WHY ex-Yugoslavs are the best footballers

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 25. 03. 2021
  • Footballers from the countries which used to make up Yugoslavia are impressing worldwide, but why? Luka Modric even won the World Footballer of the Year Award in 2018. Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovenia, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Kosovo - all produce outstanding football talent and we delve into the reasons for their success. Kick off! reporter Sebastian Saam argues that ex-Yugoslavs should be classed among the best players in the world.
    Report: Sebastian Saam
    Camera: Thomas Steimer
    Edit: David Jacobi
    ▸ subscribe: goo.gl/Y799RK
    ▸ help us create subtitles: goo.gl/fz2L61
    ▸ our channel: / dwkickoff
    More football stories here:
    Facebook: / dw.kickoff
    Twitter: / dw_sports
    Website: dw.com/sports
  • Sport

Komentáře • 1,7K

  • @aidygooner
    @aidygooner Před 3 lety +1575

    Even the best players of Austria and Switzerland are Balkans. 😂

    • @dwkickoff
      @dwkickoff  Před 3 lety +226

      Kalajdžić, Grbić, Dragović, Šeferović, Shaqiri, Xhaka in the Austrian and Swiss squads just a few days ago.

    • @aidygooner
      @aidygooner Před 3 lety +163

      @@dwkickoff No wonder the match between Serbia and Switzerland felt like a derby match in the last World Cup. 😄

    • @vismong102
      @vismong102 Před 3 lety +20

      @Mi hangsh bolet 1510 Albanians carried Swiss in WC

    • @walterwhitegaming80085
      @walterwhitegaming80085 Před 3 lety +5

      yes lol

    • @walterwhitegaming80085
      @walterwhitegaming80085 Před 3 lety +19

      @@aidygooner serbia was robbed in that match

  • @Darty555
    @Darty555 Před 3 lety +1073

    It's a similar story in basketball too, Jokic, Vucevic, Doncic, Bogdanovic, Dragic and Nurkic all incredibly talented players that come from former Yugoslav nations. An area of the world that is full of talented sportsmen

    • @dwkickoff
      @dwkickoff  Před 3 lety +131

      Basketball powerhouses!

    • @coolvania
      @coolvania Před 3 lety +57

      Don’t forget Peja Stojaković, Vlade Divac, Tony Kukoč, and even Pistol Pete Maravich (his parents were Serbian)

    • @vanhalen4308
      @vanhalen4308 Před 3 lety +18

      Also Predrag Mijatovic (Real Madrid Player who scored oly goal/winning goal In 1998 UCL final againts Juventus After 32 Years)

    • @federicolf9902
      @federicolf9902 Před 3 lety +2

      @@vanhalen4308 À clearly Off-side goal it was. Shame!

    • @vanhalen4308
      @vanhalen4308 Před 3 lety +9

      @@federicolf9902If You see the match Mijatovic was run staright without stop. So that was not an offside Because it was Mistake from Juve defender. They forgot to mark Mijatovic 🤭

  • @aaronkastriotiseni1406
    @aaronkastriotiseni1406 Před 3 lety +280

    I remember the time when we didn't watch any of the European leagues, Yugoalavian firs league was very good.
    We as kids didn't dream playing in Real, Barca, Milan,Juve, Liverpool, Manchester, etc... We dreamed playing for Red Star, Partizan, Dinamo Zagreb, Hajduk.

    • @DorijanGrey
      @DorijanGrey Před rokem +20

      you forgot Velez :)

    • @cristianfuentes2597
      @cristianfuentes2597 Před rokem

      ​@@DorijanGrey velez sarsfield

    • @3054VIC
      @3054VIC Před rokem +1

      In Croatia people did watch other European leagues on tv and Serie A and English Division 1 were popular. But in coastal Croatia they were able to catch Italian TV that other parts of Ex-Yu could not.

    • @ivanbilic5697
      @ivanbilic5697 Před rokem

      @@NikolaJokerMVP15 Dinamo Zagreb: Boban, Prosinecki, Simic, Biscan, Modric, Mandzukic, Corluka, Kranjcar, Lovren, Vida, Vrsaljko.... respect to Partizan youth academy, but even in SFRJ until 90s wasn't the best, after 90s especially. Dinamo Zagreb took the lead in front of everyone.

  • @marjansarec2337
    @marjansarec2337 Před 3 lety +529

    In Slovenija, every small village, city has a football pitch. They're more common than churches. There is a fierce competition even in simple matches between friends.

    • @VonKrauzer
      @VonKrauzer Před 3 lety +18

      @Sebastian Saam they have a chance. This is a tricky group they have, along side with Croatia and Russia. Slovaks may swing a few points on their day too. I think that Russia will probably take first place and two former Yugoslav republics will battle it for the second.

    • @Darwinek
      @Darwinek Před 3 lety +1

      @Sebastian Saam I watched first two Croatia's qualifiers. Don't know what's going on, but they were lackluster.

    • @matyassiegel1732
      @matyassiegel1732 Před 3 lety +4

      well in Czech republic its the same, except there is also church in every village - which is strange considering we are atheist country.

    • @otwone5123
      @otwone5123 Před 3 lety +1

      Bruv, Macedonian and it's the same here, I have literally found football pitches in the middle of the fucking forest

    • @karlomatosevic8437
      @karlomatosevic8437 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Darwinek Croatian coach Zlatko Dalić was trying to see how much younger players can help us in EC, and most importantly in WC. These matches were last chance for some players to show that they deserve to play on big stage. Because be honest it is not same to play friendly match and qualifications for WC. So when some pleyers from U21 came back to senior team, I think that Croatia will go as leader in this group.

  • @crvenimarsovac
    @crvenimarsovac Před 3 lety +328

    I really appreciate how you used ex-Yu music in this video. I can honestly say that I didn't expect that

    • @tonysplit9488
      @tonysplit9488 Před 3 lety +15

      @Sebastian Saam and Slaven Bilić’s guitar solo from his Band “Rawbau” in the beginning of the documentary👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻👍🏻😊

    • @micoculumovic2729
      @micoculumovic2729 Před 3 lety +8

      Atomsko Sklonište, EKV, Dino Dvornik...

    • @RicoBanani
      @RicoBanani Před 3 lety +5

      TBF

    • @tomogvozdenovic1959
      @tomogvozdenovic1959 Před 3 lety

      @Sebastian Saam could you list all the songs you used please?

    • @MyTROTINET
      @MyTROTINET Před 3 lety +4

      @Sebastian Saam you played Krug by EKV 👏 👏👏👏. Serbia did win the under 21 world cup a cpl of years ago too..beating Brazil in the final! Waterpolo...volleyball..tennis.. all sports former Yugoslav nations punch above their weight in..

  • @s52pana
    @s52pana Před 3 lety +469

    I was 8 years old in 98. I really liked Croatia. Their shirts were so sick with the blue and the red & white checkers

  • @jonpirovsky
    @jonpirovsky Před rokem +36

    Some people are surprised that Croatia beat Brazil this year, but they forget that Brazil had met Yugoslavia numerous times before in the World Cup (plus Croatia and Serbia as well). And it has almist always been tight matches. The first ever Brazil match in a World Cup was a defeat against Yugoslavia in 1930.

  • @mr.sushi2221
    @mr.sushi2221 Před 2 lety +192

    I have always had a soft spot for Croatian players. Love the language, the country looks beautiful and their players always play attractive football.

