Zlatko Papec

Zlatko Papec (17 January 1934 – 3 February 2013) was a Croatian footballer.[1]

Zlatko Papec
Personal information
Date of birth (1934-01-17)17 January 1934
Place of birth Zagreb, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Date of death 3 February 2013(2013-02-03) (aged 79)
Place of death Split, Croatia
Playing position(s) Forward
Youth career
Lokomotiva Zagreb
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1952–1955 Lokomotiva Zagreb 57 (20)
1956–1964 Hajduk Split 177 (55)
1964–1968 Freiburger FC 130 (10)
1968–1969 Rijeka 4 (0)
1971–1972 Junak Sinj
Total 368 (85)
National team
1953–1956 Yugoslavia 6 (4)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

He began his career playing as a left winger at Zagreb's Lokomotiva, at the time when the club was a regular member of the Yugoslav First League, and was part of the greatest attacking lineup in the history of the club, alongside Josip Odžak, Vladimir Čonč, Vladimir Firm and Drago Hmelina. Papec appeared in 57 league matches for Lokomotiva in the period from 1952 to 1955, when he was conscripted and then served the compulsory military service in the Yugoslav Navy.

After leaving the navy he joined Hajduk Split in 1956 and stayed with the club until 1964. In this period he appeared in a total of 366 matches and scored 167 goals (including 177 appearances and 55 goals in the First League). In 1964 he moved abroad and joined second level West German side Freiburger FC, where he established himself as a first team regular immediately upon arrival and appeared in 130 matches in his four seasons with club. In 1968, he returned to Yugoslavia and briefly joined NK Rijeka. He had effectively retired in the late 1960s, although he later returned to the pitch and had a brief stint with second-level side NK Junak Sinj in the 1971–1972 season.

Papec was capped for Yugoslavia six times between 1953 and 1956. He made his debut on 14 May 1953 in a friendly against Belgium played at Heysel Stadium and his last international game was a friendly against Indonesia held on 23 December 1956 in Jakarta.[2] He was also a member of the Yugoslav squad which reached the quarter-finals at the 1954 World Cup[3] and was part of the Yugoslav team which won silver medal at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne.

Statistics

International goals

#DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
1.28 November 1956Olympic Park Stadium, Melbourne, Australia United States9–1Win1956 Summer Olympics
2.4 December 1956Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne, Australia India4–1Win1956 Summer Olympics
3.4 December 1956Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne, Australia India4–1Win1956 Summer Olympics
4.23 December 1956Gelora Senayan Main Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia Indonesia1–5WinFriendly
Correct as of 27 February 2016[4]
gollark: I'm sure I read about some accursed workaround for such devices.
gollark: Which is probably not that much worse than the real GPT-3.
gollark: Assuming they haven't trained their own model, which I'm fairly confident in, the most powerful thing they could be using is the 20-billion-parameter GPT-NeoX.
gollark: They don't actually specify what LM they use, weird.
gollark: Ah, not GPT-3 then but a vaguely similar thing, fascinating.

References

  1. Preminuo je Zlatko Papec (79): Za Hajduk odigrao 366 susreta, 24sata.hr, 4 February 2013 (in Croatian)
  2. "Papec Zlatko". reprezentacija.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 24 March 2013.
  3. "1954 FIFA World Cup Switzerland - Yugoslavia squad". FIFA. Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  4. Football PLAYER: Zlatko Papec
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