Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. Stjepan Bobek ( pronunciación en croata: /stjêpaːn bǒbek/; Zagreb, Yugoslavia, 3 de diciembre de 1923 – Belgrado, Serbia, 22 de agosto de 2010) 1 fue un futbolista y entrenador serbocroata que jugaba de delantero. 2 . Era reconocido por su técnica y su alta capacidad goleadora por lo que es habitualmente reconocido como uno de los ...

  2. Stjepan Bobek (pronounced [stjêpaːn bǒbek]; 3 December 1923 – 22 August 2010) was a Croatian and Yugoslav professional football striker and later football manager. Usually a forward or attacking midfielder, Bobek was renowned for his technique, vision and goalscoring ability and is commonly regarded as one of Yugoslavia's ...

  3. 22 de ago. de 2010 · Former FK Partizan and Yugoslavia striker Stjepan Bobek has died at the age of 86 in Belgrade. The prolific forward was, along with FK Crvena Zvezda midfielder Rajko Mitić, one of the leading...

  4. es.uefa.com › 021c-0e8e846dfc91-e613b81f8c07-1000--la-leyenda-goleadora-de-bobekLa leyenda goleadora de Bobek | UEFA.com

    13 de ene. de 2019 · El récord goleador de Lionel Messi de 253 goles en la Liga inspiró a UEFA.com a buscar el máximo goleador en las ligas europeas. En este artículo nuestro compañero Elvir Islamović nos recuerda la...

  5. 13 de ago. de 2020 · Stjepan Bobek. FMH Editorial. Beginnings. Stjepan Bobek was born in Zagreb, now the capital of Croatia, but then in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, in 1923. He started in men’s football aged 13, pretending to be his older brother. After the Second World War, he moved from Zagreb to play for Partizan Belgrade. Yugoslavia’s Greatest Player?

  6. 23 de ago. de 2010 · Belgrado, Serbia / 23.08.2010 00:54:00. Durante 13 años, Bobek jugó 468 partidos e hizo 403 goles. El ex futbolista y entrenador del Partizan, Stjepan Bobek, una leyenda del futbol de la ex...

  7. 23 de sept. de 2010 · Thu 23 Sep 2010 12.41 EDT. The striker Stjepan Bobek, who has died aged 86, will always be linked with his fellow player Rajko Mitic in the coruscating Yugoslavia team of the late 1940s and 50s.