    • @Traveltheworld1818.
      @Traveltheworld1818. Před 2 lety +19

      Croatia has had a player or 2 in a Champions league winning club team for the last 10 years

    • @14Mydarling
      @14Mydarling Před rokem +22

      Croatia qualified in 13/15 big competitions! More than all ex Yugoslavia teams together.
      It says how dominant they are comparing to ex Yugoslavia countries 💪🏼

    • @omermowaffaquejaigirder8889
      @omermowaffaquejaigirder8889 Před rokem

      Convey your love to a bosnian

    • @mr.sushi2221
      @mr.sushi2221 Před rokem

      @@omermowaffaquejaigirder8889 okay

    • @johnsain
      @johnsain Před rokem

      @@Traveltheworld1818. Imagine if there were 100,000,000 Croatians?.....Serbs?.....etc....

  • @kostaszikas8642
    @kostaszikas8642 Před 3 lety +495

    A fun fact: Since the start of Champions League in 1992, in every Final so far there has been at least one ex-Yugoslav across the two teams, except one (in 2006 Arsenal Barca). I don't think any other country can claim this. BTW it's North Macedonia now, not Northern. Cheers!

    • @dwkickoff
      @dwkickoff  Před 3 lety +48

      great stat Kostas

    • @RenegadeShepard69
      @RenegadeShepard69 Před 3 lety +34

      France gets close, with at least one frenchman in at least one of the teams, bench or starting, in every Champions League except for 1999, 2007 and 2010. Congrats to all the Ex-Yugoslavs! It's a record that shows the great strenght of those nations.

    • @korculaamv9820
      @korculaamv9820 Před 3 lety +14

      Damn, i didn't noticed that, i only managed to notice that last 7 finals had atleast one Croat or more

    • @kostaszikas8642
      @kostaszikas8642 Před 3 lety +9

      @Sebastian Saam Thanks! For a long time I was wondering why nobody has picked this up. There is a small asterisk: In 2007 there were two "half-Yugoslavians", namely Zeljko Kalac is Croatian who grew up in Australia so he played for their national team; and Marek Jankulovski is half-Macedonian/half-Czech but played for Czech Rep. Anyways, I still think it's quite amazing and I was kind of lazy to check for other countries but I think this is unique.

    • @dibaskg
      @dibaskg Před 3 lety +8

      Wow… I mean… wow… :-) We’ve reached the point of hearing “Northern Macedonia”, and the only correction we (Greeks) find appropriate is to point out that “it’s North Macedonia now” :-). This is a football-related video, and a very good one, so I won’t expand. I just found the correction hilarious :-) (in a disgusting way).

  • @acapraichu4879
    @acapraichu4879 Před 3 lety +289

    I remember a guy in one of the Yugoslav war video said:
    "Idk what will happen if Yugoslavia reform itself but what I do know is that we will be very good at sports"

    • @powderskier5547
      @powderskier5547 Před 3 lety +5

      Stop talking garbage, Croats never gave their heart playing for stupid dirty communist jugoslavia. This is evident as after they got their independance they have excelled in all sports, they dont need the others

    • @milekiticevsin3290
      @milekiticevsin3290 Před 3 lety +9

      @@powderskier5547 ok

    • @MeME-xs6tk
      @MeME-xs6tk Před 3 lety +16

      @@powderskier5547 Yeah...you can see it in basketball🤭

    • @veduardo4152
      @veduardo4152 Před 3 lety +9

      @@powderskier5547 nakon 20+ godina, jos uvijek toliko mrznje...

    • @ohrid59mk76
      @ohrid59mk76 Před 3 lety +13

      @@powderskier5547 sad si se usrao prijatelju i to do skroz ! pogledaj video kako se Zvone Boban raduje posle finala u Chileu ili Radja , Kukoc u dresu Jugoslavije ! sto je bilo bilo je , al nemoj da pljujes i historija se ne moze menjati o tvojoj volji .

  • @lovrobarbir1273
    @lovrobarbir1273 Před 3 lety +195

    Props to you for pronounciation of Yugoslav names... For a moment I really thought you are of Slavic origins

    • @samykiani944
      @samykiani944 Před 3 lety +21

      He speaks Serbo-Croatian!

    • @lovrobarbir1273
      @lovrobarbir1273 Před 3 lety +5

      @@samykiani944 what really, well that explains a lot, tnx

    • @walterwhitegaming80085
      @walterwhitegaming80085 Před 3 lety +5

      ha lol

    • @tonysplit9488
      @tonysplit9488 Před 3 lety +5

      @Sebastian Saam aaaah zato😊👏🏻👍🏻Bravo

    • @lovrobarbir1273
      @lovrobarbir1273 Před 3 lety +13

      @Sebastian Saam Hahah ništa, zaslužio si svaku pohvalu, znam koliko je težak jezik, a posebno jednom Nijemcu. Još jednom svaka čast i samo tako nastavi

  • @gdchalatsis000
    @gdchalatsis000 Před 3 lety +230

    Volleyball, water polo, handball. Of course basketball, even tennis.
    You name it! Yugos rock!
    Big respect from Greece.

  • @tf3629
    @tf3629 Před 3 lety +138

    It's in their DNA.

  • @jakob9546
    @jakob9546 Před 3 lety +418

    Best sport region on the planet!💯

    • @samykiani944
      @samykiani944 Před 3 lety +14

      I absolutely agree.

    • @schmechmal
      @schmechmal Před 3 lety +10

      In your dreams

    • @Dah2291
      @Dah2291 Před 3 lety +3

      Brazil ? Paris ?

    • @jakob9546
      @jakob9546 Před 3 lety +18

      @@Dah2291 yea you have a Point, but ex Yugo region is all around great:all mayor ball sports they dominante, Cycling(champs), and cuz of Slovenia (mostly) this slavic Balkan region is also very very decent at winter sports. Brazil and France as far as i know are more than not football oh and handball, volleyball but still those 2 are much bigger countries. Idk...

    • @walterwhitegaming80085
      @walterwhitegaming80085 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Dah2291 NO I DONT WANT TO GO TO BRAZIL AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

  • @carlislepanting5219
    @carlislepanting5219 Před 2 lety +20

    I'm a real madrid fan for life & I'm from Belize central America!! They have been so many great Yugoslav & ex Yugoslavia players through the generations at the bernabeu Stadium!! Luka modric at present!! A hero!!✌🙏🌎💖🇧🇿🤗💯

  • @prolificseeker4778
    @prolificseeker4778 Před 3 lety +105

    What a interesting part of the world, Much Love from Mexico🇲🇽

    • @luislicona386
      @luislicona386 Před 3 lety +3

      Mexicano! Greetings from another mexican here. I hope we start getting better results in our own National Team soon!!

    • @MegaTali15
      @MegaTali15 Před 3 lety +1

      Tercer Mexa por aquí!! Saludos!!

    • @bdz798
      @bdz798 Před 2 lety +1

      ORALEE CHICO..much love from Croatia..✌

    • @amarson2322
      @amarson2322 Před 2 lety

      The only thing I dislike about Mexico is the fact that parts of bodies are everywhere and that the cartels are running your countru

    • @buzzerbeaterbuzzerbeater9001
      @buzzerbeaterbuzzerbeater9001 Před 2 lety +1

      Aztecs and Aryans have some kind of historic connection.
      Don t ask me to explain...

