Vojvodina
Војводина
Nickname(s)Воша / Voša
Лале / Lale (Tulips)
Стара дама / Stara dama (The Old Lady)
Бело-црвени / Belo-crveni (The White-reds)
Short nameFKV, VOJ
Founded6 March 1914 (1914-03-06)
GroundKarađorđe Stadium
Capacity14,458[1]
PresidentDragoljub Zbiljić
Head coachBožidar Bandović
LeagueSerbian SuperLiga
2022–23Serbian SuperLiga, 5th of 16
WebsiteClub website

Fudbalski klub Vojvodina (Serbian Cyrillic: Фудбалски клуб Војводина), commonly known as Vojvodina and colloquially as Voša (Serbian Cyrillic: Воша), is a Serbian professional football club based in Novi Sad, Serbia, the second largest city in Serbia, and one of the most popular clubs in the country. The club is the major part of the Vojvodina multi-sport club and currently the third oldest football club in the Serbian SuperLiga and the most successful football club in Serbia next to the rivals Crvena zvezda and Partizan.

In its long history, Vojvodina were one of the most successful clubs in the former Yugoslavia, winning two First League titles, in 1966 and 1989, were runners-up in 1957, 1962 and 1975, achieved 3rd place in 1992 and finished 5th in the competition's all-time table.[2] Vojvodina were also runners-up in the Yugoslav Cup in 1951. They won the UEFA Intertoto Cup in 1976, the Mitropa Cup in 1977 and were also runners-up of the Mitropa Cup in 1957 and the UEFA Intertoto Cup in 1998. From 1993 to 1997, Vojvodina achieved in the national championship 3rd place five times in a row and were runners-up in the domestic cup in 1997. They were runners-up in the Serbian SuperLiga in 2008–09 Serbian SuperLiga and 3rd place in 2007, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2017 and 2020. Vojvodina were also runners-up of the Serbian Cup in 2007, 2010, 2011 and 2013. They have won the Serbian Cup twice, winning their first title in 2014 and their second in 2020.

History

On 6 March 1914, in Sava Šijakov's weaving mill in the Temerinska Street 12, a group of students of the Serbian Orthodox high school established with the help of intellectuals and craftsman a football club in Novi Sad. The club was founded in secrecy, because the former Austro-Hungarian authorities banned larger organized gatherings of juveniles in the Vojvodina region which was inhabited mostly by Serbs.[3] The club took the name Vojvodina, in order to emphasize the memory of the political-territorial unit of the Serbs in the "Serbian Vojvodina" in which the Serbs, at least on paper, get the same rights as all other citizens in the Habsburg Empire for which they have fought for years. The name Vojvodina means in Serbian a type of duchy, more specifically, a voivodeship. It derives from the word "vojvoda", and means "one who leads warriors" or "war leader".

Among the club founders on that day were the future textile industrialist Milenko Šijakov, the future university professor Vladimir Milićević, the future chemists Milenko Hinić, the future lawyers Radenko Rakić and Kamenko Ćirić, Gojko Tosić, Đorđe Živanov, Branko Gospođinački, the future doctor of law Kosta Hadži and others. The new club played its first match in the village of Kovilj against local club FK Šajkaš. Vojvodina played in bright blue colours and white shorts and won by 5–0. Svetozar Jocković, Jovan Ljubojević, Milorad Milićević, Dušan Kovačev, Jovan Jocković, Ozren Stojanović, Sava Ignjačev, Gavanski, Predrag Stojanović Ciga, Živojin Đeremov and Uroš Čakovac entered the record books as the first players in the history of Vojvodina. The players were mainly pupils and students, who came from Prague in the summer holidays and played only that one match, because shortly before World War I broke out. The strict hand of the Austro-Hungarian authorities stopped all Serbian organizations in Novi Sad and Vojvodina was the first time in the situation to be shut down.[4]

Flag of Vojvodina Novi Sad.

