Dragiša Binić Explained

Dragiša Binić
Native Name:Драгиша Бинић
Native Name Lang:sr
Order:Member of the National Assembly of Serbia
Term Start:2001
Term End:2002
Party:Party of Serbian Unity (SSJ) (2000–2004)
Birth Date:20 October 1961
Birth Place:Golubovac, PR Serbia, FPR Yugoslavia
Module:
Embed:yes
Header-Color:
  1. B0C4DE
Position:Striker
Years1:1980–1983
Years2:1983–1987
Years3:1987–1988
Years4:1988–1989
Years5:1989–1990
Years6:1990–1991
Years7:1991–1993
Years8:1993–1994
Years9:1994
Years10:1995
Clubs1:Napredak Kruševac
Clubs2:Radnički Niš
Clubs3:Red Star Belgrade
Clubs4:Brest
Clubs5:Levante
Clubs6:Red Star Belgrade
Clubs7:Slavia Prague
Clubs8:APOEL
Clubs9:Nagoya Grampus Eight
Clubs10:Tosu Futures
Caps1:20
Goals1:3
Caps2:101
Goals2:20
Caps3:27
Goals3:13
Caps4:29
Goals4:18
Caps5:7
Goals5:0
Caps6:27
Goals6:14
Caps7:19
Goals7:8
Caps8:14
Goals8:10
Caps9:8
Goals9:5
Caps10:6
Goals10:5
Nationalyears1:1990–1991
Nationalteam1:Yugoslavia
Nationalcaps1:3
Nationalgoals1:1

Dragiša Binić (Serbian Cyrillic: Драгиша Бинић; born 20 October 1961) is a Serbian former footballer who played for Red Star and was part of their European Cup victory in 1991. He had three caps for the Yugoslavia national football team, scoring one goal.[1] His son Vladan Binić is also a footballer.[2]

Club career

Red Star Belgrade

In the summer 1987 transfer window, soon to be twenty-six-year old striker Binić signed with Red Star Belgrade. The move meant reuniting with his former Radnički Niš young teammate Dragan Stojković who had transferred to Red Star a year earlier and already managed to establish himself as the team star and fan favourite. Led by head coach Velibor Vasović, the ambitious Belgrade club was looking to get back on the winning track after a disappointing league season. Other arrivals to the club included the twenty-four-year-old defender Goran Jurić from Velež Mostar, twenty-two-year-old defensive midfielder Refik Šabanadžović from Željezničar Sarajevo, and talented eighteen-year-old creative midfield prospect Robert Prosinečki from Dinamo Zagreb.

With Bora Cvetković and Husref Musemić as his main competition at the forward spots, Binić looked to be settling well into the new environment alongside team regulars: midfielder Žarko Đurović, attacking midfielder Goran Milojević, midfield playmaker and emerging team leader Dragan Stojković, and defenders Slobodan Marović and Miodrag Krivokapić. Following a good start to the season with Binić scoring away at FK Priština, the combustible striker and coach Vasović quickly developed an antagonistic relationship, with Binić getting suspended from the squad over an insubordination quarrel with the coach. After missing several months of match action while only training with the team, Binić got reinstated following another reported incident with Vasović that apparently featured the striker confronting the coach in front of his private residence.[3]

Career statistics

Club

[4]

Club performanceLeague
SeasonClubLeagueAppsGoals
YugoslaviaLeague
1980/81Napredak KruševacFirst League20
1981/82Second League40
1982/83143
1983/84Radnički NišFirst League195
1984/85274
1985/86Second League318
1986/87First League243
1987/88Red Star BelgradeFirst League2713
FranceLeague
1988/89BrestDivision 22918
SpainLeague
1989/90LevanteSegunda División70
YugoslaviaLeague
1990/91Red Star BelgradeFirst League2714
CzechoslovakiaLeague
1991/92Slavia PragueFirst League125
1992/9373
CyprusLeague
1993/94APOELFirst Division1410
JapanLeague
1994Nagoya Grampus EightJ1 League85
1995Tosu FuturesFootball League65
CountryYugoslavia17550
France2918
Spain70
Czechoslovakia198
Cyprus1410
Japan1410
Total25896

International

Yugoslavia national team
YearAppsGoals
199010
199121
Total31

International goals

Yugoslavia score listed first, score column indicates score after each Binić goal.

International goals by date, venue, cap, opponent, score, result and competition
scope=colNo.scope=col data-sort-type=dateDatescope=colVenuescope=colCapscope=colOpponentscope=colScorescope=colResultscope=colCompetition
scope=row127 March 1991Stadion Crvena Zvezda, Belgrade, SFR Yugoslavia21–04–1UEFA Euro 1992 qualification

Honours

Red Star Belgrade

1987–88, 1990–91

1990–91

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dragiša Binić, international football player. 30 March 2024. EU-football.info.
  2. Web site: Binić – Velika Zvezda. FK Crvena Zvezda. 2 July 2010. 30 March 2024. sr.
  3. News: Petrović . Nebojša . Mihajlović Zvezdi 1991. otvorio nebo, a Binić jurio Nemca po terenu: Dok se stadion tresao, držao je Efenberga za kosu! . Mondo.rs . 9 March 2021 . 1 May 2021.
  4. Web site: Binić Dragiša . 22 December 2008.