  • @VGYugo
    @VGYugo Před 3 lety +330

    Serbia won U20 World Cup in 2015. They beat Brazil 2:1 in the finals.

    • @sidvyas8549
      @sidvyas8549 Před 3 lety +7

      WILD 🔥🔥🔥

    • @aidygooner
      @aidygooner Před 3 lety +48

      Yet their senior team are useless and don't play as a TEAM. 😬 But hopefully they'll find the right balance soon so they can qualify for the next World Cup.

    • @fathanahahmad8795
      @fathanahahmad8795 Před 3 lety +31

      They're pretty good tho, even cr7 had too throw his armband 😂

    • @Azizi1163
      @Azizi1163 Před 3 lety +1

      @@aidygooner the reason is much deeper than u think why are they useless and don't play as a team.

    • @aidygooner
      @aidygooner Před 3 lety +6

      @Dusan Stojanovic I hope so because as a football fan I want to see good players thrive as a team instead of being wasted by bad management, player egos, weak mentality or bad attitudes.

  • @CroHunter96
    @CroHunter96 Před 3 lety +39

    Great great great documentary. I moved with 6 years from Zagreb to Cologne and when I’m nowadays driving though the districts in Zagreb or other Croatian city’s , you can see that on every pitch there are a lot of people . No matter if it’s football or basketball or something else .... it’s just part of the lifestyle . They are even organising some tournaments on their courts because it’s a real community ...Grüße aus Köln

  • @f.meyer_cr7
    @f.meyer_cr7 Před 3 lety +53

    Mario Mandžukić one of my favourite players

  • @anoldtimer
    @anoldtimer Před 3 lety +41

    We still play on the roads. We still use bricks as goalposts, that’s why .

  • @thetarcio
    @thetarcio Před 3 lety +28

    I found this channel this week and i'm completely addicted. Thank you for the subtitles, i'm brazilian and my english isn't that good. It helps a lot!
    Keep the lord football's work, fellows.

  • @siiir1322
    @siiir1322 Před 3 lety +279

    The problem is the corruption in the associations. Just look at serbia.
    They have amazing players and when you look at the quality of the squad, they should atleast make it to every major tournament or even make it everytime to atleast the knock out stages.
    But the corruption and the terrible work from officials destroy the national team.
    Sergej milinkovic savic, luka jovic, tadic, mitrovic, kolarov, milenkovic, matic milivojevic...
    All really good players, some of them World class... and their talent is wasted

    • @kevinwambo1856
      @kevinwambo1856 Před 3 lety +29

      Sad Facts

    • @samykiani944
      @samykiani944 Před 3 lety +30

      Maybe things start to change for Serbia at least. Kokeza is out and Piksi is the coach.

    • @lucasvinicius-xo1ko
      @lucasvinicius-xo1ko Před 3 lety +22

      As a brazillian i can say the same happens in brazil for a long long time, but we're so lucky that we cant stop producing excellent players

    • @sashoksashok8108
      @sashoksashok8108 Před 3 lety +7

      The funny thing is that after the break up of Yugoslavia , the best results they got under "tyran" Milosevic

    • @Darwinek
      @Darwinek Před 3 lety +19

      Just like in Croatia, where Zoran Mamić finally went to jail. Even without him, Dinamo Zagreb eliminated Tottenham. :)

  • @user-xj3ve7wt8k
    @user-xj3ve7wt8k Před 3 lety +74

    1998 - Bronze
    2018 - Silver
    2022 - Bronze
    2038 - Gold ? :)

    • @carlop.7176
      @carlop.7176 Před 3 lety +3

      Sumnjam, al ipak 👍

    • @user-xj3ve7wt8k
      @user-xj3ve7wt8k Před 3 lety +3

      Ali je zanimljivo...

    • @anteahorvat9917
      @anteahorvat9917 Před 3 lety

      @Sebastian Saam👍 😀😀😀

    • @eny8601
      @eny8601 Před 3 lety +1

      I hope so.....⚽️

    • @kristianp.5400
      @kristianp.5400 Před 3 lety

      @@carlop.7176 , zasto sumnjas ??? Sve je moguce i vjeruj mi da ce tako i biti. Da dozivim i to zlato kao i sve prethodne medalje pa da mogu riknut sretan 🇭🇷💪 !!!

  • @tonysplit9488
    @tonysplit9488 Před 3 lety +107

    Really enjoyed the documentary. Excellent research and pronounciation. Respect👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻 Best Regards from Split🇭🇷 Keep on the good work. And keep in mind : Hajduk živi vječno 😊

    • @prolificseeker4778
      @prolificseeker4778 Před 3 lety +13

      Much Love from Mexico🇲🇽,Still can't believe how dominant the 2018 Croatian team was, Modric is a living Legend no doubt...

  • @JoshuaKimbrough
    @JoshuaKimbrough Před 3 lety +121

    That Yugo kit is HARD af!

  • @mariomutaja4317
    @mariomutaja4317 Před 3 lety +33

    Luka Modrić..the Legend

  • @ratisok2324
    @ratisok2324 Před 3 lety +48

    Everything is so well explained and with respect to all ethnicities!
    Would be epic if our clubs (like Dinamo) wouldn't need to sell so much.
    Love from Croatia! 🇭🇷🇭🇷🇭🇷🇭🇷🇭🇷🇭🇷❤❤❤ Ex-Yu countries are the best 💪💪💪

    • @kocostamatis3080
      @kocostamatis3080 Před 2 lety

      Croatia is the best you pussy!!
      🇭🇷❤🇭🇷

    • @DorijanGrey
      @DorijanGrey Před rokem

      Knowing the path
      and walking the path are very different things if you were alive back then you would know that Yugoslavia prefered serbian footballers over any other Yugoslav republic baller ;)

    • @milosl6698
      @milosl6698 Před 8 měsíci

      Di t i je mamic@@DorijanGrey

    • @DorijanGrey
      @DorijanGrey Před 8 měsíci

      @@milosl6698 nije meni al je u Medjugorju mucko djubre :D

  • @FraneTH-ip1fl
    @FraneTH-ip1fl Před 3 lety +29

    The main reason is that the kids still play football on the street with their friends. The kids don’t play that many videogames as in Western Europe. And then there’s just a certain talent for sports . Especially in Split and Dalmatia. Unbelievable how many sport superstars they produced and still produce in various sports

    • @FraneTH-ip1fl
      @FraneTH-ip1fl Před 3 lety +7

      @Sebastian Saam actually there might be something about it. Nikola Vlašić’s sister was a world class high Jump champion. Ivano Balic and Petar Metličić are from Split and won world Championship and Olympic games gold in handball for Croatia. Then Toni Kukoč and Dino Radja are from Split and won three times in a row the European Championship in Basketball for Jugoplastika Split 1989,1990 and 1991. Later Kukoč joined Chicago Bulls and won three times the NBA with Michael Jordan as team mate. Wimbledon winner and Davis Ćup winner Goran Ivanišević and Niki Pilić are also from Split.The people in Split are proud of the fact that they have such a high number of world class athletes in various sports. I think it’s the climate, sun, sea and the fact that the kids love sports. A lot of them are playing on the streets and you can find football courts and Basketball courts all over the city.

