OFK Beograd
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2022}}
{{Infobox football club
| clubname = OFK Beograd
| image = OFK Beograd.png
| upright = 0.6
| fullname = Omladinski fudbalski klub Beograd
| current =
| nickname = Romantičari (The Romantics)
Plavo-beli (The Blue-Whites)
| founded = {{Start date and age|6 July 1911}} as Beogradski sport klub {{small|(disputed)}}
{{Start date and age|25 March 1945}} as Radnički sportski klub Metalac
| ground = Kraljevica Stadium, Zaječar (temporarily){{cite web | url=https://sportal.blic.rs/fudbal/ofk-beograd-se-seli-u-zajecar-zbog-renoviranja-stadiona/2024041809304826826 | title=OFK Beograd se seli u Zaječar! | date=18 April 2024 }}
| capacity = 8,168
| chairman = Momčilo Minić
| mgrtitle = Head coach
| manager = Simo Krunić
| league = Serbian SuperLiga
| season = 2024–25
| position = Serbian SuperLiga, 4th of 16
| website = {{URL|ofkbeograd.com}}
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OFK Beograd ({{lang-sr-Cyrl|ОФК Београд – Омладински фудбалски клуб Београд}}, English: Belgrade Youth Football Club), also known in English as OFK Belgrade{{Cite web |title=OFK Belgrade Scores, Stats and Highlights - ESPN (AU) |url=https://www.espn.com.au/football/team/_/id/5273 |access-date=2025-01-17 |website=ESPN |language=en}} and currently referred to as OFK Beograd Mozzart Bet for sponsorship reasons,{{Cite web | url=https://ofkbeograd.com/2024/08/15/ozvanicena-saradnja-ofk-beograda-i-kompanije-mozzart/ | title=Ozvaničena saradnja OFK Beograda i kompanije Mozzart | language=Serbian | publisher=ofkbeograd.com | date=14 August 2024 | accessdate=14 August 2024}}{{Cite web | url=https://www.mozzartsport.com/fudbal/vesti/romantika-sa-novim-imenom-ofk-beograd-mozzart-bet/489566 | title=Romantika sa novim imenom - OFK Beograd Mozzart Bet | language=Serbian | publisher=www.mozzartsport.com | date=14 August 2024 | accessdate=14 August 2024}} is a Serbian professional football club based in Belgrade, more precisely in Karaburma, an urban neighborhood of the municipality of Palilula. It is part of the OSD Beograd sport society.
All up, the club has won 5 national championships, in the following seasons: 1930–31, 1932–33, 1934–35, 1935–36, and 1938–39; the club won these titles under their old name of BSK (Beogradski Sport Klub).{{cite web|url=http://www.ofkbeograd.co.rs/?tip=menu&page=9option=com_content&task=view&id=724&Itemid=43|title=NAŠI TROFEJI! PET PUTA ŠAMPION DRŽAVE!;– OFK (NAŠI TROFEJI! PET PUTA ŠAMPION DRŽAVE!)|publisher=ofkbeograd.co.rs|access-date=16 November 2020|archive-date=6 November 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221106145231/http://www.ofkbeograd.co.rs/?tip=menu&page=9option=com_content&task=view&id=724&Itemid=43|url-status=live}} The club has been cup winners five times also, winning in the following seasons: 1934, 1953, 1955, 1961–62, and 1965–66.
The club has also recorded significant results in European competition, reaching the 1962–63 European Cup Winners' Cup semi-finals where they lost to Tottenham Hotspur. They reached the 1972–73 UEFA Cup quarter-finals where they lost to FC Twente.
History
=The beginning=
The club was founded in 1945 as Metalac but it is considered to be the successor of BSK, one of the most prominent football clubs in Kingdom of Serbia and later Kingdom of Yugoslavia. It was also the most successful club between 1923 and 1941, with five national champion titles. BSK played its first game on 13 October 1911 against Šumadija from Kragujevac and won 8–1.
File: Milutinovic.jpg, 1955–56 European Cup top scorer, came to the club from Bayern.]]
In 1945, after World War II, the club was established under the name Metalac by some former members of BSK. This club carried the name until 1950, when it was renamed to BSK, but in the 1957 the club merged with TSK Šumadija to form OFK Beograd (Serbian Latin: Omladinski fudbalski klub, {{langx|en|YFC – Youth Football Club}}).[https://www.rsssf.org/tablesj/joegfound.html Serbia and Montenegro - List of Foundation Dates]
=The golden era=
A two-decade-long "Golden Era" began when the club won the Yugoslav Cup in 1953. Three other Yugoslav Cup wins followed, in 1955 and the 1961–62 and 1965–66 seasons. The club was the Yugoslav First League runner-up twice, in 1954–55 and 1965–66. In the meantime, the club had changed its name once again. In 1957, the club was named OFK Beograd, once again in an attempt to attract spectators to the stadium, especially younger ones who often opted for either Red Star or Partizan. In that time, the players played elegant football and therefore got the nickname of "Romantičari".
File: Josip Skoblar en 1970.jpg won the European Golden Shoe in 1971.]]
