Vlado Bozinovski

{{short description|Australian footballer}}

{{Multiple issues|

{{BLP sources|date=November 2014}}

{{more footnotes needed|date=November 2014}}

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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2023}}

{{Infobox football biography

| name = Vlado Bozinovski

| image =

| fullname =

| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1964|3|30|df=y}}

| birth_place = Ohrid, SFR Yugoslavia

| height = {{height|m=1.80}}

| position = Midfielder

| youthyears1 =

| youthclubs1 =

| years1 = 1982–1983

| years2 = 1984–1985

| years3 = 1985–1989

| years4 = 1989

| years5 = 1989–1990

| years6 = 1990–1991

| years7 = 1991–1992

| years8 = 1992–1993

| years9 = 1993–1995

| years10 = 1995–1996

| years11 = 1996

| years12 = 1996–1998

| years13 = 1998

| years14 = 1999–2000

| years15 = 2001

| clubs1 = Hellas-Hakoah

| clubs2 = South Melbourne

| clubs3 = Footscray JUST

| clubs4 = Club Brugge

| clubs5 = Beira-Mar

| clubs6 = Sporting CP

| clubs7 = Beira-Mar

| clubs8 = Ipswich Town

| clubs9 = Paços Ferreira

| clubs10 = Felgueiras

| clubs11 = Tiong Bahru United{{cite news|author=Joe Dorai|title=Jaguars sign Aussie Bozinoski|newspaper=The Straits Times|page=32|date=23 May 1996}}{{cite news|title=Jaguars allowed replacement|newspaper=The Straits Times|page=30|date=15 August 1996}}

| clubs12 = Ankaragücü

| clubs13 = Tanjong Pagar United

| clubs14 = Home United

| clubs15 = Clementi Khalsa

| caps1 = 33

| caps2 = 13

| caps3 = 61

| caps4 = 6

| caps5 = 32

| caps6 = 11

| caps7 = 23

| caps8 = 9

| caps9 = 60

| caps10 = 20

| caps11 =

| caps12 = 46

| caps13 =

| caps14 =

| caps15 = 19

| goals1 = 3

| goals2 = 1

| goals3 = 7

| goals4 = 0

| goals5 = 2

| goals6 = 0

| goals7 = 1

| goals8 = 0

| goals9 = 2

| goals10 = 0

| goals11 =

| goals12 = 6

| goals13 =

| goals14 =

| goals15 = 2

| totalcaps = 333

| totalgoals = 24

| nationalyears1 = 1988

| nationalyears2 = 1988–1992

| nationalteam1 = Australia U23

| nationalteam2 = Australia

| nationalcaps1 = 3

| nationalcaps2 = 6

| nationalgoals1 = 0

| nationalgoals2 = 1

| manageryears1 = 2001

| managerclubs1 = Clementi Khalsa (player-coach)

}}

Vlado Bozinovski (born 30 March 1964) is an Australian retired footballer who played as a defensive midfielder.

Club career

Bozinovski immigrated to Australia in his teens, going on to play football in the country for South Melbourne FC and Footscray JUST. In 1989, aged 25, and following a very brief spell in Belgium, he moved to Portugal and joined S.C. Beira-Mar, appearing in 32 league games as the Aveiro club retained its top division status.

Staying in the country, Bozinovski signed for giants Sporting Clube de Portugal but, after one single season, returned to his previous club and, in the following year, signed for Ipswich Town in the Premier League. He appeared in only one fourth of the games for the Blues, who only narrowly avoided relegation.

In the 1993 summer, Bozinovski returned to Portugal, representing F.C. Paços de Ferreira and F.C. Felgueiras, playing two out of three seasons in the top flight. He signed for S.League club Tiong Bahru United in May 1999. He left for Turkey the same year where he competed in the 1996–97 Süper Lig with Ankaragücü. The 33-year-old then returned to Singapore, where he played for Tanjong Pagar United FC, Home United FC and Clementi Khalsa FC, the latter as a player-coach until he was relieved of his coaching duties in September 2001.{{cite news|author=Jose Raymond|title=Coaching change at struggling Clementi Khalsa|newspaper=Today|page=31|date=29 September 2001}} He retired at the end of the 2001 season.

Subsequently, Bozinovski became a players agent.{{cite web|url=http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/04/19/1019020710562.html|title=Sharks hoping Hiro can be the hero in do-or-die final|work=The Sydney Morning Herald|date=20 April 2002|access-date=19 May 2011}}

International career

Bozinovski gained six caps for Australia, scoring once in the process. His debut took place on 13 June 1988, in a 1–0 friendly win with the United States in Orlando, Florida.

Additionally, Bozinovski represented the nation at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, appearing twice as a substitute in an eventual quarterfinal exit.{{cite web|url=https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/bo/vlado-bozinovski-1.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200418094125/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/bo/vlado-bozinovski-1.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=18 April 2020|title=Vlado Bozinoski Biography and Statistics|publisher=Sports-reference|access-date=1 December 2010}}

References

{{reflist}}