    • @cheguevara5560
      @cheguevara5560 Před rokem

      I agree 100 % growing in up in Czechoslovakia in 70es we play football on the street every day ,later some of us joined local clubs ,fast forward 50 years ,when I go there for vacation ,no one is playing football on the street anymore ...and many local clubs are gone ,super markets replaced football pitches ,the result quality of football in Slovakia is average ,huge decline in last 30 years
      . 1961 Czechoslovakia silver at WC in Chile
      1969 Slovan Bratislava / European cup winners Cup
      Winner 1976 European champion in Beograd
      1980 winner Olympic games in Moscow so watching Slovakian football today is a painfull experience for some one who played football more than 30 years ,depressing to watch 🤣🤣

  • @bojanstrackovski631
    @bojanstrackovski631 Před 3 lety +36

    Darko Pancev is highest scorer in top-division European football in the 1990-91 season with 34 goals, winner of the European Golden Boot award in 1991.

    • @robertmitchell8868
      @robertmitchell8868 Před 3 lety +1

      Pancev > Pandev, IMHO.

    • @belioblak8283
      @belioblak8283 Před 3 lety

      Toni Savevski was the best foreign player in the Greece.

    • @IlijaZmaj
      @IlijaZmaj Před 3 lety +3

      Pančev is GOD.

    • @dzemilmehovic5271
      @dzemilmehovic5271 Před 3 lety +2

      Pančev is also still to this day youngest ever footballer to be top scorer of one 1st division league season. He was 18 when he was top scorer of Yugoslav league in 1982/83 for Vardar Skoplje

    • @divinewind7405
      @divinewind7405 Před 2 lety

      THIRTY YEARS AGO MAN! JEEZ

  • @miranblazek5303
    @miranblazek5303 Před 3 lety +22

    Croatian football league is really good, according to ifrastructure. But it's really competative. Our Fottball Asociation is doing good job,no matter the problems

  • @tonysplit9488
    @tonysplit9488 Před 3 lety +53

    Actually Nikola Karabatic’s father is Croatian from Kaštela near Split, his mother is Serbian. He’s fluent in Croatian and spending his summer vacations pretty often in Dalmatia

    • @tonysplit9488
      @tonysplit9488 Před 3 lety +2

      @Sebastian Saam you’re always welcome , mate. And please ignore this obviously paid GNK Dinamo Mamić Mafia Club troll “dumb and dumber”. It is commonly known that Zdravko Mamić is playing trolls like he’s paying journalists, judges, policemen, and politicians (mainly from the HDZ party). This guy is a cancer to Croatian football and society

    • @tonysplit9488
      @tonysplit9488 Před 3 lety

      Paying..not playing. Sorry for the typo

    • @rokhorvat6660
      @rokhorvat6660 Před 3 lety +10

      @DecemberJanuary serbian language uses plenty of turcisms. Same goes for the Bosnians. Serbs are writing cyrillic letters, Croats are using Latin letters. The first serbian book was printed 300 years after the first Croatian book. Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic literally copy and pasted Croatian linguists Marko Marulic and Bartol Kasic who lived 250-300 years before Karadzic. And Karadzic copied them while he was living in Vienna and during a time when Serbia was part of the Ottoman Empire and Turkish language was the official language in Serbia. So if all these people are using the same language then it’s the Croatian language.there is not a single poet or writer from Serbia or Bosnia from the 14th century until the 19th century. While Gundulic, Hektorovic, Marulic, Kašić etc were all Croats from Dalmatia

    • @rokhorvat6660
      @rokhorvat6660 Před 3 lety +9

      @Sebastian Saam call it Croatian language. Because that’s what it basically is. Serbs never experienced Barock, Renaissance. None of the people who are from the Eastern Orthodox Byzantine cultural heritage and who ended up under Ottoman Turkish occupation for 500 years ars Serbia, Montenegro and Macedonia did. On the other handside Croatia never became a Turkish pashaluk and Turks never managed to conquer Split, Zadar, Trogir, Dubrovnik, Šibenik, Karlovac, Sisak, Pula, Rijeka, Opatija, Senj, Zagreb, Varazdin etc this is why Croatia had universities, gymnasiums, printed books and poets and linguists centuries before Serbs and the others. Literally Serbs copied and pasted Croatian language in 19th century and modified it and enhanced it with plenty of turcisms. They also took the Russian Cyrillic alphabet and modified it. Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic did this while he was living in Vienna and while Serbia was still an Ottoman Turkish Pashaluk until 1878.

    • @rokhorvat6660
      @rokhorvat6660 Před 3 lety +7

      @DecemberJanuary Petar Hektorovic, Marko Marulic, Bartol Kašić, Ivan Gundulic, Hanibal Lucic, Marin Drzic, Faust Vrancic..all Croat writers mainly from Dalmatia. From the 15th century to the 18th century. Serbia didn’t have a single poet, writer, linguist, scientist during that time. Of course not since Serbia was under Ottoman Turkish occupation during that time and cut off from (western) European cultural achievements, trends and exchange

  • @fapmashina1
    @fapmashina1 Před 3 lety +10

    Excellent documentary! I'm absolutely delighted how diligent work you've done finding and bringing here so much interesting details in such a well organized and cool manner! Well done! Keep on doing great videos!
    Warm greetings from Croatia!

    • @powderskier5547
      @powderskier5547 Před 3 lety

      You serious? You still craving for jugoslavia? YUCK

  • @MegaTali15
    @MegaTali15 Před 3 lety +37

    I love the Jugoslavija shirt!!
    Does it still exists?? I want one!!
    By the way, I've heard that people from Former Yugoslavia support the other national teams, is that true??
    Pozdrav svima iz Meksika!! Mi volimo vas!! 🇲🇽♥️🇸🇮🇭🇷🇷🇸🇧🇦🇲🇪🇲🇰
    (And no, I didn't used Google translator, I'm learning Serbian)

    • @petarmalovic7624
      @petarmalovic7624 Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah,most of us support each other.Much love to Mexico from Montenegro.

    • @pellevanlig245
      @pellevanlig245 Před 2 lety +1

      Drop Croatia! They ain't part of this.

    • @user-rj4gu5oh3k
      @user-rj4gu5oh3k Před rokem +4

      We do support each other but in the same time our people are one of the most patriotic people in the world so it does get heated sometimes but the best thing to do is put politics aside

    • @fritula6200
      @fritula6200 Před rokem

      What is a Jugslav Shirt ?? Describe it?

    • @rutokelavra819
      @rutokelavra819 Před rokem +1

      @@fritula6200 jel se pravis glup, il ti stvarno pitas?

  • @pretender52
    @pretender52 Před 3 lety +9

    From the way u told the story and the music you used I got goosebumps more than once. You got a like from Croatian!

  • @satanretina2962
    @satanretina2962 Před 3 lety +86

    In my team we have Jan Oblak, stefan savic, Ivo grbic, Sime vrsaljko and ivan saponjic

    • @kinderwood93bari4
      @kinderwood93bari4 Před 3 lety +5

      And we have Mandzukic , Rebic, Krunic,even Ibrahimovic.

    • @pavek7193
      @pavek7193 Před 3 lety

      @Sebastian Saam atletico is also super league founder

    • @janvukovic8717
      @janvukovic8717 Před 3 lety

      Hahaha yesss

    • @marpagapal3312
      @marpagapal3312 Před 3 lety

      Oblak is by far the best keeper in football history, the others don't have quality to play for Atletico...

