Highlights and Goals of Slovan Bratislava 1-4 Dinamo Zagreb UEFA ...
UEFA Champions League 2024-2025 Matchday 4 Tuesday, November 5, 2024
Updated an hour agoFULL TIME
Dinamo Zagreb's 4-1 away win over Slovan Bratislava leaves them in last place in the UEFA Champions League.Sandro Kulenovic, unmarked, found the ball only to push it in.
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He later coached Lustenau 07 from March to December 2009,5 as well as WAC St. Andrä from May 2010 to June 2013. Bjelica moved to Austria Vienna on June 17, 2013 as their new coach6 and qualified the team for the 2013-14 UEFA Champions League group stage after defeating Croatian champions Dinamo Zagreb in the final qualifying round.7 Bjelica was fired on February 16, 2014.8 As Austria Wien failed to qualify for the UEFA Europa League at the end of the season, his contract expired.
In June 2014, he was hired by Serie B side Spezia.9 On August 30, 2016, he was appointed coach of Polish side Lech Poznań.10 On May 10, 2018, he was released from his contract.
On May 15, 2018, Bjelica signed a two-year contract with Croatian champions Dinamo Zagreb, being appointed their coach.12 Four days later, he celebrated winning the league title, while on May 23 he won the Croatian Cup. On November 8, Dinamo managed to qualify for the knockout stage of the 2018-19 UEFA Europa League after defeating Spartak Trnava.13 On September 18, 2019, Bjelica led Dinamo in the club's inaugural UEFA Champions League match after two seasons, with a 4-0 home win over Atalanta.14 On April 16, 2020, after the club fired the entire coaching staff, it was announced that Dinamo terminated Bjelica's contract.
In September 2020, after failing to win the first three games of the season, Croatian club Osijek fired their coach, Ivica Kulešević, and appointed Bjelica in his place. In the 2020-21 season they finished in second place, breaking a number of club records, from the best league result in the club's history with 77 points to the lowest number of goals conceded, with 23 goals. At the start of the 2022-23 season, after a win against Hajduk Split, Bjelica was released at the end of August.
On April 18, 2023, Bjelica was introduced as the new coach of Trabzonspor of the Turkish Super League.18 On October 8, he was relieved of his duties because of a series of poor results.
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Dinamo Zagreb 2-2 Slovan Bratislava
September 20, 2000
Dinanamo Zagreb 1-1 Slovan Bratislava
12 September 2000
Slovan Bratislava 0-3 Dinamo Zagreb
29 September 1969
Slovan Bratislava 0-0 Dinamo Zagreb
September 15, 1969
Dinamo Zagreb 3-0 Slovan Bratislava
Shin injury / End of November 2024
Yuri Medvedev
Illness / End November 2024
Juraj Kucka
Meniscus injury / Early December 2024
Robert Mak
Ankle injury / Doubtful
The club was founded on April 9, 1911 and on June 9, 1945 merged with three other Zagreb sports entities: HAŠK, Građanski and Concordia. During the time Croatia was part of Yugoslavia, it played in the Yugoslav First League, where it won four leagues and seven cups. In addition, it was the first Croatian and Yugoslav club to win a European competition, the Fairs Cup in its 1967/68 edition. During that time, Dinamo was never relegated from the top flight.
When Croatia became independent, the team joined the Prva HNL, changed its name to Hajduk and had other denominations, such as HAŠK Građanski and Croatia Zagreb. However, it regained its original name in 2000. In 2011, the presidency added the appellation “Građanski” (in English, “citizens”) to the social name and celebrated the centenary events, taking Građanski Zagreb as the founding date.
The entity maintains a strong rivalry with Hajduk Split, with whom it disputes the so-called “Eternal Derby”.
Slovan became the first and so far only club in Slovakia, as well as in the former Czechoslovakia, to win a European competition by winning the Cup Winners' Cup after defeating F. C. Barcelona in the final in Basel in 1969. In addition, the club contributed seven players to Czechoslovakia's Euro 1976 victory.
At its inauguration, the stadium had a capacity of 25,000 seats. This capacity was increased with the construction of a second forum in 1961, to accommodate 45 000 spectators, in addition to the installation of a scoreboard, night lighting and renovation of the turf, and was used as a home ground by the Czechoslovakia national soccer team.
After the dissolution of Czechoslovakia in 1993, the Tehelné pole became one of the country's main stadiums. In 1990, the stadium was modernized and its capacity was reduced to 30,000 seats, all seated. It is the second largest stadium in Slovakia, after the Všešportový areál in Košice, which seats 30,312 spectators.
During the 2005-2006 season, Tehelné pole hosted FC Artmedia Bratislava's home matches in the UEFA Champions League, as its stadium did not meet the standards required by UEFA.
The stadium closed its doors in November 2009 and was subsequently demolished in 2013, and in its place the new Tehelné pole or National Football Stadium was erected, with a capacity of 22 000 people and a cost of about EUR 80 million, financed by the state. The need for a new stadium stems from standards set by UEFA in 2008 that no stadium in the entire country meets.