Predrag Mijatović

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Predrag Mijatović
Predrag Mijatović (2007)
Personal information
Full name Predrag Mijatović
Date of birth January 19, 1969 (1969-01-19) (age 39)
Place of birth    Titograd, SFR Yugoslavia
Playing position Striker
Club information
Current club Real Madrid (Sporting Director)
Youth clubs
FK Kom
Budućnost Titograd
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1987–1989
1989–1993
1993–1996
1996–1999
1999–2002
2002–2004
Budućnost Titograd
Partizan
Valencia
Real Madrid
Fiorentina
Levante
Total
059 0(60)
104 0(45)
104 0(56)
090 0(29)
042 00(4)
021 00(3)
420 (197)   
National team
1989–2003 Yug./Serb.-Mont. 073 0(28)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Predrag "Peđa" Mijatović (Serbian Cyrillic: Предраг Мијатовић - Пеђа) (born January 19, 1969 in Titograd, Montenegro, SFR Yugoslavia) is a Montenegrin former football player and current sports director of Real Madrid. He is considered one of Yugoslavia's best players of the 1990s. During his career his position on the pitch was striker.

On the club level, Mijatović played for 6 different clubs: Budućnost Podgorica, FK Partizan, Valencia, Real Madrid, Fiorentina, and Levante. Internationally, Mijatović has been capped 73 times, scoring 28 goals (the appearances are split between the SFR Yugoslavia and the FR Yugoslavia national teams). He played in the 1998 World Cup and Euro 2000.

A very technically gifted player, Mijatović is well remembered for scoring a goal for Real Madrid in the 1998 Champions League final that brought the biggest European title back to Madrid after 32 years. He also had many memorable moments on the big stage, at both club and international levels.

In the 1995/1996 Primera División season, he scored 28 goals for Valencia CF, which earned him a transfer to Real Madrid.

Contents

[edit] Club career

[edit] FK Partizan

In the summer of 1989, the talented 20-year-old was very close to signing with Hajduk Split before Partizan's president Mirko Marjanović stepped in and convinced him to come to Belgrade.

Mijatović's first season in Partizan was mostly spent settling into the new surroundings with only 1 goal in 15 league matches. The next 1990/91 season provided a bit of breakthrough as he became a prominent team member with 14 goals in 33 league appearances. However, their failure to win any silverware combined with Red Star Belgrade's rampage through Yugoslav League and Europe meant that the entire Partizan team was in constant shadow of their crosstown rivals.

For his part, Mijatović continued improving, becoming the squad's undisputed leader during 1991/92 season under coach Ivica Osim, and leading Partizan to the 1992 Yugoslav Cup title over reigning European Cup champions Red Star. He also picked up the Yugoslav Footballer of the Year award along the way.

Before the start of the 1992/93 season SFR Yugoslavia disintegrated meaning that the new Yugoslav League consisted of teams from Serbia and Montenegro only. Mijatović put in another impressive season, helping Partizan finally overcome their Red Star jinx, and leading them to the Yugoslav title.

Ever since he established himself at Partizan, Mijatović had been linked with various top European sides - Real Madrid, Atlético Madrid and Juventus, among others. However, none of them expressed sufficient interest and he eventually ended up at Valencia CF in the summer of 1993. Then Real president Ramón Mendoza later admitted that Robert Prosinečki's failure to live up to expectations in Madrid made his club wary of young Yugoslavs.[1]

[edit] Valencia CF

Mijatović made his La Liga debut on September 5, 1993 against Real Oviedo and immediately became an integral part of coach Guus Hiddink's squad. He would go on to make 35 league appearances and score 16 goals in his debut season.

After steady progression he got the Spanish Footballer of the Year honours in the 1995/96 season in which he led Valencia to second place in La Liga with 28 goals in 40 league matches - a truly impressive tally considering he was often deployed as a midfield creator.

The glowing performance didn't go unnoticed by Spanish giants Real Madrid who, now under new club president Lorenzo Sanz, started courting Mijatović again after failing to commit to him three years earlier.

[edit] Real Madrid

Mijatović finally arrived at the Spanish capital as a highly touted 27-year-old during the 1996 summer transfer window. At Real, playing in a slightly withdrawn forward/playmaker role, Mijatović linked up with Davor Šuker (another fresh arrival from Sevilla) to form a formidable strike partnership. Under manager Fabio Capello, they both featured in all 38 league matches during 1996/97 season, leading their team to the La Liga title with Šuker scoring 24, and Mijatović 14 goals while also laying on many others.

Though the following, 1997/98 season at Real wasn't quite as successful for Mijatović from a personal standpoint, it still provided many memorable moments. Despite injuries and somewhat inconsistent form, he still managed 10 goals in 24 league games, linking up well with emerging 21-year-old forward Fernando Morientes who arrived from Real Zaragoza at the beginning of the season and all but squeezed Šuker out of the squad by the end of it. And even though FC Barcelona led by, among others, Sonny Anderson, Luís Figo, and Luís Enrique beat them to the league title, the season was still deemed a success since the elusive European trophy was finally back at the Bernabéu after a 32-year wait. Real beat Juventus in May 1998 in Amsterdam's ArenA with Mijatović scoring the only goal - incidentally his first of that season's Champions League.