After the liberation, Vojvodina resumed the work thanks to the enthusiasm of Serbian students from Prague. The first president of Vojvodina became Milenko Šijakov, son of weaving mill owner Sava Šijak, and the first secretary became Dr. Živko Bajazet, the longtime president of the Serbian merchant bank and member of the Sokol organization. The club financed solely by membership fees and by generous contributions as by Maks Grin, Daka Popović, the Novaković brothers, Ilija Balabušić and the members of Dunđerski family. Part of the Vojvodina players and management who studied in Prague, were also members of football club Slavia Prague. The Czech club supported the Vojvodina members during the difficult times before and during World War I and contributed in the development of the club. In 1920, was brought from Prague the first set of red and white jerseys. At the club meeting held on 23 July 1922, it was decided that in honour of Slavia Prague the red and white colors adorn the jerseys of Vojvodina. The coat of arms was also partially modeled after Slavia Prague's coat of arms, where the red star of the Czech team was replaced with the blue star, so that Vojvodina's coat of arms had all the colors of the Serbian flag. The first coach, technical director and chief organizer of Vojvodina was the lawyer Dr. Kosta Hadži, one of the main founder of Vojvodina and the Novi Sad Football Subassociation. Under his leadership, Vojvodina won the Novi Sad Subassociation league in 1926, which was the first trophy in its history. Vojvodina played with following players: Mihajlović, Živić, Kričkov, Popović, Vajs, Aleksić, Grgarov, Marjanović, Šević, Petrović, Dudás and Saraz. The club provided the first professional contracts to its players, and also brought professional players from abroad such as Czech Josef Čapek and Hungarians Sándor Dudás and Abraham Saraz.[5] One of the best and most influential Vojvodina players at that time was Dušan Marković, an effective striker who played for Vojvodina from 1921 to 1935. End of the 1930s, Vojvodina brought many good players into the team, which was later known as the Millionaires team and one of the best was Jožef Velker, which became to a crucial player of the club. In 1932, 1934, 1935, 1937–1940, Vojvodina won the Novi Sad Football Subassociation league. Since then, Vojvodina begun having serious pretensions to gain promotion to the Yugoslav First League. The club failed to immediately make an impact, but during the season 1940/41, Vojvodina fought for the top.[6] The final stage of the championship was interrupted by the beginning of World War II, and the Axis bombing, mobilization and country's occupation made the continuation of the competition impossible.[7]

In 1962, Vojvodina was runners-up. However, the results deteriorated in the following seasons and Vojvodina even started fighting against relegation. In 1964 everything changed with Vujadin Boškov as the technical director and Branko Stanković as coach. Vujadin Boškov remodeled and modernized the club. The infrastructure was improved and a new sports center was built. It also organized a successful scouting network and the administration, headed by president Arsa Kovačević, was able to provide all necessary conditions for the competition. Coach Branko Stanković changed the style of play and shifted the emphasis on discipline and running. The only player who had a free hand was Silvester Takač, one of the best players of this generation. In 1966, Vojvodina won the Yugoslav first league for the first time with eight points ahead of second placed Dinamo Zagreb. Members of this generation were Silvester Takač, Ilija Pantelić, Žarko Nikolić, Ivica Brzić, Rajko Aleksić, Đorđe Pavlić, Dobrivoje Trivić, Stevan Sekereš, Đorđe Milić and Stevan Nešticki.

In 1989, under the new coach Ljupko Petrović, Vojvodina spent almost the whole championship as league leaders. During the season, Vojvodina won at home against all top four Yugoslav clubs. Partizan Belgrade was defeated by goals by 3–2,[8] Dinamo Zagreb by 4–1,[9] Hajduk Split by 2–0[10] and finally Red Star by 3–1 in front of more than 27,000 spectators.[11] Vojvodina played the decisive game for the championship against Sloboda Tuzla and needed a win to clinch the title ahead of rival Red Star. Vojvodina won in front of 27.000 spectator by goals from Šestić (twice), Vorkapić and Vujačić with 4–2.[12] The final whistle sparked off a huge celebration inside the stadium as well as a massive celebratory pitch invasion.[13] The second championship trophy was finally won with three points ahead, after 23 years of waiting, by the new generation of players, such as Siniša Mihajlović, Miloš Šestić, Slaviša Jokanović, Budimir Vujačić, Ljubomir Vorkapić, Miroslav Tanjga, Goran Kartalija, Dušan Mijić, Svetozar Šapurić, Čedo Maras, Stevan Milovac, Dragan Punišić and Zoran Mijucić. The following season, Vojvodina fell unhappily in the first round of European Cup against Honvéd Budapest, although most of the key players from the previous league-winning season remained. Losing the first leg by 1–0 at Honvéd was extremely disappointing. During the second leg, things went much better as Vojvodina got up 2–0 by goals from Siniša Mihajlović and Miroslav Tanjga, however a late own goal by defender Dragan Gaćeša dashed Vojvodina hopes of progressing further.[14]

