Milutin Ivković

Milutin Ivković (Serbian Cyrillic: Милутин Ивкoвић, pronounced [milǔtin ǐvkoʋitɕ]; 3 March 1906 – 23 May 1943) was a Serbian doctor and football defender who played for Yugoslavia at the 1928 Summer Olympics and the 1930 FIFA World Cup.[1]

Milutin Ivković
Ivković at the 1930 FIFA World Cup
Personal information
Full name Milutin Ivković
Date of birth (1906-03-03)3 March 1906
Place of birth Belgrade, Kingdom of Serbia
Date of death 23 May 1943(1943-05-23) (aged 37)
Place of death Jajinci, Nazi-occupied Serbia
Height 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)
Playing position(s) Right-back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1922–1929 SK Jugoslavija 235
1929–1934 BASK Belgrade 100
Župa Aleksandrovac
National team
1925–1934 Kingdom of Yugoslavia 39 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

After his playing career, he became a communist political activist. He was killed by Nazi Germany during World War II on 23 May 1943 in Jajinci (near the capital city Belgrade).[1]

Early life

Ivković was born in Belgrade on 3 March 1906. His mother Milica was the granddaughter of the Serbian Vojvoda Radomir Putnik. It was during his childhood that he received his life-long nickname of Milutinac (pronounced [milutǐnats]).

Playing career

Club career

He started playing football in the youth team of SK Jugoslavija, and became a regular senior player for the club between 1922 and 1929 playing a total of 235 matches. Towards the end of his career he moved to another Belgrade club, BASK.

International career

Ivković played for the Yugoslav national team a total of 39 times. He made his debut on 28 October 1925 against Czechoslovakia (0-7 defeat) in Prague, and his last match for the national team was played on 16 December 1934 against France (2-3 defeat) in Paris. He participated in the first 1930 FIFA World Cup in Montevideo.

Post-playing career

In 1934, he graduated from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Medicine and after completing his military service he opened office in Belgrade.

Ivković joined the Progressive Movement and was one of the leaders of the boycott of the Olympic Games in Berlin. On June 1938 he became the editor of Mladost, launched at the initiative of the Communist Youth League.

Death and legacy

During the occupation of Yugoslavia, he cooperated with the Yugoslav Partisans. He was persecuted and on several occasions arrested and prosecuted. On 24 May 1943 at 23:45 hours he was arrested and the next day at Jajinci he was shot and killed "for communist activities". His body was never found.[2]

The Football Association of Serbia set up in 1951 a plaque in the JNA Stadium (currently, FK Partizan stadium) and a street next to the Red Star Stadium (former playground of SK Jugoslavija) bears his name. Additionally, a monument made by Vladimir Jokanović, was erected in the outskirts of the same stadium and was inaugurated on 16 May 2013.

gollark: I don't know how many are in my data dump in total, but I was training it jankily on Colab so it only ran for a few tens of thousands of steps.
gollark: Anyway, I did train a GPT-2 model on my messages ages ago. It wasn't very good, but I think this is just because I did not know much ML stuff at the time, so it was a small model and very undertrained.
gollark: A day or so, I forgot.
gollark: Oh, oops, it's 54MB compressed altogether, I read the wrong thing.
gollark: 587MB.

References

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