Željko Obradović

Player

Birthday March 9, 1960

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Čačak, PR Serbia, FPR Yugoslavia

Age 64 years old

Nationality Serbia

#15346 Most Popular

1924

In Liga ACB, Joventut finished in 3rd place with 24–14 record.

1960

Željko Obradović (born 9 March 1960) is a Serbian professional basketball coach and former professional player who is the head coach for Partizan of the Basketball League of Serbia (KLS), the ABA League and the EuroLeague.

Widely regarded as the greatest coach in European basketball history and outside the NBA, Obradović has won a total of 64 club titles and honours over the course of his 30-year-long coaching career, including a record nine EuroLeague titles with five different clubs, along with 18 EuroLeague Final Four appearances.

Obradović was born on 9 March 1960, in Čačak, PR Serbia, FPR Yugoslavia.

Obradović started his club career as a basketball player with Borac Čačak, in their youth system.

1970

He was brought in by Partizan's incoming head coach Moka Slavnić and vice president Dragan Kićanović, both recent retirees who had starred on the Yugoslav national team throughout the 1970s as a legendary guard duo.

1977

During the 1977–78 season, then eighteen-year-old Obradović, got his first taste of senior men's team basketball at Borac, as he appeared in six Yugoslav First Federal League games during the season, and contributed a total of 3 points.

1979

With Yugoslav under-19 national team, he played at the 1979 FIBA Under-19 World Championship.

He was also a member of the senior Yugoslav national team.

1984

After eventually establishing himself as the team's starting point guard, he stayed with the club until 1984.

Over the summer 1984, twenty-four-year-old Obradović joined Partizan.

1986

In Obradović's third season with the team, Partizan won the 1986–87 season title of the Yugoslav League.

1987

In the following season, they reached the 1987–88 season edition of the European Champions Cup's Final Four.

1988

With Yugoslavia's senior national team, he won a silver medal at the 1988 Summer Olympics, and a gold medal at the 1990 FIBA World Championship.

Obradović's greatness as a professional club basketball coach, is fully confirmed by the great collection of titles he has acquired in his twenty-eight-year career as a head coach, including: a record 9 European-wide premiere level EuroLeague championships (won with five different teams), a record 14 EuroLeague Finals appearances, a record 18 EuroLeague Final Four appearances, two European-wide secondary level Saporta Cup championships, and numerous national domestic league championships and national cups.

1989

Finally, they won the 1989 Yugoslav Cup and the Korać Cup's championship of the 1988–89 season.

During his time at Partizan, Obradović established himself as one of the best and most reliable point guards in Yugoslavia's top-level league.

Obradović's playing career came to a halt when he was sentenced to two years in prison after causing the death of a pedestrian in a car accident.

After serving his prison sentence, Obradović returned to the court as a player, and already in his latter days as a player, he began coaching Partizan's youth team.

1990

Also joining the front office in the technical director capacity was another fresh retiree from playing, thirty-one-year-old Milenko Savović, Obradović's longtime teammate at Partizan, who had spent the previous 1990–91 season playing for Vojvodina.

1991

He retired from playing basketball in 1991, and he then immediately signed on as head coach of the senior team of the club.

Obradović was a member of the junior national teams of Yugoslavia.

Obradović's coaching career began quite suddenly in the summer of 1991 while he was still an active thirty-one-year-old Partizan player getting ready for EuroBasket 1991 with the Yugoslav national team.

Selected and coached by Dušan Ivković, the 1991 national squad was to be captained by Obradović—the oldest player among the assembled group.

However, after finishing the training camp in Poreč and coming back to Belgrade to sleep over before leaving in the morning for a preparation friendly tournament in Dortmund, Germany, Obradović got called in for a meeting with the Partizan management—club president Radojica Nikčević, vice-president Dragan Kićanović, as well as board members Đorđe "Siske" Čolović, Milorad "Miketa" Đurić, and Dragan Todorić—who convinced him to take over the Partizan head coaching job, which entailed retiring from playing effective immediately thus giving up a chance to captain the national team at the upcoming EuroBasket.

The idea was to have Obradović, a debutante head coach, work under the guidance of experienced elder statesman of Yugoslav basketball, sixty-seven-year-old professor Aleksandar Nikolić, whose coaching advisory services were soon secured by Kićanović and the club management.

In the 1991–92 season, Partizan had a 20–2 record in the 1991–92 YUBA League regular season.

In the playoffs, they progressed to the final, winning the best-of-five series 3–0 against Crvena zvezda.

In European competition, Obradović led the young squad to become the champions of 1991–92 FIBA European League, on the spur of breakup of Yugoslavia.

Partizan played its international matches in Fuenlabrada, Spain, due to international sanctions imposed on FR Yugoslavia.

1992

It also won the Yugoslav Cup in 1992, beating Bosna 105–70 in the final game.

In 1992–93 season, Partizan was runner-up to Crvena zvezda with 3–2 record in the final series.

1993

In 1993 Yugoslav Cup, it lost with 104–91 in the final game to OKK Beograd.

In 1993, Obradović signed a contract with the Spanish team Joventut, based in Badalona.

With Joventut, he won the 1993–94 FIBA European League.

1994

In 1994 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto, Joventut was eliminated in the quarterfinals.

However, he won the 1994 Lliga Catalana de Bàsquet.

1997

In addition to his success at club level, he has also won major trophies as head coach of the Yugoslavia national team (present-day Serbia), most notably winning the gold medals at EuroBasket 1997 and the 1998 FIBA World Championship.

Among his individual coaching awards, he has won two FIBA European Coach of the Year awards, three EuroLeague Coach of the Year awards, four Greek Basket League Best Coach awards, the ABA League Coach of the Season award, two Manager of the Year in Turkey awards, the Best Sports Coach in Greece award and the Ivković Award for Lifetime Achievement.

2008

In 2008, he was named one of the 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors, making the list as one of the ten head coaches that were chosen.