In 1990, Vojvodina failed to defend the previously acquired title and finished the season as 11th. The disintegration of Yugoslavia, the civil war (1992–1995), the inflation and the UN sanctions have hit the Yugoslav football teams hard. The difficult situation forced Vojvodina to sell its best players and the champions team broke up in the early nineties. However, Vojvodina's management, led by Milutin Popivoda, succeeded to assemble a new team. The coaches, mainly Milorad Kosanović, made also a great combination of players from Vojvodina's excellent youth like, Jovo Bosančić, Goran Šaula, Radoslav Samardžić, Goran Ćurko and Srđan Bajčetić, and players from other areas like Aleksandar Kocić, Dejan Govedarica, Goran Jezdimirović, Miodrag Pantelić, Vesko Mihajlović and Zoltan Sabo. From 1992, Vojvodina achieved in the championship always the 3rd place, 6 times in a row, and received the call of the eternal third. In 1995, they finished the first half of the season on the first place. Because of the UN sanctions, in this period Vojvodina, as all the rest of the clubs from FR Yugoslavia, was not allowed to compete in European competitions and the question on how this generation would have played on the international scene was left. However, in 1995, Vojvodina played a friendly match in Amsterdam against Ajax, in the season when they won the UEFA Champions League, where the "old lady" of Serbian football defeated them by 3–2. In 1997, Vojvodina achieved also the cup final, but lost against Red Star. In 1998, Vojvodina started one after another victory in UEFA Intertoto Cup. After eliminating Stabæk (2–0, 2–2), Örebro SK (3–0, 1–0) and Baltika Kaliningrad (3–0, 1–0) in the first three rounds, Vojvodina played the semi-final against SC Bastia. In the first leg, held in Bastia, Vojvodina suffered a 2–0 defeat. Although they were not given any chances in the return leg in Novi Sad, Vojvodina pulled off a convincing 4–0 win. The cup final was played against Werder Bremen. The first match in Bremen was lost by 1–0 and the return game ended with 1–1.[15] Vojvodina coach was Tomislav Manojlović and the red-white jersey was worn by players like Nikola Lazetić, Zdravko Drinčić, Vidak Bratić, Jovan Tanasijević, Vladimir Mudrinić, Zoran Janković, Dragan Žilić, Mićo Vranješ, Saša Cilinšek, Vladimir Matijašević and Leo Lerinc.[16]

Vojvodina's team of the decade 2000–2010, elected by the fans.[17]

In the 2000/01 season, Vojvodina fought unexpectedly for competitive survival in the elite and the club ran into financial problems. The departure of the club director Svetozar Šapurić opened the descent and Vojvodina entered into a several-year long crisis. In a short period of time, numerous managers and coaches were changed regularly and the situation deteriorated more and more. This was a period of mediocre results and the circle of selling the best players to richer European clubs after just a couple of seasons of first-team football and replacing them with fresh young talents. Despite that, at that period, a large number of class players worn the jersey of Vojvodina like Miloš Krasić, Milan Jovanović, Milan Stepanov, Ranko Despotović, Vlada Avramov, Bojan Neziri, Vidak Bratić, Jovan Tanasijević, Radoslav Batak, Milan Vještica, Milan Belić and Miodrag Stošić. In 2005, as a final act of desperation, the organised supporters, the Firmaši and Vojvodina's oldest supporters, called the Stara Garda (English: Old Guard), gathered and took over the assembly of the club to make the public aware on their dissatisfaction and the bad situation in the club. In the same year, the newly arrived club president Ratko Butorović announced a better future for club. The squad was improved and in fact followed the stabilization and the rise of the club, both financial and in terms of results. Also, the management announced large reconstructions of the stadium and training facility, which were realized in the following years.[18][19]