File: Slobodan Santrač crop.jpg , All time best scorer of the Yugoslav national league]]
The 1960s and the first half of the 1970s were years of European glory. OFK Beograd had participated eight times in European competitions. Their biggest success came in the 1962–63 European Cup Winners' Cup season, playing in the semi-final against Tottenham Hotspur, eventual champions. In the following ten years, teams such as Napoli, Feyenoord, Panathinaikos, Bologna F.C. 1909, FC Twente and Juventus also lost to OFK Beograd.
=The silent fall=
The Romantičari were not able to take advantage of their success on the domestic and European scene. After several successful seasons, a sudden fall occurred. During the 1980s, the club often changed leagues from the First Division to the Second.
=Modern era=
In the summer of 2003, they were back in European competition. They played in the UEFA Intertoto Cup. OFK defeated Estonian side Narva Trans at home by the score of 6–1, but UEFA cancelled the result because of a smoke bomb being thrown on the field during the game. Consequently, only the second leg result would count. OFK Beograd won in Tallinn with a score of 5–3. They were eliminated in the second round by Czech club 1. FC Slovácko, with a score of 4–3.
File: Aleksandar Kolarov.jpg, with whom OFK Beograd reached the national cup final]]
The club was back on the European stage in 2004. They started playing in the second round of the Intertoto Cup and eliminated Dinaburg. In the third round, OFK went on to play against Tampere United. OFK Beograd defeated their Finnish opponents and went on to play in the semifinals. They were eliminated by Atlético Madrid losing the first leg 1–3 at home with Aleksandar Simić scoring for OFK and Fernando Torres, Diego Simeone and Ariel Ibagaza scoring for Atlético, losing the second leg 2–0 in Madrid meant OFK were eliminated 1–5 on aggregate. Even though OFK were eliminated it was seen as an honour and a return to the club's glory days to have a European powerhouse such as Atlético play at Omladinski Stadium with world class talents such as Torres and Simeone.
In 2005, the club entered the UEFA Cup in the second round of qualifying losing to Lokomotiv Plovdiv on the away goals rule. In 2006, the club faced French side Auxerre in the UEFA Cup. In the first game, in Belgrade, OFK defeated their opponents by the score of 1–0 a goal from centre-back Miloš Bajalica in the 31st minute of play proving the difference, a great result considering Auxerre was then one of France's strongest clubs. In the second game OFK Beograd lost 5–1 with the result standing at 2–1 for Auxerre with ten minutes to play, a result which would see OFK Beograd eliminate Auxerre. However, the young OFK team capitulated in the last ten minutes of play conceding three goals and were eliminated 5–2 on aggregate. In the 2010 Europa League, OFK beat Torpedo Zhodino of Belarus 3–2[http://www.scorespro.com/soccer/livescore/ofk-beograd-vs-torpedo-zhodino/15-07-2010/ OFK Beograd – Torpedo Zhodino : 2–2] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180322204612/https://www.scorespro.com/soccer/livescore/ofk-beograd-vs-torpedo-zhodino/15-07-2010/ |date=22 March 2018 }} Match report from Scorespro.com[http://www.scorespro.com/soccer/livescore/torpedo-zhodino-vs-ofk-beograd/22-07-2010/ Torpedo Zhodino – OFK Beograd : 0–1] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150131201907/http://www.scorespro.com/soccer/livescore/torpedo-zhodino-vs-ofk-beograd/22-07-2010 |date=31 January 2015 }} Match report from Scorespro.com on aggregate and went on to play Galatasaray where they lost 7–3 on aggregate, coming back from two-nil down to draw 2–2 with late goals been scored by Miloš Krstić and Nenad Injac in Turkey against Galatasaray but ultimately losing the second leg 1–5 at home with Danilo Nikolić scoring the only goal for OFK.
OFK Beograd were relegated from the Serbian SuperLiga after finishing fifteenth in the 2015–16 season. The next season saw relegation from the 2016–17 Serbian First League after finishing bottom of the table. The club played in the Serbian League Belgrade in the 2017–18 season (their first season in the Serbian third tier), finishing in second place behind Žarkovo who were promoted to the Serbian second tier.
In November 2018 the "Klub prijatelja OFK Beograda" was formed (trans. "Club of Friends of OFK Beograd") with the goal of saving the club from becoming extinct and helping the club through its most difficult times. The KPO is made up of loyal fans who want to see OFK return to its former glories competing at the very top of the first tier of Serbian football.
File: Spasoje Samardžić (1967).jpg, Eredevisie champion with Feyenoord]]
In their second year in the Serbian third division, OFK finished in fifth position on 46 points, with Grafičar being promoted to the second division. OFK did however manage to win the Belgrade Cup.
