugoslav Second League Western Division from 18 to 21 clubs.[3]
The draconian punishment caused widespread shock and approval among the Yugoslav public with each of the FSJ's six sub-federations except for SR Croatia's expressing strong support of the decision.[3] Fans of Hajduk, Trešnjevka, and Željezničar organized street protests in their respective cities with the Split demonstration being the most attended.[3] The three clubs quickly lodged an appeal with the FSJ.[3]
On Friday, 9 September 1965, the Yugoslav FA's appeals commission announced its decisions. The main punishment for the three clubs was reduced to points-deduction. Željo, Hajduk, and Trešnjevka were docked 6, 5, and 5 points, respectively.[4]
All of the individual punishments for players and club management members were upheld.[4]
As a result of having 6 points docked in addition to missing two of their best players for most of the 1965-66 season, Željezničar spent the majority of the league campaign in a desperate fight for league survival. Towards the end of the season, for the deciding league matches in Željo's battle to avoid relegation, the FSJ decided to lift the Željo star player Ivica Osim's ban ahead of its expiration. In the second last week of the season, on 12 June 1966, Osim's goal at Radnički Niš in a 0–1 away win in Niš effectively kept Željo in the First League.
Over the decades since, Planinić's motivation to become a whistleblower has been aggressively questioned by journalists close to the punished clubs. After he blew the whistle, the tone and framing of press write-ups referencing Planinić in various Sarajevo and Split-based print media outlets ranged from dismissing his claims outright to insults, insinuations and speculation about his decision to come forward being made out of spite, hurt ego, or personal vendetta against his club because supposedly his summer 1965 off-season contract negotiations with FK Željezničar stalled or because he had lost the starting position in Željezničar's goal to teammate Vasilije Radović.[5] [6]
Champions:
players (league matches/league goals):
Source:[7]