Many players contributed to these successes, some of them are Gojko Kačar, Dušan Tadić, Dragan Mrđa, Marcelo Pletsch, Aboubakar Oumarou, Ranko Despotović, Željko Brkić, Daniel Mojsov, Slobodan Medojević, Miroslav Stevanović, Vlatko Grozdanoski, Giorgi Merebashvili, Miroslav Vulićević, Brana Ilić, Branislav Trajković, Vuk Mitošević, Damir Kahriman, Janko Tumbasević, Darko Lovrić, Savo Pavićević, Joseph Kizito, Danijel Aleksić, Mario Gjurovski, Aleksandar Katai, Nino Pekarić, Vladimir Buač, Nikola Petković and Stephen Appiah.

Club colours and crest

Vojvodina played its first match in bright blue colours and white shorts. Some of the first Vojvodina players and management studied in Prague and were also members of football club Slavia Prague. The Czech club supported the Vojvodina members during the difficult times before and during World War I and contributed in the development of the club. In 1920, was brought from Prague the first set of red and white jerseys. At the club meeting held on 23 July 1922, it was decided that in honour of Slavia Prague the red and white colors adorn the jerseys of Vojvodina. The coat of arms was also partially modeled after Slavia Prague's coat of arms, where the red star of the Czech club was replaced with the blue star, so that Vojvodina's coat of arms had all the colors of the Serbian flag.[20]

Stadium and training facility

Stadium

The home field of Vojvodina is the Karađorđe Stadium. It is named after Karađorđe, the leader of the First Serbian uprising against the Ottoman occupation. Formerly, it was known as the City Stadium or Vojvodina Stadium, but it was renamed on request of the Vojvodina fans in 2007 to Karađorđe Stadium. However, it was in fact the older and original name of the stadium that was used from its foundation until the end of World War II. With a total capacity of about 20 000, of which 15 000 seats,[21] it is one of the largest football stadiums in Serbia. The stadium has a new athletic track, and it is equipped with new Philips LED lights and 1700 lux strong floodlights. The stadium features a VIP sector with 150 seats, VIP café-restaurant, press center, and 14 fully equipped broadcast cabins. It is also the home ground for the Serbian U-21 football team.[22]

In 2012, the executive board announced further reconstructions of Karadjordje Stadium. These will include a new South stand, the reconstruction of Eastern and Southwest stands, and the covering of the whole stadium. The reconstruction will increase the stadium's capacity approximately to 19,500 seats.

Training facility

The FC Vujadin Boškov is the club's training facility and youth academy base. The sports complex is located in Veternik, Novi Sad and was named after football legend Vujadin Boškov. The center has over 85,000 square meters of sports facilities and 2,000 square meters of enclosed space. It has six courts, one with artificial grass and two surrounded by bleachers. It has 8 double rooms and 2 luxury suites, and each unit have most modern equipment. A kitchen supplies the senior team and all the younger categories. The sports complex has also a changing room, gym, medical center, laundry facilities and in the main building houses two press centers. Recreational facility and amusement at both facilities include TV, billiards, table football, computers, air conditioners and other modern equipment. The entire complex is managed by a team of highly qualified personnel. A special service for the 24-hour security of the sports facility is also available. The sport complex is today among the highest value in Southeast Europe.[23]

Youth academy

Miloš Krasić, former youth player of Vojvodina.