In the 2019–20 season, OFK commenced their third successive season in the Serbian third tier with hiring former accomplished player Stevica Kuzmanovski as coach. On 25 September 2019, in the last 32 of the Serbian Cup, OFK faced their city rivals FK Rad and won 3–2 with two goals from Andreja Lazović and one goal from Stefan Janković. This was considered quite a success as OFK where at this time in the Serbian third division and FK Rad in the Serbian top division the SuperLiga. COVID-19 Pandemic resulted in the season coming to a halt for clubs in the third division Belgrade league, OFK finished the season in a disappointing 3rd place. The eventual champions were IMT who were promoted to the Serbian First League (Second Division of the Serbian football pyramid), another hammer blow for OFK as a 4th consecutive season in the Serbian 3rd tier would come in season 2020–21 for a club barely surviving financially.{{Cite web|url=http://www.ofkbeograd.co.rs////2020-07-31|title=OFK-Vesti|website=ofkbeograd.co.rs|language=sr|access-date=2020-07-31}} At the conclusion of the 2022–23 season, OFK finished in first place in the Serbian League Belgrade, securing promotion to the Serbian First League for the 2023–24 season.
On 14 August 2024, OFK was renamed to OFK Beograd Mozzart Bet for sponsorship reasons.
Honours
=Domestic=
==League==
- Yugoslav First League
- Winners (5): 1930–31, 1932–33, 1934–35, 1935–36, 1938–39
- Yugoslav Second League
- Winners (3): 1958–59 (East), 1979–80 (East), 1984–85 (East)
- Serbian First League
- Winners (1): 2023–24
==Cups==
- Yugoslav Cup
- Winners (5): 1934, 1953, 1955, 1961–62, 1965–66
- Runners-up: 1938
- Serbia and Montenegro Cup
- Runners-up: 2005–06
=European=
- UEFA Cup Winners' Cup
- Semi-finals: 1962–63
- UEFA Cup
- Quarter-finals: 1972–73
- Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
- Semi-finals: 1958–60
=Unofficial=
- Serbian Championship
- Winners: 1919–20, 1920–21
- Serbian League (top level between 1940 and 1944)
- Winners: 1939–40, 1940–41, 1942–43, 1943–44
- Runners-up: 1941–42
- People's Republic of Serbia League (Belgrade championship)
- Winners: 1945
- Serbian Cup
- Winners: 1941
European competitions
{{Main|OFK Beograd in European football}}
Before UEFA was founded (in 1954), OFK Beograd, under the name of Beogradski Sport Klub (BSK), participated in Mitropa Cup, the first really international European football competition. The club competed for five seasons without a big success, usually stopped by teams from Hungary, the major football power at the time. In UEFA competitions, OFK Beograd played 16 seasons, the biggest success being reaching the semifinals of the 1962–63 European Cup Winners' Cup.
=UEFA competitions summary=
class="wikitable" | ||||||||||||
style="width:250px;"| OFK Beograd
! style="width:50px;"| Seasons ! style="width:30px;"| P ! style="width:20px;"| W ! style="width:20px;"| D ! style="width:20px;"| L ! style="width:30px;"| F ! style="width:30px;"| A ! style="width:45px;"| Match Pts%W ! ! style="width:35px;"| Ties P ! style="width:35px;"| Ties W ! style="width:35px;"| Ties L ! style="width:45px;"| Ties %W | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
style="text-align:center;"
| Representing Serbia {{flagicon|Serbia}} |2 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 4 | 8 | 50.00 | 2| | ||||
|2| | ||||||||||||
style="text-align:center;"
| Representing Yugoslavia {{flagicon|YUG}} |8 | 38 | 14 | 7 | 17 | 64 | 69 | 46.05 | 18 | 10 | 8 | 55.56 | |
style="text-align:center;"
| Total |10 | 42 | 16 | 7 | 19 | 68 | 76 | 46.43 | 20 | 10 | 10 | 50.00 |
Youth system
File:Ivanovic 2.JPG honed his skills at OFK Beograd.]]
OFK Beograd's youth system has a reputation as one of the best in the history of Serbian football. In its 107 years of existence, it produced and promoted hundreds of players who played not just for the club, but for the national team as well. Among these players are the likes of Josip Skoblar, Spasoje Samardžić, Ilija Petković, Slobodan Santrač, Dragoslav Stepanović, Mitar Mrkela, Saša Ćurčić, Duško Tošić, Branislav Ivanović, Aleksandar Kolarov, and many others.
Since OFK Beograd's existence, attention was always turned to the younger categories of players. Recently, the club has built a new private training center, comprising eight playing fields along with training equipment with the newest technology.
A youth school was created with 150 players born between 1996 and 1999.{{citation needed|date=September 2022}} There are also seven competitive teams for which more than 170 players are playing. The youth system compromises around 20 highly qualified coaches who are all specialized in certain areas of the game. Most of the coaches are former players who spent years at the club and who also went through the same youth system. Several physios are also present and are equipped with the newest technology for their work.
Rivals
OFK's biggest rivals are FK Rad from the Belgrade suburb of Banjica. It is known as the small Belgrade derby. In the mid-2000s in a game between the two clubs in the last game of the season OFK scored a last minute equalizer against Rad meaning Rad were relegated for the first time in almost twenty-five years. In the following season when OFK were playing in the Intertoto Cup Rad fans threw a number of flares from outside the stadium forcing UEFA to award the game 3–0 against OFK even though OFK won the game 6–1 against Estonian club Narva Trans.
