Krasnodar Rora Explained

Krasnodar Rora
Fullname:Krasnodar Rora
Birth Date:23 March 1945
Birth Place:Vis, FS Croatia, Yugoslavia
Death Place:Zagreb, Croatia
Position:Midfielder
Height:1.78 m
Years1:1962–1964
Years2:1964–1973
Years3:1973–1975
Years4:1975–1977
Years5:1977–1978
Clubs5:Hagenau
Caps1:50
Caps2:222
Caps3:48
Caps4:21
Caps5:31
Goals1:8
Goals2:37
Goals3:2
Goals4:1
Goals5:2
Totalcaps:372
Totalgoals:50
Nationalyears1:1967–1968
Nationalteam1:Yugoslavia
Nationalcaps1:5
Nationalgoals1:0
Manageryears1:1992
Managerclubs1:Radnik Velika Gorica
Manageryears2:1992–1993
Managerclubs2:Šibenik
Manageryears3:1998
Managerclubs3:Cibalia

Krasnodar Rora (23 March 1945 – 12 November 2020) was a Croatian professional football player and manager.

Club career

Rising through the ranks at Šibenik, Rora rose to prominence as a key player of the local powerhouse Dinamo Zagreb in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and was part of the club's golden generation which won the 1967 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, the team's first and only European silverware.

After turning 28, the minimum legal age for Yugoslav players to move abroad, he played for Standard Liège in Belgium under fellow Yugoslavs Vlatko Marković and Nedeljko Bulatović, before moving on to France in 1975 where he spent two seasons at AS Nancy alongside the young Michel Platini under coach Antoine Redin.

International career

Rora also earned five caps for Yugoslavia in 1967 and 1968, under the tenure of national manager Rajko Mitić, alongside several of his Dinamo teammates from the 1967 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup final such as Rudolf Belin, Mladen Ramljak, and Slaven Zambata. However, the only two Dinamo players Mitić eventually called up for the UEFA Euro 1968 final four tournament in June were Belin and Ramljak, with Yugoslavia eventually winning the silver medal. His final international was an October 1968 World Cup qualification match against Spain.[1]

Post-playing career

Rora retired from playing in 1978 at the age of 33 after a single season with a small French second-level side SR Hagenau under manager Raymond Hild, where he helped them win the regional Alsace Cup. In 1983, he had a short stint as assistant manager of Branko Zebec at Eintracht Frankfurt replacing Ulrich Meyer.[2]

He then moved back to his homeland and worked as a youth coach at Dinamo Zagreb and also had managerial stints at smaller Croatian clubs Radnik Velika Gorica, Cibalia, as well as his original club Šibenik.

Personal life

Death

He died on 12 November 2020 in Zagreb, aged 75.[3] [4] [5]

Honours

Dinamo Zagreb

1966–67

1964–65, 1968–69

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Player Database. 10 December 2022. EU-football.
  2. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung: ″Rora als Assistent″ (16 July 1983, p33)
  3. News: Ničota, Tomo . Nadvilo se crnilo nad Maksimir, otišla je zauvijek još jedna Dinamova legenda! Preminuo Krasnodar Rora . . 12 November 2020 . 12 November 2020 . hr.
  4. News: Preminulo legendarno lijevo krilo Dinama Krasnodar Rora . HRT . 12 November 2020 . 12 November 2020 . hr.
  5. News: Krasnodar Rora - Povijest Dinama . . 12 November 2020 . hr . 9 December 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191209130456/http://povijest.gnkdinamo.hr/popis-igra%C4%8Da/krasnodar-rora.html . dead .