Famous for its excellent football youth work, its good scout network, the modern club's training ground and the youth academy base FC Vujadin Boškov, which is well equipped and one of the most prestigious in the Southeast Europe, Vojvodina has developed renowned professional footballers such as Miloš Krasić, Gojko Kačar, Milan Stepanov, Srđan Bajčetić (retired), Dušan Tadić, Željko Brkić, Danijel Aleksić, Slobodan Medojević, Aleksandar Katai, Goran Šaula, Jovo Bosančić, Damir Stojak, Miroslav Stevanović, Sergej Milinković-Savić, Mijat Gaćinović, Milan Jovanović among others. In 2008 and 2009, Vojvodina organized together with the A.C. Milan a training camp at the FC Vujadin Boškov. The Vojvodina junior players were trained there by Milan training techniques and methods. In 2012, Vojvodina's team, led by coach Milan Kosanović, won the Serbian youth championship.

Supporters

The Firmaši during the UEFA Europa League away match against Rapid Wien in 2012.

One of the first organized supports of Vojvodina fans was recorded in 1931, at the away game against Mačva Šabac. Already in 1937, the first organized supporters club was established, probably the first organized supporter group in the former Yugoslavia.[24] Although the club had numerous supporters throughout the history, more organized groups emerged end of the 1970s and beginning of the 1980s. In 1989, for the first time starts the idea of uniting of all the smaller supporter groups. This idea is realized and the group was named Red Firm. A few days later, several youngsters established the group Firma (English: The Firm) as one of the subgroups, because they wanted a Serbian name for their group. The disintegration of Yugoslavia and its follows led to stagnation in all Yugoslavian supporter groups so that in 1992, the Red Firm fell apart and the Firma took over the leadership of the organized supports. The members of Firma call themselves Firmaši (English:Members of the Firma), the plural of the singular form Firmaš, and belongs today to the top supporter groups in Serbia.[25] They are more known as ultras, not hooligans. However, they always protected the name and honour of FK Vojvodina, Novi Sad and Serbia, putting themselves against all who were not doing enough for the club.[26] The Firmaši gather in the north stand of the Karađorđe Stadium, from where they fiercely support their club. Besides football, they also support other sport sections of the Vojvodina Novi Sad Sport Association. The club also has a group of their oldest supporters, called the Stara Garda (English: Old Guard) and who are for more than 40 years in the east stand of the stadium.[27]

Honours

Domestic

League

Cups

Super Cups

International

Individual awards

Serbian SuperLiga Footballer of the Year

Serbian SuperLiga Young Footballer of the Year

Club records

Radomir Krstić is Vojvodinas's record-holder by number of appearances (613 matches). The goal-scoring record-holder is striker Todor Veselinović, with 586 goals (of it 130 goals in the Yugoslav championship). He was also the top scorer of the Yugoslav league in 1956, 1957, 1958 and 1961. In addition, Vojvodina had two more top scorers in its history.[29] In 1993, Vesko Mihajlović with 22 goals and in 2010, Dragan Mrdja also with 22 goals. The first player of Vojvodina, who wore the representative jersey of Yugoslavia was Abraham Saraz Eugen in 1922, where he scored two goals in the match against Czechoslovakia.[30] Since then, numerous Vojvodina football players were in the Yugoslav national team and Todor Veselinović, Vujadin Boškov, Zdravko Rajkov, Dobrosav Krstić, Silvester Takač, Žarko Nikolić, Dobrivoje Trivić and Siniša Mihajlović (a former player of Inter Milan) are among them.

Player records

Club all-time European record

As of 12 August 2021
CompetitionPWDLGFGAGD
European Cup / Champions League9513109+1
UEFA Cup / Europa League592414218880+8
UEFA Europa Conference League420237–4
UEFA Intertoto Cup10613189+9
Mitropa Cup371311135751+6
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup239682722+5

UEFA ranking

As of 1 May 2023[31]
RankTeamPoints
201Serbia FK Čukarički6.475
202Serbia FK Radnički Niš6.475
203Serbia FK Vojvodina6.475
204Serbia FK TSC6.475
205Serbia FK Spartak Subotica6.475

