Dušan Petković (footballer, born 1903) explained

Dušan Petković
Birth Date:13 April 1903
Death Place:New York City, United States
Position:Forward
Years1:1922–1933
Years2:1927
Clubs2:Montpellier SC
Caps1:175
Caps2:? ?
Goals1:219
Nationalyears1:1923–1926
Nationalteam1:Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
Nationalcaps1:8
Nationalgoals1:2

Dušan Petković (13 April 1903 – 2 December 1979) was a Serbian and Yugoslav football forward.

Biography

Nicknamed Senegalac (English: The [[Senegal]]ese) due to somewhat darker complexion, Petković is remembered as a superb striker who had excellent finishing and playmaking abilities. He spent his whole playing career at SK Jugoslavija based in his hometown. He appeared in a total of 175 official games and scored 219 goals for SK Jugoslavija, becoming the second all-time scorer for the club (SK Jugoslavija's top scorer being Dragan Jovanović with 311 goals).

He was part of the squad that won the 1924 and 1925 Yugoslav championships, and in 1926 he was the Yugoslav league top scorer with 8 goals in just 6 appearances. In 1927 he had a short stint playing for Montpellier SC, along with fellow Serb Branislav Sekulić.

Between 1923 and 1926 Petković also played for Yugoslavia national football team. He debuted on 28 October 1923 against Czechoslovakia and scored 1 goal in the game which eventually ended in a 4–4 draw. His last game for the national team was on 28 June 1926, also against Czechoslovakia in Zagreb. Petković was part of the squad that represented Yugoslavia at the 1924 Summer Olympics, when the team was knocked out in the first round after taking a 0–7 beating against Uruguay.[1]

After retiring from active football, he worked as a sports editor at the Belgrade daily Vreme until 1941, when he left to Sofia, Bulgaria and worked at Yugoslavia's embassy there. He later moved to the United States and, never returning to Yugoslavia again, died in 1979 in New York City.

Honours

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dušan Petković . Olympedia . 24 August 2021.