    • @janvukovic8717
      @janvukovic8717 Před 3 lety

      @@marpagapal3312 yeah man

  • @avenumohan7879
    @avenumohan7879 Před 3 lety +122

    Ibrahimovic should be counted as well

    • @fmac6441
      @fmac6441 Před 3 lety +7

      As well as half of the Swiss team.
      LOL

    • @pabloescobar7479
      @pabloescobar7479 Před 3 lety

      @@fmac6441 and some Switzerland players

    • @stevefrompolaca2403
      @stevefrompolaca2403 Před 3 lety +1

      his mum hails from the zadar region and his dad from bosnia...

    • @BosnianBornBeast
      @BosnianBornBeast Před 2 lety +1

      Tbh, Ibrahimovic is more relevant to this team than say Pulisic. I guess Pulisic wouldn't count because his grandfather was from Dalmatia but his dad was born in the US. Plus Pulisic's mom probably doesn't have balkan blood at all. So that makes him a third generation American....

    • @buzzerbeaterbuzzerbeater9001
      @buzzerbeaterbuzzerbeater9001 Před 2 lety +1

      @@BosnianBornBeast True.
      Istina.
      Vrai.

  • @bojangrbikj2495
    @bojangrbikj2495 Před 3 lety +5

    Outstanding pronunciation of all names too, seems you have really done your due diligence! Excellent work!

  • @danbet7710
    @danbet7710 Před rokem +15

    Australia’s most successful foray at the World Cup had up to 8 players from this region.

  • @carlosvg2286
    @carlosvg2286 Před 3 lety +17

    How a 4M nation reached a WC final in modern football with such game level amazes me. Unrepeatable

    • @carlosvg2286
      @carlosvg2286 Před 3 lety

      @Sebastian Saam who do you think will make it?

    • @edgarallanpoe18
      @edgarallanpoe18 Před 3 lety

      @Sebastian Saam It's going to be interesting with Bosnia as new very talented players like Demirović, Hadžikadunić, Ahmedhodžić, Menalo and others are included in squad now, and with powerhouses like Pjanić, Džeko, Višća, Krunić, Kolašinac still able to play on high level, with new great coach Petev it's going to be interesting. The game with France, which ended in 1-0 win for France, was very close one and if you ask me it was undeserved win for World Cup winners, but at the end they got 3 points. Bosnia showed great and surprisingly very very solid performance against a team that worths over 1 billion US dollars. Clash between Bosnia and Ukraine is going to be decisive, but if Bosnia wins both games with Ukraine I think the team will go to WC and potentially show very good performance in Qatar. We'll see.

    • @maarko46
      @maarko46 Před rokem

      @Sebastian Saam We will Mate, we will

  • @RicoBanani
    @RicoBanani Před 3 lety +2

    respect for playing music from the region in the background.. great video. extra points to the reporter for his flawless pronunciation

  • @mvuyisityiwani9080
    @mvuyisityiwani9080 Před 3 lety +5

    DW Kickoff is the gift that keeps on giving, I can't wait to watch this

  • @felixw19
    @felixw19 Před 3 lety +102

    Remember a few yeas back when Jovic, Gacinovic, Rebic and Kovac were at Frankfurt and people were joking that they were building a Yugoslav national team? Man that would have been awesome!

    • @tf3629
      @tf3629 Před 3 lety +3

      Similar thing is happening at AC Milan

    • @alx_ivn_89
      @alx_ivn_89 Před 3 lety +13

      four Croatians at Spurs not so long ago: Modrić, Kranjčar, Ćorluka and Pletikosa = Crottenham

    • @Arrowgamesefootball
      @Arrowgamesefootball Před 3 lety +6

      Džeko and Misimović wining the Bundesliga with Wolfsburg ,don't forget that

    • @MrFilip333
      @MrFilip333 Před 3 lety +4

      You forgot Filip Kostic in Frankfurt. In Benfica 2013 were Matic, Markovic, Fejsa, Sulejmani and one more i cant remember but 5 Serbs in one club at the same time ahahahaha

    • @felixw19
      @felixw19 Před 3 lety

      @@MrFilip333 He only got to Frankfurt after Kovac left

  • @vasjaklun6008
    @vasjaklun6008 Před 3 lety +12

    You didn't mention Slovenija, 2 million inhabitants and the national team qualified twice for the World cup and once for the Euro.

    • @EnteleiEchein
      @EnteleiEchein Před 2 lety

      Yes, Slovenia has also talented cyclists. Roglic and Pogacar.

    • @gregoriodelpiero5016
      @gregoriodelpiero5016 Před rokem

      As a Croat I have no problem saying that, per capita, Slovenia is by far the most successful sporting EX-YU nation. By far!

  • @FraneTH-ip1fl
    @FraneTH-ip1fl Před 3 lety +8

    Bravo Sebastian👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻Excellent documentary as usual.

    • @FraneTH-ip1fl
      @FraneTH-ip1fl Před 3 lety +2

      @Sebastian Saam Frohe Ostern & Happy Easter😊🙏🏻 And looking forward for your next documentary 👌🏻

  • @IvanAgram
    @IvanAgram Před 3 lety +27

    Well kudos to one who picked the soundtrack for this.

    • @lukakovinic801
      @lukakovinic801 Před 3 lety

      @Sebastian Saam massive props for choosing the "Crna dama" solo :)

    • @plagosus
      @plagosus Před 3 lety

      I was looking for this comment :) @Sebastian Saam svaka čast!

  • @kblo7473
    @kblo7473 Před 3 lety +9

    As a kid growing in exYu, sports are our favorite pastime. We had basketball & football pitches everywhere - so you can say we grew up on the pitch. If you were persistent, dedicated and lucky enough to evade serious injuries - there is chance for you.

  • @oxallion6245
    @oxallion6245 Před 3 lety +5

    I just love this channel. Gr8 content!!!

  • @nagabilly
    @nagabilly Před 3 lety +4

    This is an incredibly well made video. The music, the history, everything

  • @lovrepodrug7194
    @lovrepodrug7194 Před 3 lety +6

    Nice song choice for the video, the first song was from the famous Croatian hip hop group TBF (The Beat Fleet)

  • @MentalMickey
    @MentalMickey Před 3 lety +14

    Only the kids and people who are not informed are shocked about croatian football success. Roots of croatian football goes 100 years in past and if you combine that with extreme talent, 90s nationalism boost and pride that form the cult of football team then you get that success in France 1998. and Russia 2018. are not such a big surprise.

    • @ziginaigra
      @ziginaigra Před rokem

      1998 team was much better than 2018

  • @martinsoto1040
    @martinsoto1040 Před 3 lety +5

    I was literally thinking about this the other so crazy how this video was in my recommendation even though I’ve never watched before. A big fan now

  • @mirzapa
    @mirzapa Před 3 lety +74

    Yugoslavia was (and continues to be) dominant in football, basketball, handball, tennis, water polo, volleyball, skiing, athletics, various martial arts, etc. Name a sport, we crushed it!

    • @dorohoroya1308
      @dorohoroya1308 Před 3 lety +1

      What about kricket?

    • @mirzapa
      @mirzapa Před 3 lety +45

      @@dorohoroya1308 we don't play colonial sports

    • @fapmashina1
      @fapmashina1 Před 3 lety +7

      Great remark! You're absolutely right!
      Peace and love from Croatia to the all good people of the former Yugoslavia!

