Žarko Varajić

Medal record
Men's basketball
Representing  Yugoslavia
Olympic Games
1976 Montreal Team competition
EuroBasket
1979 Italy Team competition
1977 Belgium Team competition

Žarko Varajić (Serbian Cyrillic: Жарко Варајић; born December 26, 1951 in Nikšić, PR Montenegro, FPR Yugoslavia) is a retired Serbian basketball player that represented SFR Yugoslavia as a player. Before he started to play basketball, he played football for the pioneer team of BC Sutjeska from Niksic. Varajic lives in Belgrade since 1992. He graduated from the University of Physical Education, Academy for Basketball Coaches - section Basketball and Academy for Sport`s Managers.

Professionally was engaged as

Club career

Eighteen-year-old Varajić arrived at Bosna, a club competing in the second-tier of Yugoslav basketball, in 1970.[1] With young players such as Ante Đogić, Rođeni Krvavac, and center Zdravko Čečur on the roster, the club sought promotion to the top-tier Yugoslav First League, a feat that had been eluding them for decades.

During summer 1971, the head coaching post was taken over by the 24-year-old Bogdan Tanjević who had just retired from playing. The young squad led by a young rookie head coach, with new acquisition 22-year-old Svetislav Pešić from KK Partizan, the only player on the roster to have previously played top-tier basketball,[2] KK Bosna managed to gain promotion to the top-tier Yugoslav First League.

In 1979, Varajić scored 45 points – the record in the number of points scored in the final matches of the European Champions' Cup (nowadays the Euroleague) during the period he played with Bosna Sarajevo against the Italian Emerson Varese in Bosna's triumph 96-93, in Grenoble, France.

Actively played basketball from 1966 to 1984

With BC Bosnia won the following trophies

National Team

As a National Team Player Varajic played 126 times and won the following medals:

Awards and Honors

Administrative career

References

  1. Tomašević, Aleksandar (16 March 1978). "Kad se Skenderijom prolomi "Varaja majstore!"". Ven. Retrieved 7 September 2015.
  2. Sofić, Ibrahim (4 April 2014). "Boša o tituli iz 1979: Neki drugi svijet". Al Jazeera Balkans. Retrieved 7 September 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 29, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.