Aleksandar Tirnanić Explained

Aleksandar Tirnanić
Birth Date:15 July 1910
Birth Place:Krnjevo, Kingdom of Serbia
Death Place:Belgrade, FR Yugoslavia
Position:Winger
Youthyears1:1923
Youthclubs1:SK Olimpija
Youthyears2:1924
Youthclubs2:SK Jugoslavija
Youthyears3:1924–1927
Youthclubs3:BSK Belgrade
Years1:1927–1937
Clubs1:BSK Belgrade
Caps1:500
Goals1:527
Years2:1937–1938
Clubs2:SK Jugoslavija
Years3:1938–1939
Clubs3:BASK
Years4:1939–1941
Clubs4:Jedinstvo Belgrade
Years5:1942–1943
Clubs5:Sloga Belgrade
Totalcaps:500
Totalgoals:527
Nationalyears1:1929–1940
Nationalteam1:Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Nationalcaps1:50
Nationalgoals1:12
Manageryears1:1946–1948
Managerclubs1:Yugoslavia (co-manager)
Manageryears2:1952–1961
Managerclubs2:Yugoslavia (co-manager)

Aleksandar "Tirke" Tirnanić (Serbian: Александар "Тирке" Тирнанић; 15 July 1910 – 13 December 1992) was a Serbian football player and manager.

Early life and beginnings

Born in the central Serbian small town of Krnjevo (Velika Plana municipality), Tirnanić was still in infancy when his working-class family moved to the capital Belgrade. He barely remembered his father, a metal factory worker who died in 1914 as part of the Serbian Army World War I effort.

Raised by a single mother, young Tirnanić quickly developed a love for football, which he played endlessly at Bara Venecija pitches on the Sava River's right bank. He got spotted there by coach Radenko Mitrović who brought the talented youngster to SK Jugoslavija youth setup. However, Tirnanić soon moved to arch crosstown rival BSK youth squad where he quickly developed into a notable right-winger. Realizing his potential, he completely immersed himself in football and abandoned school.

Career

He made his first-team senior debut as a 17-year-old, quickly marking himself out as an able and temperamental player, and forming a midfield partnership with Moša Marjanović.

Tirnanić spent most of his senior club career with BSK Beograd for which he appeared in 500 matches. During his career with BSK Tirnanić had great rivals Leo Lemešić (1924–1940) and Ljubo Benčić (1921–1935) who played for Hajduk Split. Additionally, he earned 50 caps and scored 12 goals for the Kingdom of Yugoslavia national team from 1929 to 1940. In 1937 he moved again to SK Jugoslavija where he played until 1938 when he joined BASK.[1] For BASK he played from 1938 to 1939. He later played for two Belgrade based clubs Jedinstvo (1939–1941) and Sloga (1942–1943).[2]

International career

He also appeared in the 1930 FIFA World Cup. The day before he turned 20 he scored a goal, which made him at the time the youngest goalscorer in the World Cup. Later he has been beaten by Manuel Rosas in 1930, Pelé in 1958, Michael Owen in 1998, Dmitri Sychev in 2002 and latest Lionel Messi in 2006, which makes him the sixth youngest goalscorer in the FIFA World Cup. Later, he coached the Yugoslav team in two more World Cups, 1954 and 1958, the football tournaments at the Summer Olympics, 1948, 1952 and 1960 when Yugoslavia won gold medal, also appearing in the 1960 European Nations' Cup when Yugoslavia scored second place.

During the Balkan Cup, held in 1935 in Athens, Greece, Tirnanić and Tomašević were the top goalscorers of the tournament with 3 goals each. Thanks to these contributions Yugoslavia won the Balkan Cup in that edition, leaving behind Greece, Romania, and Bulgaria.[3]

In the films Montevideo, God Bless You! (2010) and See You in Montevideo (2014), Tirnanić was portrayed by actor Miloš Biković.

International goals

Yugoslavia's goal tally first

! # !! Date !! Venue !! Opponent !! Score !! Result !! Competition
1. 13 April 1930 3–1 6–1 Friendly
2. 15 June 1930 1–2 2–2 Friendly
3. 14 July 1930 1–0 2–1 1930 FIFA World Cup
4. 4 October 1931 1–0 2–3 1931 Balkan Cup
5. 26 June 1932 1–1 7–1 1932 Balkan Cup
6. 10 September 1933 3–4 3–4 Friendly
7. 3 June 1934 7–4 8–4 Friendly
8. 25 December 1934 3–1 4–3 1934–35 Balkan Cup
9. 4–1
10. 1 January 1935 1–0 4–0
11. 12 July 1936 3–2 3–3 Friendly
12. 6 September 1936 9–3 9–3 Friendly

Notes and References

  1. Beogradski sokolovi page 87
  2. Beogradski sokolovi page 96
  3. Web site: Balkan Cup (for Nations) 1934-5 . live . . https://web.archive.org/web/20120722171040/http://rsssf.com/tablesb/balkancup.html . 2012-07-22 .