    • @prolificseeker4778
      @prolificseeker4778 Před 3 lety +5

      Much Love to your Great Nations, From Mexico🇲🇽

    • @dumfriesspearhead7398
      @dumfriesspearhead7398 Před 3 lety

      Rugby?

  • @ssjtalla23
    @ssjtalla23 Před 3 lety +3

    Loved how you used variety of music from Balkans ❤️

  • @vatroslavzupancic2282
    @vatroslavzupancic2282 Před 3 lety +34

    Croatian national Football Association was established in 1912 , years before Yu existed...

    • @miken7750
      @miken7750 Před 3 lety +1

      AMEN

    • @LjubomirLjubojevic
      @LjubomirLjubojevic Před 3 lety +1

      That may be, but sport was not very big in Austrian (Hapsburg) Empire, even in pre-WWII Yugoslavia, only after the WWII did Communist government invest into building football (and basketball) fields in EVERY small village. It was mandatory because everyone needed to have same chance and everyone was to keep themselves physically fit with some sport, and to know how to play 1 or 2 team sports.

    • @vatroslavzupancic2282
      @vatroslavzupancic2282 Před 2 lety

      @@LjubomirLjubojevic It was a trend everywhere, since 1896 where a renewal of the Olympic Games and the interest in Sports. Having a sport field in every village was normal even and specifically for dictatorship so Yugoslavia was no special example.

  • @BKcroatia
    @BKcroatia Před 3 lety +3

    Great video,very enjoyable watch

  • @tonysplit9488
    @tonysplit9488 Před 3 lety +6

    Very nice documentary 👏🏻

  • @MrReese
    @MrReese Před 3 lety +7

    When playing Football Manager I usually raid Dinamo Zagreb. Their player quality is unbelievable, basically a gold mine for getting very good players for not too much money.

    • @MrReese
      @MrReese Před 3 lety +1

      @Sebastian Saam Haha :D. Was not a criticism of course, it's a great video! The people behind FM do a lot of research and therefore have a lot of knowledge in the field. Some people in football even use FM for real-world scouting apparently.

  • @sgtwnbdg
    @sgtwnbdg Před 3 lety +54

    Igor stimac is now the head coach of Indian National football team
    Please support indian football ❤️🙏

  • @ivankrajinovic825
    @ivankrajinovic825 Před 3 lety

    One of the best video reports ever 👌
    Made us proud!

  • @murraycampbell4043
    @murraycampbell4043 Před rokem

    I always wondered about the answer to this question. Great video!!!!

  • @denkodel6516
    @denkodel6516 Před 3 lety +11

    The Croats Rock 🇭🇷🇭🇷🇭🇷🇭🇷🇭🇷

  • @anabadem5024
    @anabadem5024 Před 3 lety +3

    This is why I love this channel ❤🤝

  • @paneperunovski
    @paneperunovski Před 3 lety +21

    This video turned out to become a nice intro in what followed few days after - the epic fall of Germany against Macedonia

    • @gravedigger1187
      @gravedigger1187 Před 3 lety +7

      Bas mi je drago za Makedoniju, navijam za vas na Euro!! Srecno!

    • @paneperunovski
      @paneperunovski Před 3 lety

      @Yair Nahum Almassi Cute way to defend the cradle of the denocracy, by offending and discriminating... Just as they practice the democracy

    • @starman1144
      @starman1144 Před 3 lety

      *North Macedonia

    • @paneperunovski
      @paneperunovski Před 3 lety

      @@starman1144 Yeah? Wow. Amazing

  • @Tsar64
    @Tsar64 Před rokem

    I absolutely love that you included Videosex (Detektivska priča) in the background music, my favorite band!!! ❤️

  • @ivancosic6123
    @ivancosic6123 Před 3 lety +4

    How does this have so few views, this video is perfectly made. Great music choice

  • @user-gw7op3nb8h
    @user-gw7op3nb8h Před 3 lety +7

    Im croatian but im so sad coz ibra didn't played for bosnia or croatia

  • @Timliu92
    @Timliu92 Před 3 lety +69

    Imagine if Yugoslavia is still united - Oblak, Handanovic, Modric, Milinkovic-Savic, Rakitic, Kovacic, Jovic, Tadic, Pandev, Dzeko, Pjanic, Kolarov, Matic, etc all in the same squad. We are in for a treat - possibly even a WC or a Euro title!

    • @walterwhitegaming80085
      @walterwhitegaming80085 Před 3 lety +9

      dont forget mitrovic radonjic kostic and vlahovic

    • @albinh.3149
      @albinh.3149 Před 3 lety +16

      How about Rashica, Muriqi, Shaqiri, Xhaka,.... and many more?
      Yugoslav brotherhood and unity wasnt it?
      Pathetic

    • @joaophilippe
      @joaophilippe Před 3 lety +3

      That would be one of the strongest teams in the world

    • @workinginthewell3498
      @workinginthewell3498 Před 3 lety +13

      @@joaophilippe No, it wouldn't be. Because players would enter the squad based on their nationality, not their quality. It already happened in the past. Why do you think they rarely qualified for world cups, and never won a single medal in 70 years? Individual quality was always there, but many great players never played for NT, or they only got few caps. It's better this way.

    • @miliomb
      @miliomb Před 3 lety +2

      IBRAHIMOVIC...IBRA KADBRA

  • @IguANAart
    @IguANAart Před 3 lety +2

    Kudos for great music choice!

  • @tonysplit9488
    @tonysplit9488 Před 3 lety +14

    I can see that Sebastian is already an excellently informed and prepared expert in football topics. Nevertheless i can recommend a very nice documentary on Copa90 Stories on CZcams called “We won’t do what you tell us. The Hajduk Split story”.

  • @hiddekruithof5080
    @hiddekruithof5080 Před 3 lety +22

    I always wondered this, smal populations but great footballers.
    Greetings from Holland👍🏻

  • @v21829
    @v21829 Před 3 lety +38

    Legendary coach Miroslav Ćiro Blažević (1998 Bronze medal) said something like this (paraphrasing): "Yugoslavia always had a good team. You know why they never won anything? There was no national pride! Croatia is the proof, when you play for your own country, you have greater national pride and motivation than playing for union of countries!"

    • @tonysplit9488
      @tonysplit9488 Před 3 lety

      Tomislav Ivić was by far the bigger coach than Ćiro Blažević .

    • @agv-vt8co
      @agv-vt8co Před 3 lety +3

      This may be true, but then what about the 1989 European Basketball Championship?

    • @v21829
      @v21829 Před 3 lety +3

      @@agv-vt8co Croatia got a silver medal at the 1992 Olympics, so?

    • @agv-vt8co
      @agv-vt8co Před 3 lety +4

      @@v21829 yeah, great for them and deserved. But I'm talking about something else, when they still were Yugoslavia with all nations inside. What pushed them to lift the trophy in 1989? Was it only their talent and their working together as a team? Or was also some sense of pride for unified Yugoslavia?

    • @v21829
      @v21829 Před 3 lety +1

      @@agv-vt8co Of course the talent and they were the best team in Europe. Yugoslav pride was not really strong after Tito's death. They had a great chemistry as a team and great players. Serbia is still one of the best in the world, Croatia had some great players back then, nowdays not some good results.

  • @nikoladjelic9383
    @nikoladjelic9383 Před 3 lety +14

    Not only football, but every sport!

