Yugoslavia at the 1984 Winter Olympics
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Yugoslavia at the Olympic Games | ||||||||||
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At the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo | ||||||||||
Competitors | ||||||||||
Medals Rank: 14 |
Gold 0 |
Silver 1 |
Bronze 0 |
Total 1 |
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Olympic history (summary) | ||||||||||
Summer Games | ||||||||||
1920 • 1924 • 1928 • 1932 • 1936 • 1948 • 1952 • 1956 • 1960 • 1964 • 1968 • 1972 • 1976 • 1980 • 1984 • 1988 • 1992* • 1996 • 2000
*As Independent Olympic Participants |
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Winter Games | ||||||||||
1924 • 1928 • 1932 • 1936 • 1948 • 1952 • 1956 • 1960 • 1964 • 1968 • 1972 • 1976 • 1980 • 1984 • 1988 • 1992 • 1994 • 1998 • 2002 | ||||||||||
Other related appearances | ||||||||||
Serbia (1912, 2008–) Croatia (1992–) Slovenia (1992–) Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992–) FYR Macedonia (1996–) Serbia and Montenegro (2004–2006) Montenegro (2008–) |
The Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was the host nation for the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo. Prior to these Games, Yugoslavia had never won a medal at the Winter Games, but Jure Franko won a silver medal in the men's giant slalom to become a national hero.
Contents |
[edit] Medals
[edit] Silver
- Jure Franko — Alpine Skiing, Men's Super-G
[edit] Results and competitors by event
[edit] Alpine Skiing
Men's Downhill
- Janez Pleteršek — 1:48.97 (→ 27th place)
- Tomaž Jemc — 1:49.68 (→ 30th place)
Men's Slalom
- Bojan Križaj — 1:41.51 (→ 7th place)
- Tomaž Cerkovnik — 1:42.97 (→ 11th place)
- Jože Kuralt — 1:44.85 (→ 13th place)
- Jure Franko — did not finish (→ no ranking)
Men's Super-G
- Jure Franko — 2:41.41 (→ Silver Medal)
- Bojan Križaj — 2:43.48 (→ 9th place)
- Grega Benedik — did not finish (→ no ranking)
Women's Slalom
- Mateja Svet — 1:40.85 (→ 15th place)
- Anja Zavadlav — did not finish (→ no ranking)
- Nuša Tome — did not finish (→ no ranking)
- Andrea Leskovšek — disqualified (→ no ranking)
Women's Super-G
- Andrea Leskovšek — 2:24.61 (→ 16th place)
- Veronika Šarec — 2:25.01 (→ 20th place)
- Nuša Tome — 2:26.21 (→ 22nd place)
- Mateja Svet — 2:26.22 (→ 23rd place)
[edit] Biathlon
Men's 10 km
- Andrej Lanišek — 36:16.0 (→ 49th place)
- Marjan Vidmar — 37:08.1 (→ 54th place)
- Tomislav Lopatić — 40:18.2 (→ 57th place)
Men's 20 km
- Andrej Lanišek — 1:24:23.1 (→ 41st place)
- Marjan Vidmar — 1:26:32.1 (→ 46th place)
- Jure Velepec — 1:27:05.8 (→ 48th place)
Men's 4 x 7,5 km Relay
- Andrej Lanišek, Jure Velepec, Zoran Ćosić, and Franjo Jakovac — 1:54:13.80 (→ 17th and last place)
[edit] Bobsleigh
Men's Two Man Bobsled
- Yugoslavia I
- Zdravko Stojnić and Siniša Tubić — 3:34.02 (→ 22nd place)
- Yugoslavia II
- Boris Rađenović and Nikola Korica — 3:34.13 (→ 24th place)
Men's Four Man Bobsled
- Yugoslavia I
- Zdravko Stojnić, Mario Franjić, Siniša Tubić, and Nikola Korica — 3:26.48 (→ 19th place)
- Yugoslavia II
- Nenad Prodanović, Ognjen Sokolović, Zoran Sokolović, and Borislav Vujadinović — 3:28.31 (→ 23rd place)
[edit] Ice Hockey
- Igor Beribak
- Mustafa Bešić
- Dejan Burnik
- Marjan Gorenc
- Edo Hafner
- Gorazd Hiti
- Drago Horvat
- Peter Klemenc
- Jože Kovač
- Vojko Lajovec
- Blaž Lomovšek
- Drago Mlinarec
- Murajica Pajić
- Cveto Pretnar
- Bojan Razpet
- Ivan Ščap
- Matjaž Sekelj
- Zvone Šuvak
- Andrej Vidmar
- Domine Lomovšek
[edit] Speed Skating
Men's 500 m
- Nenad Žvanut — 42.55 (→ 39th place)
- Behudin Merdović — 46.34 (→ 41st place)
Men's 1,000 m
- Nenad Žvanut — 1:26.63 (→ 41st place)
- Behudin Merdović — 1:33.33 (→ 43rd place)
Men's 1,500 m
- Behudin Merdović — 2:19.25 (→ 40th place)
Men's 5,000 m
- Behudin Merdović — disqualified (→ no ranking)
Women's 500 m
- Dubravka Vukušić — 51.99 (→ 31st place)
- Bibija Kerla — 51.99 (→ 32nd place)
Women's 1,000 m
- Bibija Kerla — 1:51.06 (→ 36th place)
- Dubravka Vukušić — 2:03.02 (→ 36th place)
Women's 1,500 m
- Dubravka Vukušić — 2:42.12 (→ 31st place)
- Bibija Kerla — 2:46.32 (→ 32nd place)
Women's 3,000 m
- Bibija Kerla — 5:37.67 (→ 36th place)
[edit] References
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