However, after being on top of the world in May, Mijatović came back to Real Madrid in August with lukewarm feelings due to his poor showing at the 1998 World Cup. The following 1998/99 season turned out to be his last with the royal club. Despite winning the Champions League trophy, coach Jupp Heynckes' contract was not extended. The new coaching set-up employed by first José Antonio Camacho and subsequently Guus Hiddink often used Mijatović out of position on the wing, while Raúl and Morientes were the preferred attacking duo most of the time. Though at moments he displayed his old brilliance, Mijatović's performance was much too streaky and inconsistent for a club of Real's stature. Even when Hiddink got fired mid-season, it still didn't spell the start of better days for Mijatović, as he openly feuded with new coach John Toshack. After going out in Champions League quarterfinals to a Shevchenko-led Dynamo Kyiv (incidentally, 2 matches where Mijatović played some excellent football) and failing to win the league for the second season in a row, changes were clearly in order especially knowing the triggerhappy nature of the Real brass. They were getting ready to clear the space upfront for the promising 20-year-old Nicolas Anelka from Arsenal to be brought in. The management decided that the best days of now 30-year-old Mijatović were behind him and sold him to Fiorentina at the end of the season.

[edit] Fiorentina

In Florence Mijatović played under coach Giovanni Trapattoni, with Gabriel Batistuta and Enrico Chiesa providing competition for places upfront. Fortunately for all three, Trapattoni favoured an attacking formation that season, allowing each forward his share of playing time. This also meant Mijatović dropped further into midfield which was a role he adapted to quickly.

[edit] National team

Simultaneously with Mijatović's transfer from Valencia CF to Real Madrid, Yugoslavia returned to playing competitive matches after a 4 year ban due to the UN embargo. Naturally, Mijatović, by this time a bona fide European football star, played a prominent role for Yugoslavia as well. Playing in the pure attacking role for his country, he was seemingly scoring at will. In late 1997, during the 2-game World Cup playoff qualifiers against Hungary, he notched 7 goals (hat-trick in the first leg in Budapest and 4 goals in the return home leg at the Marakana). Yugoslavia demolished their opposition 12-1 on aggregate and qualified for the 1998 World Cup in France.

[edit] World Cup 1998

The expectations in France 98 were undoubtedly substantial. In many circles Yugoslavia was considered to be the tournament's dark horse as a team full of players with prominent roles in top European clubs. Now 29 years of age, Mijatović was in the prime of his career and also heading into the tournament on a high from his Champions League final success. Furthermore, with 14 qualifying campaign goals to his name, he was expected to provide most of the scoring punch. He himself beamed with confidence, even cautiously suggesting Yugoslavia will go far in the tournament.

However, he performed well below expectations, managing to score only one goal in 4 matches - a fluky effort during a group phase match against Germany that was awarded to him only after further video examination because at first it seemed like Dejan Stanković provided the final touch to put the ball in the net. To compound his subpar performance, Mijatović slammed a crucial penalty against the crossbar in the round-of-16 elimination game against the Netherlands that Yugoslavia subsequently lost to an injury time goal by Edgar Davids.

[edit] Road to Euro 2000

At the start of the next qualifying cycle for Euro 2000, Mijatović continued to be an automatic choice for Yugoslavia under new coach Milan Živadinović. The same continued when Vujadin Boškov took over in Živadinović's place midway through the qualifying. For his part, Mijatović responded with some solid outings. Replicating scoring form from World Cup 98 qualifying proved elusive, but he still found ways to be useful with a few key assists and overall buildup play.

The deciding match occurred in October 1999 versus Croatia and in highly charged atmosphere Mijatović came through with a shining moment, scoring an acrobatic first half header to level the score at 1-1. The eventual 2-2 final meant Yugoslavia qualified directly for the European Championships in Belgium and Holland.

[edit] Euro 2000

Heading into the final tournament, Mijatović, now 31 years old and with just solid club form at Fiorentina, was free of pressure and big personal expectations that followed him during World Cup two years earlier. He still played all four of Yugoslavia's matches, though in a more withdrawn position since suddenly emergent Savo Milošević established himself as the target man up front. Mijatović failed to score in all four games and had a fairly low-key tournament altogether.

[edit] Post-football

After retiring in 2004, Mijatović continued living in Valencia and soon became a player agent.

In June 2006, he hooked up with Ramón Calderón as part of his candidate bid for the position of Real Madrid president. When Calderón won the closely contested club election on July 2, 2006, Mijatović became Real's new Director of Football.

Following the unilateral independence of Kosovo, Mijatovic said that the EU should be nice to the Serbs when choosing sides over the status, Mijatovic thinks that Kosovo is a historical and integral part of Serbia. He greeted the Serbian president, Boris Tadic, on his win over Tomislav Nikolic and the future of an European Serbia.[1]

[edit] Personal

Mijatović's personal life has been well-publicized due to his turbulent relationship with Belgrade socialite Elena Karaman. They were married for 1½ years during the early 1990s, and had two sons before divorcing. During the divorce proceedings, he often wore a Los Angeles Dodgers baseball cap with the initials "L.A.", dedicated to their sons Luka and Andreja.

He was involved in several high-profile protests against the NATO bombing campaign of Yugoslavia, his home country. He was fined over 5 million pesetas by Real Madrid after refusing to play against Alavés in April 1999.

In the years following his divorce, Mijatović got remarried to Serbian fashion model Aneta Milićević. The couple has three daughters: Nađa (born 1999), Nina, and Lola.

Since becoming Real Madrid football director, Mijatović resides in Madrid, which he thinks is the perfect city for a footballer[2].

[edit] External links