    • @mrconfusion87
      @mrconfusion87 Před 2 lety

      Unfortunately, not in hockey though! Russia, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Finland, and Sweden will still be eating your lunch there though...

  • @milosmijatovic3964
    @milosmijatovic3964 Před 3 lety +5

    wow probably the first youtube video about about ex-yugoslavia which is not radiating mass hate in the comments. This just really shows how powerful football is.
    football = peace

  • @14Mydarling
    @14Mydarling Před rokem +10

    Amazing documentaru, mate!
    Congratulations! 👏🏻👏🏻
    Actually…If we are talking about Yugoslavia and ex Yugoslavia football, we can talk about Croatia only.
    Respect to Bosnia, Montenegro, Serbia, Slovenia, Macedonia.
    But Croatia is the only one who made great results.
    -WC bronze 1998
    -WC silver 2018.
    -twice they were fighting for 1/4 and twice for 1/2 final EURO.
    - Croatians won:
    Golden foot WC
    Golden ball WC
    Silver ball
    Ballon d’or
    Croatia qualified at 13/15 big competitions, more than all ex Yugoslavia countries together!
    Croatia scored more goals at the last WC, than all ex Yugoslavia countries at their all World cups!
    Croatians win 10 yrs in a row UCL trophy with their teams.
    They have amazing continuity since their independence.
    Montenegro has great legends (Mijatovic Savicevic), Serbia has also few good players, Bosnian has Dzeko Pjanic, Macedonia and Slovenia, who has Oblak.
    Serbia for example, couldn’t qualify at EUROS all this century despite few good players they had.
    Croatia is a level up for all of them if we talk about football class, team and warrior spirit, cult of the national team, patriotism and RESULTS.
    Just to mention, even in exporting the football players, Croatia is first again.
    By the last statistics, those football countries export the players most:
    1. Brazil 1219
    2. France 978
    3. Argentina 815
    4. England 525
    5. Germany 441
    6. Columbia 425
    7. Spain 409
    8. Croatia 400
    By the size of inhabitants, Croatia is the 1st country in the world by exporting football players!
    Simply, a different level than all ex Yugoslavia countries when we talk about football.
    True football country, “small Brazil”, despite corruption in their football.
    Big respect to them! ✌🏼

  • @Pekara121
    @Pekara121 Před rokem +2

    People for some reason seem to be forgetting that Zlatan Ibrahimovic is an ex yugo. Incredible talents that are crafted in west Europe.

  • @micaiah3289
    @micaiah3289 Před 3 lety +2

    Ive been watching this channel for years and didn't even realize..here's your sub....also can you do a video on Guyana that where I'm from. 🤗

  • @smokeybirdman
    @smokeybirdman Před 3 lety +3

    As a 48 yo Australian i really enjoyed following them in world cups.. Plus many of our players in socceroos are of Croatian/Serbian heritage mark bosnich, tom yuric, mark viduka and tom rogic

    • @kocostamatis3080
      @kocostamatis3080 Před 2 lety +1

      Mostly Croats 🇭🇷❤🇭🇷

    • @smokeybirdman
      @smokeybirdman Před 2 lety

      @@kocostamatis3080 yes Australia didn't get into football even though the country that invented it started our country. Go figure. For some reason we preferred more physical games like rugby and AFL and cricket. Fuk knows why cricket considering its played in summer and the sun here is unbelievably hot.
      So after ww2 when European began migrating from England and Italy and Greece and then known Yugoslavia the football game was strengthen. If Australia played football instead of the other codes we would very likely have one a cup or two. But fortunately the Croats etc love the game and honour our country with representation

    • @eddybulich3309
      @eddybulich3309 Před rokem

      @@kocostamatis3080 All of them

  • @matelula8424
    @matelula8424 Před 3 lety

    hi from Split nice video as always.. HŽV

  • @ericfurst6091
    @ericfurst6091 Před 3 lety +14

    It would make totally sense to make the Yugoslavia league again (like Belgium and the Netherlands fusion league). But i doubt it would happen again bc of the conflicts.

    • @RedStefan
      @RedStefan Před 3 lety +6

      We have in Basketball and Handball regional leagues. Although in handball is a bit broader encompassing whole SE Europe.

    • @dzemilmehovic5271
      @dzemilmehovic5271 Před 3 lety +2

      it could happen with strict enough puishments. But FA leaders who are corrupt dont wanna allow it

  • @moistpeanut5986
    @moistpeanut5986 Před 3 lety +119

    and teams like France or England would not be nearly as good if it wasnt for its colonial past.

    • @male11nov
      @male11nov Před 3 lety +11

      Hahaha. So true, its like knife cutting through cheese so precisely, love your comment.

    • @asli9812
      @asli9812 Před 3 lety +17

      They hate to hear it lmao. France would’ve barely gotten passed the round of 16 for sure!

    • @tayloryoung9803
      @tayloryoung9803 Před 3 lety +4

      @@asli9812 lol completely untrue. As normal as it is poorer people play football hence poorer people from France and England tend to be from former colonies. They were trained here and born here. If being from a former colony in itself made you better then explain me why no African country ever made it to the semis. Quite some players in ex-Yougoslav countries are also trained and brought up in western europe like Rakitic or Pjanic ,Kovacic, milinkovic-savic and so on.
      Then you may also state that they are not "originally French" well in that case I can't do much for you

    • @keighlancoe5933
      @keighlancoe5933 Před 3 lety +1

      England has only until quite recently had more diverse squads. Go back to 2010 and beyond and most of the players are White English people. London has loads of football clubs, and London is like 60% non-British now, so you're seeing loads of players coming through from London now which is why England football team is now more diverse

    • @tayloryoung9803
      @tayloryoung9803 Před 3 lety +2

      @@keighlancoe5933 it is definitely a phenomenon that is observable everywhere, same in Germany now : (rudiger, sané gnabry, moukoko + all the Turkish), but England in the 2000's still had quiet some "non white" players as Sole Campbell / Wilcott/ Defoe /Cole /Ferdinand/James /Heskey for the most notable

  • @rokhorvat6660
    @rokhorvat6660 Před 3 lety +2

    Very nice and interesting video👌🏻👌🏻

  • @painless465
    @painless465 Před rokem +1

    The two best American Football coaches are Croatian American-Bill Belicheck(grandparents from Karlovac) for the New England Patriots and in college,Nick Saban of the University of Alabama

  • @anthonybranco
    @anthonybranco Před rokem +2

    It's called genetics. It's amazing to me how much they talk about sport investment and other factors. When the real politically incorrect factor is genetics. They're a great combination of height, strength and intelligence. Yugoslavians were the Brazilians of Europe in the late 80's/early 90's. I'm Portuguese, we're just not tall enough to succeed in sport like Slavic people. That's why Portugal rely on some African imports for speed. At least the Portuguese aren't disgraceful France.

  • @moradbenazzouz6550
    @moradbenazzouz6550 Před 3 lety +6

    I recognised this in my younger age in düsseldorf germany, they were all technichel and mentaly strong.