Other rivals to a much lesser degree include Crvena Zvezda and FK Partizan.
After being relegated to Serbian League Belgrade OFK had a bitter rivalry with FK Zemun.
Supporters
{{Main|Plava Unija}}
OFK Beograd's fans are commonly known as Plava Unija (The Blue Union) since 1994. When Beogradski Sportski Klub (BSK) was founded in 1911, the club which dominated the fields of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes developed a significant fan base. Throughout the several wars that took place since the founding of BSK, the club's turbulent history has produced adverse effects on the average attendance of today's matches in which OFK Beograd plays.
An organized group appeared for the first time in 1984 under the name of "Blue Thunders". The group lived under that name until 1990. When they were influenced by the rise of nationalism in Yugoslavia, they change their name to "Sokolovi" (The Falcons). The group officially collapsed in 1993 about a year after UN sanctions were put on FR Yugoslavia. The fans' love towards the club was certainly not forgotten and in 1994 a new group is founded – Blue Union Belgrade. The name remains the title of OFK Beograd's main group of ultras.
OFK Beograd's fans have been known to be resistant of past regimes. In the 1990s, Milicionar, a pro-regime police-backed team, entered the first division. When OFK Beograd first played against them, the OFK fans reacted with creation of a banner which bore the message "Goal Against the Regime." Among other things, members of Plava Unija also reinstated the old ex-Yugoslav firms habit of finding local home crews when their team was on away matches, no matter which Serbian town or city was in question.
Plava Unija fostered a friendship with Voždovac's fans, "Invalidi" while the club still played in Yugoslavia's second tier from 1996 to 1998. That friendship still remains to this day. OFK Beograd is also known to be supported by fans of Dynamo Moscow and Anorthosis Famagusta.[http://ofkmsk.ru/news Moscow fan club OFK Beograd] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120514050606/http://ofkmsk.ru/news |date=14 May 2012 }} official website {{in lang|ru}}
Players
=Current squad=
{{updated|20 April 2025|{{cite news|url=https://www.superliga.rs/tim/ofk-beograd/|title=Tim|language=sr|publisher=Serbian SuperLiga|access-date=10 August 2024}}}}
{{Fs start}}
{{Fs player|no=1|nat=MNE|name=Balša Popović|pos=GK}}
{{Fs player|no=3|nat=GHA|name=Edmund Addo|pos=MF|other=on loan from Red Star Belgrade}}
{{Fs player|no=4|nat=SRB|name=Andrej Pavlović|pos=DF|other=on loan from Red Star Belgrade}}
{{Fs player|no=5|nat=SRB|name=Darko Gojković|pos=DF}}
{{Fs player|no=6|nat=KEN|name=Richard Odada|pos=MF|other=on loan from Dundee United}}
{{Fs player|no=7|nat=SRB|name=Nikola Knežević|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=8|nat=SRB|name=Aleksa Cvetković|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=10|nat=SRB|name=Saša Marković|pos=MF|other=captain}}
{{Fs player|no=11|nat=SRB|name=Nikola Mituljikić|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=12|nat=SRB|name=Stefan Šćepović|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=13|nat=MNE|name=Nikola Vujadinović|pos=DF}}
{{Fs player|no=14|nat=SRB|name=Miljan Momčilović|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=15|nat=SRB|name=Aleksandar Đermanović|pos=DF|other=vice-captain}}
{{Fs player|no=16|nat=GHA|name=Kwadwo Opoku Ackah|pos=DF|other=on loan from Red Star Belgrade}}
{{Fs player|no=17|nat=SRB|name=Slobodan Stanojlović|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=18|nat=MNE|name=Miloš Lalević|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=19|nat=SRB|name=Vasilije Grbović|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=20|nat=SRB|name=Srđan Nikolić|pos=DF}}
{{Fs mid}}
{{Fs player|no=22|nat=SRB|name=Nedeljko Stojišić|pos=GK}}
{{Fs player|no=23|nat=GHA|name=Felix Osei Agyemang|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=25|nat=CIV|name=Issiaka Dembele|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=27|nat=NGA|name=Prince Benjamin Obasi|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=29|nat=MKD|name=Stefan Despotovski|pos=DF}}
{{Fs player|no=37|nat=GHA|name=Samuel Owusu|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=39|nat=SUR|name=Gleofilo Vlijter|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=45|nat=SRB|name=Aleksej Vukičević|pos=DF}}
{{Fs player|no=63|nat=SRB|name=Stefan Obradović|pos=DF}}
{{Fs player|no=69|nat=SRB|name=Dragan Stoisavljević|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=71|nat=SRB|name=Adem Avdić|pos=DF|other=on loan from Red Star Belgrade}}
{{Fs player|no=77|nat=SRB|name=Marko Gobeljić|pos=DF}}
{{Fs player|no=80|nat=SRB|name=Dimitrije Stevanović|pos=GK}}
{{Fs player|no=88|nat=SRB|name=Filip Halabrin|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=91|nat=SRB|name=Lazar Jovanović|pos=FW|other=on loan from Red Star Belgrade}}
