Živko Slijepčević

Živko Slijepčević (Serbian Cyrillic: Живко Слијепчевић, born 19 August 1957) is a Serbian football manager and former player.

Živko Slijepčević
Живко Слијепчевић
Personal information
Date of birth (1957-08-19) 19 August 1957
Place of birth Gerzovo, SFR Yugoslavia
Height 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
1965–1968 Preporod Novi Žednik
1968–1975 Spartak Subotica
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1975–1988 Spartak Subotica 245 (59)
1985Trepča (loan) 16 (5)
1989–1989 Quimper Cornouaille 63 (9)
1989–1993 Valenciennes 94 (9)
1993–1997 Trélissac
Teams managed
1995–1997 Trélissac
1998–2001 Notron
2001–2006 US Concarneau
2008–2010 US Avranches
2010–2016[1] Trélissac
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

He played for FK Preporod, FK Spartak Subotica, Quimper Cornouaille FC, Valenciennes FC and Trélissac FC. Currently working as a coach of French Trélissac FC.

Personal life

Born in Gerzovo, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, he grew up in northern Serbia, in a town of Novi Žednik, near Subotica. There he made his first football steps at local club FK Preporod Novi Žednik, where he competed in a lower league. His talent was noticed by the people from FK Spartak Subotica who brought him to the club in 1968. He will play for Spartak for the following 20 years. He became a senior in 1975, and with the exception of the second half of the 1984–85 season, which he spent on loan with FK Trepča, he will play with Spartak in the Yugoslav Second League until 1998.[2]

After a long stay in Subotica, he went to France, where he still lives and works. There, as a player he represented clubs, and also three as a coach. The longest club he played for, was the one he trains nowadays, Trélissac FC. In the season 1992/93 he played with Valenciennes FC in the Ligue 1

By the end of his playing career, he already became a player/coach during the last two seasons with Trélissac FC. Later, he was the head coach head of other French clubs such as Notron, US Concarneau, US Avranches, and Trélissac FC again.[3]

Honours

References

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