  • @GoogleUser-wp6sg
    @GoogleUser-wp6sg Před 3 lety +6

    for sure they are coaches in every football developing nation. I swear serbs, croats and bosnians are coaches everywhere

  • @themimic1540
    @themimic1540 Před 3 lety

    Great music choices :)

  • @LovroSabljak
    @LovroSabljak Před rokem

    Love the music choices🤘🤘

  • @antekovac5644
    @antekovac5644 Před 3 lety +2

    Top Video👍🏻

  • @powderskier5547
    @powderskier5547 Před 3 lety +8

    Remarkable successes Croatia, country of just 4.3 million, champions of almost all sports, greatest sporting nation on the planet per capita, not a single country comes close to Croatia

    • @pelevic2720
      @pelevic2720 Před 3 lety +2

      I think Serbia can

    • @RicoBanani
      @RicoBanani Před 3 lety

      @@pelevic2720 Serbia can try 😄
      a naravno, tko drugi.

    • @pelevic2720
      @pelevic2720 Před 3 lety

      @@RicoBanani pa ako ćemo realno, Srbija i Hrvatska su dve najveće sportske nacije

    • @pelevic2720
      @pelevic2720 Před 3 lety

      @AviatorF-22 🇭🇷: Fudbal, rukomet
      🇷🇸: Košarka, tenis, vaterpolo, odbojka 😉

    • @pelevic2720
      @pelevic2720 Před 3 lety

      @AviatorF-22 pa i Srbija

  • @sashoksashok8108
    @sashoksashok8108 Před 3 lety +27

    They are very good in many sports: Serbia in basketball. Handball. Djokovic arguably the best ever tennis player

    • @walterwhitegaming80085
      @walterwhitegaming80085 Před 3 lety +4

      and waterpolo

    • @brianmilosevic8400
      @brianmilosevic8400 Před 3 lety +1

      @Lenox Croix Volley ball,water polo

    • @14Mydarling
      @14Mydarling Před rokem

      Serbia is bad in hanball. Croatia is the strongest one in handball and football. They won double more OI medals than Serbia and Montenegro together.

  • @kebab7977
    @kebab7977 Před 3 lety +4

    In my team Malmö, we have 9 ex-Yugoslavs in our team. Although most of them were born in Malmö, Sweden from diaspora. We have some others born elsewhere such as Birmancevic from Serbia and Colak from Germany/Croatia

    • @kebab7977
      @kebab7977 Před 3 lety +2

      @Sebastian Saam Yeah the most famous one is definetely Ahmedhodzic. According to me one of the best centerback prospects in Europe. He also chose to represent Bosnia

    • @kebab7977
      @kebab7977 Před 3 lety +1

      @Sebastian Saam i think so. He also played against France together with also Malmö-born Dennis Hadzikadunic

    • @kebab7977
      @kebab7977 Před 3 lety

      @Sebastian Saam overall if you like Yugoslav/Balkan football you should check out Allsvenskan. The football quality is shit but there is so many players with yugoslav heritage playing there that i can't even count it. Most of them are from the diaspora. There is an article about it I can link it if you want although if its in swedish?

    • @pellevanlig245
      @pellevanlig245 Před 2 lety

      Tror att de flesta i MFF är bosnier.

  • @jjsjskskk
    @jjsjskskk Před 3 lety +10

    Dino Dvornik (tebi pripadam) at the end❤️❤️

  • @neonyellow.sportsdesign
    @neonyellow.sportsdesign Před 3 lety +1

    Great video! And nice easter egg at 3:40 with the getty watermark 🤓

  • @Mohamed-om2xv
    @Mohamed-om2xv Před 3 lety +5

    Really nice video! Now let's get an exhibition game together for COVID relief where all these guys play together on one team :)

    • @powderskier5547
      @powderskier5547 Před 3 lety

      No thanks, We Croatians have no interest in playing mixed with others, we are doing well in all sports without them and we never ever want to be part of that dirty jugoslavia

  • @hajduksplit_913
    @hajduksplit_913 Před 3 lety +21

    Croatia came into worldcup final alone...without the others.
    Yes we have 4 M inhabitants. But we have a pool of 8 Million worldwide. Large diaspora.

    • @moonshadow2170
      @moonshadow2170 Před 3 lety +7

      And it wouldn't happen if it was Yugoslavia cause lot of Croatian players wouldn't even get a chance to play!

    • @hajduksplit_913
      @hajduksplit_913 Před 3 lety +6

      @@moonshadow2170 agree

    • @danielmicic3300
      @danielmicic3300 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, that was huge sure, But Serbia Is just Shit because of FFS

    • @pellevanlig245
      @pellevanlig245 Před 2 lety

      Correction. 3.8 mil. ;)

    • @hajduksplit_913
      @hajduksplit_913 Před 2 lety +1

      @@pellevanlig245 who cares. Large diaspora is still there. We got player like Kovač, Rakitić or Šimunić from abroad and today Sučić, Vidović and Stanišić.

  • @ianhad7521
    @ianhad7521 Před rokem +4

    All big success were Croatian, not Yugoslavian. 32 years later you are still putting us all in the same basket. Croatian, ah, yugo. Someone from Zagreb or Ljubljana and someone from Kosovo has nothing in common, not language, not religion nor culture.
    In that way, you can count together whole Britain and Ireland, or maybe put whole ex eastern block in the same basket.

  • @igorsvacic217
    @igorsvacic217 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Some trivias:
    - Croatia, of all countries, has the most NBA Hall of famers after the USA itself (ridicolous, populatioin of under 4 million)
    - the city of Split, (population 180k) has more than DOUBLE olympic medals than India (population over a billion)

  • @vermadheeraj29
    @vermadheeraj29 Před 2 lety +1

    This shows that unity and mutual respect is so powerful.

  • @dabalotelli6610
    @dabalotelli6610 Před 3 lety +29

    The dissrespect to not even mention slovenia's 2002 and 2010 world cups, smh. Also Zlatan is half Croat half Bosnian.

    • @jotaemept99
      @jotaemept99 Před 3 lety +5

      Much respect to Slovenia. Jan Oblak & Zlatko Zahovic played for Benfica. Even Zahovic's son Luka played in the youth teams

    • @sashoksashok8108
      @sashoksashok8108 Před 3 lety +5

      He's talking too much only about Croatia

    • @MrIvanisawesome
      @MrIvanisawesome Před 3 lety +6

      @Sebastian Saam please do a story about ibrahimovics rejection; it sounds fascinating!

    • @walterwhitegaming80085
      @walterwhitegaming80085 Před 3 lety +3

      the disrespect...

    • @walterwhitegaming80085
      @walterwhitegaming80085 Před 3 lety +2

      @@jotaemept99 luka plays in maribor now i think

  • @johanjonsson2190
    @johanjonsson2190 Před 3 lety +7

    Swedish team currently has Kulusevski and Ibrahimovic. And Tankovic and Kacaniklic who are going in and out of the team selection. As well as a number of players who are not far from the quality of our team, or who might get there when they get a bit older (who are in the swedish youth teams)

    • @johanjonsson2190
      @johanjonsson2190 Před 3 lety +1

      @Sebastian Saam haha yeah i understand you.
      Also, just curious, what makes you call our team "Tre Kronor"? I sometimes hear it from foreign media, but in Sweden i only hear it being used synonymous for our Hockey team :)

    • @johanjonsson2190
      @johanjonsson2190 Před 3 lety

      @Sebastian Saam Thank you! I assume you're the (or one of the) author of this video? Very good video, i learnt a lot!

    • @johanjonsson2190
      @johanjonsson2190 Před 3 lety

      @Sebastian Saam Are you from any of the countries making up former Yugoslavia?

    • @johanjonsson2190
      @johanjonsson2190 Před 3 lety

      @Sebastian Saam Okay! :)