{{Fs player|no=92|nat=SRB|name=Stefan Papić|pos=GK}}
{{Fs player|no=94|nat=BRA|name=Diogo Bezerra|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=99|nat=SUI|name=Filip Stojilković|pos=FW|other=on loan from Darmstadt 98}}
{{Fs end}}
= Players with multiple nationalities =
{{div col}}
- {{flagicon|SRB}} {{flagicon|CRO}} Aleksej Vukičević
- {{flagicon|SRB}} {{flagicon|BIH}} Slobodan Stanojlović
- {{flagicon|MNE}} {{flagicon|SRB}} Balša Popović
- {{flagicon|MNE}} {{flagicon|SRB}} Miloš Lalević
- {{flagicon|MNE}} {{flagicon|BUL}} Nikola Vujadinović
- {{flagicon|MKD}} {{flagicon|SRB}} Stefan Despotovski
- {{flagicon|KEN}} {{flagicon|SRB}} Richard Odada
- {{flagicon|SUI}} {{flagicon|SRB}} Filip Stojilković
{{div col end}}
=Dual registration=
{{Fs start}}
{{Fs player|no=25|nat=CIV|name=Issiaka Dembele|pos=MF|other=with Sloboda Užice until the end of the 2024–25 season}}
{{Fs player|no=27|nat=NGA|name=Prince Benjamin Obasi|pos=FW|other=with Sloven until the end of the 2024–25 season}}
{{Fs mid}}
{{Fs player|no=63|nat=SRB|name=Stefan Obradović|pos=DF|other=with Mladost Novi Sad until the end of the 2024–25 season}}
{{Fs player|no=88|nat=SRB|name=Filip Halabrin|pos=MF|other=with Sloboda Užice until the end of the 2024–25 season}}
{{Fs end}}
=Out on loan=
{{Fs start}}
{{Fs player|no=|nat=SRB|name=Nemanja Milunović|pos=DF|other=at GSP Polet Dorćol}}
{{Fs player|no=|nat=SRB|name=Bogdan Mojsilović|pos=MF|other=at OFK Kikinda}}
{{Fs mid}}
{{Fs player|no=|nat=BLR|name=Daniil Dushevskiy|pos=MF|other=at Mladost Novi Sad}}
{{Fs end}}
Club officials
=Coaching staff=
class="wikitable" | |
Position | Name |
---|---|
Manager | {{Flagicon|BIH}} Simo Krunić |
Assistant manager | {{Flagicon|SRB}} Mladen Jovančić {{Flagicon|SRB}} Bojan Pavlović {{Flagicon|SRB}} Vladimir Božić {{Flagicon|SRB}} Đorđe Ivelja |
Fitness coach | {{Flagicon|SRB}} Vlada Živanović |
Physiotherapist | {{Flagicon|SRB}} Marko Igrutinović |
Goalkeeping coach | {{Flagicon|SRB}} Rade Grahovac |
General director | {{Flagicon|SRB}} Balša Terzić |
Sporting director | {{Flagicon|SRB}} Andrej Mrkela |
Technical director | {{Flagicon|SRB}} Marko Mitrović |
General secretary | {{Flagicon|SRB}} Vladimir Rašić |
Club president | {{Flagicon|SRB}} Momčilo Minić |
Vice-president | {{Flagicon|SRB}} Stefan Babović {{Flagicon|SRB}} Kostadin Terzić |
UEFA competitions
- Qualified for Europe in 14 seasons (2 in European Cup Winners' Cup, 9 in Europa League/UEFA Cup/Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, 3 in Intertoto Cup)
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |
Season
! Competition ! Round ! Country ! Club ! Home ! Away ! Aggregate |
---|
rowspan=4|1962–63
|rowspan=4|UEFA Cup Winners' Cup |QR |{{flagicon|GDR}} |align=left|Chemie Halle |2–0 |3–3 |bgcolor=green|5–3 |
R1
|{{flagicon|NIR}} |align=left|Portadown |5–1 |2–3 |bgcolor=green|7–4 |
Quarter-final
|{{flagicon|ITA}} |align=left|Napoli |2–0 |1–3 |bgcolor=green|3–3 (3–1 Playoff) |
Semi-final
|{{flagicon|ENG}} |align=left|Tottenham Hotspur |1–2 |1–3 |bgcolor=red|2–5 |
1963–64
|R1 |{{flagicon|ITA}} |align=left|Juventus |2–1 |1–2 |bgcolor=red|3–3 (0–1 Playoff) |
1964–65
|R1 |{{flagicon|ESP}} |align=left|Athletic Bilbao |0–2 |2–2 |bgcolor=red|2–4 |
1966–67
|R1 |{{flagicon|USSR}} |align=left|Spartak Moscow |1–3 |0–3 |bgcolor=red|1–6 |
rowspan=3|1968–69
|rowspan=3|Inter-Cities Fairs Cup |R1 |{{flagicon|ROM}} |align=left|Rapid Bucureşti |6–1 |1–3 |bgcolor=green|7–4 |
R2
|{{flagicon|ITA}} |align=left|Bologna |1–0 |1–1 |bgcolor=green|2–1 |
R3
|{{flagicon|TUR}} |align=left|Goztepe |3–1 |0–2 |bgcolor=red|3–3 (a) |
rowspan=2|1971–72
|rowspan=2|UEFA Cup |R1 |{{flagicon|SWE}} |align=left|Djurgården |4–1 |2–2 |bgcolor=green|6–3 |
R2
|{{flagicon|GDR}} |align=left|FC Carl Zeiss Jena |1–1 |0–4 |bgcolor=red|1–5 |
rowspan=4|1972–73
|rowspan=4|UEFA Cup |R1 |{{flagicon|TCH}} |align=left|Dukla Prague |3–1 |2–2 |bgcolor=green|5–3 |
R2
|{{flagicon|NED}} |align=left|Feyenoord |2–1 |3–4 |bgcolor=green|5–5 (a) |
R3
|{{flagicon|BUL}} |align=left|Beroe Stara Zagora |0–0 |3–1 |bgcolor=green|3–1 |
Quarter-final
|{{flagicon|NED}} |align=left|Twente |3–2 |0–2 |bgcolor=red|3–4 |
rowspan=2| 1973–74
|rowspan=2| UEFA Cup |R1 |{{flagicon|GRE}} |align=left|Panathinaikos |0–1 |2–1 |bgcolor=green|2–2 (a) |
R2
|{{flagicon|USSR}} |align=left|Dinamo Tbilisi |1–5 |0–3 |bgcolor=red|1–8 |
rowspan=2| 2003–04
|rowspan=2| Intertoto Cup |R1 |{{flagicon|EST}} |align=left|Narva Trans |6–1 |5–3 |bgcolor=green|11–4 |
R2
|{{flagicon|CZE}} |align=left|Slovácko |3–3 |0–1 |bgcolor=red|3–4 |
rowspan=3|2004–05
|rowspan=3|Intertoto Cup |R2 |{{flagicon|LAT}} |align=left|Dinaburg |3–1 |2–0 |bgcolor=green|5–1 |
R3
|{{flagicon|FIN}} |align=left|Tampere United |1–0 |0–0 |bgcolor=green|1–0 |
Semi-final
|{{flagicon|Spain}} |align=left|Atlético Madrid |1–3 |0–2 |bgcolor=red|1–5 |
2005–06