Best results in European competitions

Season Achievement Notes
European Cup / UEFA Champions League
1967 Quarter Final eliminated by Scotland Celtic 1–0 in Novi Sad, 0–2 in Glasgow
Mitropa Cup
1977 Winner First in group with Hungary Vasas, Italy Fiorentina and Czech Republic Sparta Prague
UEFA Intertoto Cup
1976 Winner First in group with Poland Zagłębie,Austria LASK Linz and Sweden Örebro SK
1998 Runner-up lost to Germany Werder Bremen 0–1 in Bremen, 1–1 in Novi Sad

Biggest win in UEFA competition:

Season Match Score
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League
2015–16 Vojvodina Italy Sampdoria 4–0
2007–08 Vojvodina Malta Hibernians 5–1
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
1961–62 Vojvodina Greece Iraklis 9–1
Mitropa Cup
1956–57 Vojvodina Slovakia Slovan Bratislava 6–0
1959–60 Vojvodina Austria Wacker Vienna 5–0
UEFA Intertoto Cup
1987–88 Vojvodina Hungary MTK Budapest 5–0
1977–78 Vojvodina Norway IK Start 5–1
1964–65 Vojvodina Austria First Vienna 5–2

European matches since 2010

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2011–12 UEFA Europa League 2Q Liechtenstein Vaduz 1–3 2–0 3–3 (a)
2012–13 UEFA Europa League 2Q Lithuania Sūduva 1–1 4–0 5–1
3Q Austria Rapid Wien 2–1 0–2 2–3
2013–14 UEFA Europa League 1Q Malta Hibernians 3–2 4–1 7–3
2Q Hungary Budapest Honvéd 2–0 3–1 5–1
3Q Turkey Bursaspor 2–2 3–0 5–2
PO Moldova Sheriff Tiraspol 1–1 1–2 2–3
2014–15 UEFA Europa League 2Q Slovakia AS Trenčín 3–0 0–4 3–4
2015–16 UEFA Europa League 1Q Hungary MTK Budapest 3–1 0–0 3–1
2Q Latvia Spartaks Jūrmala 3–0 1–1 4–1
3Q Italy Sampdoria 0–2 4–0 4–2
PO Czech Republic Viktoria Plzeň 0–3 0–2 0–5
2016–17 UEFA Europa League 1Q Montenegro Bokelj 5–0 1–1 6–1
2Q Wales Connah's Quay Nomads 1–0 2–1 3–1
3Q Belarus Dinamo Minsk 1–1 2–0 3–1
PO Netherlands AZ 0–3 0–0 0–3
2017–18 UEFA Europa League 1Q Slovakia Ružomberok 2–1 0–2 2–3
2020–21 UEFA Europa League 3Q Belgium Standard Liège 1–2 (aet)
2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League 2Q Lithuania Panevėžys 1–0 1–0 2–0
3Q Austria LASK 0–1 1–6 1–7
2023–24 UEFA Europa Conference League 2Q Cyprus APOEL 1–2 1–2 2–4

Current squad

As of 13 January 2024[32][33]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Serbia SRB Nemanja Toroman
2 DF Serbia SRB Marko Bjeković
3 DF Serbia SRB Siniša Tanjga
4 DF Georgia (country) GEO Guram Giorbelidze
5 DF Serbia SRB Đorđe Crnomarković
7 MF Serbia SRB Radomir Milosavljević
8 DF Serbia SRB Stefan Đorđević
9 FW Serbia SRB Stefan Vukić
10 MF Serbia SRB Dejan Zukić
11 FW Serbia SRB Mihailo Ivanović
14 MF Serbia SRB Vladimir Miletić
15 DF Serbia SRB Igor Jeličić
16 MF Montenegro MNE Asmir Kajević
17 MF Serbia SRB Lazar Jovanović
19 FW Democratic Republic of the Congo COD Jonathan Bolingi
20 MF Serbia SRB Uroš Nikolić
23 MF Brazil BRA Matheus Índio
No. Pos. Nation Player
25 GK Montenegro MNE Lazar Carević
28 FW Jamaica JAM Norman Campbell
29 FW Serbia SRB Filip Malbašić (captain)
30 DF Serbia SRB Stefan Bukinac
31 MF Serbia SRB Milan Kovačev
33 DF Serbia SRB Lazar Rosić (vice-captain)
36 GK Serbia SRB Andrej Borak
37 GK Serbia SRB Ranko Puškić
47 MF Serbia SRB Mihajlo Butraković
49 MF Montenegro MNE Andrija Radulović
50 DF Serbia SRB Milan Lazarević
92 FW Serbia SRB Aleksa Vukanović
99 FW Montenegro MNE Ivan Vukčević
–– GK Serbia SRB Dragan Rosić
–– DF Serbia SRB Vuk Bogdanović
–– MF Montenegro MNE Vukan Savićević