|QR2 |{{flagicon|BUL}} |align=left|Lokomotiv Plovdiv |2–1 |0–1 |bgcolor=red|2–2 (a) |
2006–07
|QR2 |{{flagicon|FRA}} |align=left|Auxerre |1–0 |1–5 |bgcolor=red|2–5 |
2008–09
|R2 |{{flagicon|GRE}} |align=left|Panionios |1–0 |1–3 |bgcolor=red|2–3 |
rowspan=2|2010–11
|rowspan=2|Europa League |QR2 |{{flagicon|Belarus}} |align=left|Torpedo Zhodino |2–2 |1–0 |bgcolor=green|3–2 |
QR3
|{{flagicon|Turkey}} |align=left|Galatasaray |1–5 |2–2 |bgcolor=red|3–7 |
Notable former players
:To appear in this section a player must have played at least one international match for their national team at any time.
{{div col|colwidth=20em}}
;Yugoslavia
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Milorad Arsenijević
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} August Bivec
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Radivoj Božić
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Vojin Božović
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Ljubiša Đorđević
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Milorad Dragićević
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Prvoslav Dragićević
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}}{{Flagicon|Banovina of Croatia}} Ernest Dubac
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}}{{Flagicon|Banovina of Croatia}} Franjo Glaser
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Svetislav Glišović
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}}{{Flagicon|Banovina of Croatia}} Ivan Jazbinšek
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Bruno Knežević
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Andreja Kojić
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}}{{Flagicon|Banovina of Croatia}} Gustav Lechner
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Petar Manola
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Blagoje Marjanović
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Milorad Mitrović
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Milorad Nikolić
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Branimir Porobić
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Predrag Radovanović
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Janko Rodin
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Nikola Simić
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Kuzman Sotirović
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Slavko Šurdonja
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Aleksandar Tirnanić
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Dragomir Tošić
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Svetislav Valjarević
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Đorđe Vujadinović
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Sava Antić
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Slobodan Batričević
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Petar Borota
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Srđan Čebinac
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Dragan Gugleta
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Stanoje Jocić
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Miodrag Jovanović
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Tomislav Kaloperović
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Srboljub Krivokuća
- {{flagicon|YUG}}{{Flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Frane Matošić
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Miloš Milutinović
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Mitar Mrkela
- {{flagicon|YUG}}{{Flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Srđan Mrkušić
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Ilija Petković
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Petar Radenković
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Spasoje Samardžić
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Slobodan Santrač
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Dragoslav Šekularac
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Vasilije Šijaković
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Josip Skoblar
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Dragoslav Stepanović
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Lazar Tasić
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Nikoslav Bjegović
- {{flagicon|FRY}}{{Flagicon|YUG}} Saša Ćurčić
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Petar Divić
- {{flagicon|SCG}} Nenad Jestrović
- {{flagicon|SCG}} Đorđe Jokić
- {{flagicon|SCG}} Miloš Kolaković
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Aleksandar Kristić
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Nenad Lalatović
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Milan Obradović
- {{flagicon|SCG}} Dušan Petković
- {{flagicon|FRY}}{{Flagicon|YUG}} Gordan Petrić