Players with multiple nationalities

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Serbia SRB Darko Zuvić (at Hajduk 1912 until the winter transfer window)
GK Serbia SRB Ognjen Bogunović (at Kabel until the winter transfer window)
GK Serbia SRB Uroš Jakovljević (at Radnički SM until the winter transfer window)
DF Serbia SRB Luka Drobnjak (at Mladost GAT until the winter transfer window)
DF Serbia SRB Filip Antonijević (at Voždovac until the end of the season)
MF Serbia SRB Dragan Kokanović (at Mladost GAT until the winter transfer window)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Serbia SRB Miloš Popović (at Mladost GAT until the winter transfer window)
MF Serbia SRB Aleksandar Busnić (at Portugal Vizela until the end of the season)
MF Serbia SRB Vanja Apostolovski (at Kabel until the winter transfer window)
FW Serbia SRB Nikola Pavlica (at Mladost GAT until the winter transfer window)
FW Serbia SRB Lukijan Abadžija (at Mladost GAT until the winter transfer window)
FW Serbia SRB Nemanja Soković (at Kabel until the winter transfer window)

Technical staff

As of 21 December 2023[34]
Current technical staff
  • Manager: Montenegro Serbia Božidar Bandović
  • Assistant Manager/Coach: Serbia Austria Vladica Grujić
  • Assistant Manager/Coach: Serbia North Macedonia Srđan Stojčevski
  • Assistant Manager/Coach: Serbia Nemanja Krtolica
  • Goalkeeping Coach: Serbia Srđan Žakula
  • Fitness Coach: Serbia Aleksandar Jovančević
  • Fitness Coach: Serbia Luka Miljević
  • Doctor: Serbia Dr Borko Vukosav
  • Physiotherapist: Serbia Goran Marijan
  • Physiotherapist: Serbia Nemanja Mijić
  • Physiotherapist: Serbia Marijan Ciganović
  • Economic: Serbia Nemanja Jotanović
  • Economic: Serbia Dragan Vasić
  • Analyst: Serbia Igor Gagričić
  • Secretary of the coaching staff: Serbia Dragomir Vukićević

Club management

Updated 1 December 2023[35]

Current management
  • President: Serbia Dragoljub Zbiljić
  • General director: Serbia Dušan Bajatović
  • Sports director: Serbia Marko Jovanović
  • President of the Assembly: Serbia Milan N. Đukić
  • Director of Stadium: Serbia Jelena Kulpinski
  • Youth school director: Serbia Dušan Grujić
  • Club secretary: Serbia Aleksandar Vlaškalić

Notable players

For all players, see: List of FK Vojvodina players.

To appear in this section a player must have either:
  • Played at least 100 games in Serbian top league.
  • Played at least 80 games for the club.
  • Set a club record or won an individual award while at the club.
  • Played at least one international match for their national team at any time.

For the list of all current and former players with Wikipedia article, please see: Category:FK Vojvodina players.

Managerial history

Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors

Shirt sponsors and manufacturers

References

  1. ""Karađorđe" kroz decenije - FK Vojvodina – Zvanična web prezentacija". Archived from the original on 5 July 2018. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
  2. Tabele-prvi-i-drugi-liga-Jugoslavije.html – Yugoslav first league all-time table Archived 22 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  3. "MTS Mondo, 6 March 2010". 6 March 2010. Archived from the original on 25 March 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
  4. "fkvojvodina.com – Jedan jedini klub (1) – The one and only club (1)". Archived from the original on 31 August 2012. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
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