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Saša Petrović
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Mihajlo Pjanović
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Dejan Rađenović
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Saša Stevanović
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Boris Vasković
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Aleksandar Živković
;Serbia
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Nikola Aksentijević
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Stefan Babović
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Nikola Beljić
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Jovan Damjanović
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Aleksandar Ignjovski
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Radiša Ilić
- {{flagicon|SRB}}{{Flagicon|SCG}} Branislav Ivanović
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Aleksandar Jevtić
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Andrija Kaluđerović
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Aleksandar Kolarov
- {{flagicon|SRB}}{{Flagicon|SCG}} Ognjen Koroman
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Nenad Krstičić
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Milan Lukač
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Milovan Milović
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Ognjen Mimović
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Aleksandar Paločević
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Slobodan Rajković
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Milan Rodić
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Bojan Šaranov
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Stefan Šćepović
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Vojislav Stanković
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Ivan Stevanović
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Duško Tošić
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Aleksandar Trišović
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Veseljko Trivunović
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Saša Zdjelar
;Armenia
- {{flagicon|ARM}} Ognjen Čančarević
;Australia
- {{flagicon|AUS}} Branko Buljevic
- {{flagicon|AUS}} Milan Ivanović
- {{flagicon|AUS}} Doug Utjesenovic
;Austria
- {{Flagicon|AUT}}{{flagicon|HUN|1920}} Sándor Nemes
;Azerbaijan
- {{flagicon|AZE}} Branimir Subašić
;Bosnia and Herzegovina
- {{flagicon|BIH}} Faruk Hujdurović
- {{flagicon|BIH}} Petar Jelić
- {{flagicon|BIH}} Đorđe Kamber
;Bulgaria
- {{flagicon|BUL}} Blagoy Simeonov
;Cameroon
- {{flagicon|CMR}} Aboubakar Oumarou
;Cyprus
- {{flagicon|CYP}} Milenko Špoljarić
;France
- {{flagicon|FRA}}{{Flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Ivan Bek
;Kazakhstan
- {{flagicon|KAZ}} Nenad Erić
;Latvia
- {{flagicon|LVA}} Oļegs Karavajevs
;Lithuania
- {{flagicon|LTU}} Kęstutis Ruzgys
;Macedonia
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Aleksandar Bajevski
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Filip Despotovski
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Boban Grnčarov
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Hristijan Kirovski
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Bojan Markoski
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Darko Micevski
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Angelko Panov
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Ostoja Stjepanović
;Malta
- {{flagicon|MLT}} Nenad Veselji
;Montenegro
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Vladan Adžić
- {{flagicon|MNE}}{{Flagicon|SCG}} Marko Baša
- {{flagicon|MNE}}{{Flagicon|FRY}} Dragan Bogavac
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Vladimir Božović
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Miodrag Džudović
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Petar Grbić
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Igor Ivanović
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Marko Janković
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Mladen Kašćelan
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Ivan Kecojević
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Nemanja Nikolić
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Mitar Novaković
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Milorad Peković
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Milan Purović
- {{flagicon|MNE}} Ivan Vuković
;Romania
- {{flagicon|ROU}} Svetozar Popović
- {{flagicon|ROU}} Rudolf Wetzer
;Slovakia
- {{flagicon|SVK|1938}}{{Flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Ján Podhradský
;Uganda
- {{flagicon|UGA}} Khalid Aucho
;United States
- {{flagicon|USA}} Ilija Mitić
{{div col end}}
For the list of current and former players with Wikipedia article, please see: :Category:OFK Beograd players.
Coaching history
{{Main|List of OFK Beograd managers}}
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
- {{flagicon|HUN|1920}} Toni Szabó (1923–24)
- {{flagicon|AUT}} Adolf Engel (1927–29)[http://www.exyufudbal.in.rs/predratni-klubovi/article/1-bsk-beograd BSK Beograd] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208102242/http://www.exyufudbal.in.rs/predratni-klubovi/article/1-bsk-beograd |date=8 December 2015 }} at exyufudbal.in.rs, retrieved 29-11-2015
- {{flagicon|HUN|1920}} Sándor Nemes (1930)[https://www.rsssf.org/miscellaneous/nemesneufeld-intl.html Sándor Nemes, also named Alex Neufeld] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230208160234/https://rsssf.org/miscellaneous/nemesneufeld-intl.html |date=8 February 2023 }} was often named Antal Nemes in Yugoslav press
- {{flagicon|AUT}} Adolf Engel (1930–31)
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Nikola Simić (1931–32)
- {{flagicon|HUN|1920}} Sándor Nemes (1933–34)
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Nikola Simić (1934)
- {{flagicon|AUT}} Josef Uridil (1935–1936)
- {{flagicon|HUN|1920}} Sándor Nemes (1936–1938)
- {{flagicon|HUN|1920}} István Mészáros (1939–40)[http://www.iffhs.de/?29dad76b9b97295bd4e9d815a85fdcdc3bfcdc0aec70aeeda8a101 IFFHS] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120321135332/http://www.iffhs.de/?29dad76b9b97295bd4e9d815a85fdcdc3bfcdc0aec70aeeda8a101 |date=21 March 2012 }} match report BSK-Ujpest (1939)[http://www.magyarfutball.hu/en/szemelyek/adatlap/747 Mészáros István profile] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131224101331/http://www.magyarfutball.hu/en/szemelyek/adatlap/747 |date=24 December 2013 }} at magyarfutball.hu
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} Svetozar Popović (1941)[http://nogomet.lzmk.hr/clanak.aspx?id=2130 Svetozar Popović profile] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208123107/http://nogomet.lzmk.hr/clanak.aspx?id=2130 |date=8 December 2015 }} at nogomet.lzmk.hr
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Boško Ralić (1946–47)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Ljubiša Broćić (1947–50)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Milovan Ćirić (1951–53)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Blagoje Marjanović (1953–56)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Vojin Božović (1956–58)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Vojin Božović (1959–60)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Đorđe Vujadinović (1960–61)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Milovan Ćirić (1961–63)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Mile Kos & {{flagicon|YUG}} Sava Antić (1963–64)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Milovan Ćirić (1964–65)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Dragiša Milić (1965–66)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Dragiša Milić & {{flagicon|YUG}} Miloš Milutinović (1966–67)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Žarko Mihajlović (1967–69)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Gojko Zec (1969–70)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Božidar Drenovac (1970–1971)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Boris Marović (1971–1973)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Milutin Šoškić (1973–1976)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Nikola Beogradac (1976–1978)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Velimir Đorđević (1984–1988)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Ilija Petković (1988–1989)
- {{flagicon|YUG}} Milan Živadinović (1990–1991)
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Ilija Petković (1991–1993)
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Blagomir Krivokuća (1993–1995)
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Božidar Milenković (1996–1997)
{{col-2}}
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Miodrag Ješić (1998–1999)
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Zlatko Krmpotić (1999–2000)
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Radmilo Ivančević (2000)
- {{flagicon|FRY}} Zvonko Varga (2000–2001)
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Stevica Kuzmanovski (2003–2004)
- {{flagicon|SCG}} Dragoljub Bekvalac (5 Apr 2004 – 15 May 2004)
- {{flagicon|SCG}} Branko Babić (30 Jun 2004 – Sept 30, 2005)
- {{flagicon|SRB|2004}} Slobodan Krčmarević (23 Oct 2005 – 24 Dec 2006)
- {{flagicon|SRB|2004}} Ratko Dostanić (25 Dec 2006 – 31 Mar 2007)
- {{flagicon|SRB|2004}} Branislav Vukašinović (2 Apr 2007 – 8 Mar 2008)
- {{flagicon|SRB|2004}} Ljupko Petrović (11 Mar 2008 – 21 Apr 2008)
- {{flagicon|SRB|2004}} Mihailo Ivanović (21 Apr 2008 – 17 Apr 2009)
- {{flagicon|BIH}} Simo Krunić (13 Apr 2009 – 30 Jun 2009)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Dejan Đurđević (1 Jul 2009 – 27 Dec 2011)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Branko Babić (10 Jan 2012 – 21 May 2012)
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Stevica Kuzmanovski (29 May 2012 – Sep 16, 2012)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Zoran Milinković (Sep 18, 2012 – Sep 9, 2013)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Zlatko Krmpotić (Sep 11, 2013 – 23 Dec 2013)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Milan Milanović (26 Dec 2013 – 16 Mar 2014)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Zlatko Krmpotić (2014)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Dejan Đurđević (2014–15)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Vladimir Petrović (2015)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Dragoljub Bekvalac (2015)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Slavko Matić (2016)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Ljubiša Stamenković (2016–17)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Petar Divić (2017–18)
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Stevica Kuzmanovski (2019)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Nikola Puača (2019–20)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Marko Mićović (2020)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Miodrag Anđelković (2020–2021)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Goran Lazarević (2022)
- {{flagicon|MKD}} Stevica Kuzmanovski (2022)
- {{flagicon|SRB}} Nenad Grozdić (2022)
- {{flagicon|BIH}} Simo Krunić (2023–present)
{{col-end}}
Shirt sponsors and manufacturers
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{commons category}}
- {{official website|ofkbeograd.com}} {{in lang|sr}}
- [http://ofkbeograd.co.rs/ Unofficial website] {{in lang|sr}}
- [http://ofkbeograd.net/ Unofficial website] {{in lang|sr}}
{{Serbian SuperLiga}}
{{Serbian First League}}
{{First League of Serbia and Montenegro}}
{{Yugoslav First League}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:OFK Beograd}}
Category:Football clubs in Yugoslavia
Category:Association football clubs established in 1911
Category:1911 establishments in Serbia