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  1. Usually a forward or attacking midfielder, Bobek was renowned for his technique, vision and goalscoring ability and is commonly regarded as one of Yugoslavia's greatest players. He is remembered for his time at Belgrade's Partizan, where he moved to following the end of World War II.

  2. 4 days ago · Stjepan Bobek, koga mnogi svrstavaju u red neprikosnovenih fudbalera svih vremena na ovom prostoru, za Valoka je govorio da mu je pomogao da se fudbalski oblikuje.

  3. Aug 22, 2010 · Prolific forward Stjepan Bobek, who starred for both FK Partizan and the Yugoslavia national team after the Second World War, has died in Belgrade at the age of 86.

  4. Aug 13, 2020 · Stjepan Bobek was born in Zagreb, now the capital of Croatia, but then in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, in 1923. He started in men’s football aged 13, pretending to be his older brother. After the Second World War, he moved from Zagreb to play for Partizan Belgrade.

  5. Dec 2, 2014 · With 403 goals in 468 league games for FK Partizan from 1945–59, Stjepan Bobek set a record that seems extremely unlikely to be broken in any of the former Yugoslavian states. Born in Zagreb in...

  6. Stjepan Bobek (Zagreb, 3. prosinca 1923. – Beograd, 22. kolovoza 2010. [2]), bio je hrvatski nogometaš, jugoslavenski reprezentivac i nakon završetka igračke karijere trener.

  7. Stjepan Bobek former footballer from Croatia Centre-Forward * Dec 3, 1923 in Zagreb, Yugoslavia (Republic)

  8. Stjepan Bobek was a striker for the Yugoslav football teams, starring for them in the late 1940s and early 1950s. He was the all-time leading scorer for Yugoslavia in internationals, scoring 38 goals in 63 matches from 1946-56.

  9. This is the profile site of the manager Stjepan Bobek. The site lists all clubs he coached and all clubs he played for.

  10. Aug 22, 2010 · Stjepan Bobek was a striker for the Yugoslav football teams, starring for them in the late 1940s and early 1950s. He was the all-time leading scorer for Yugoslavia in internationals, scoring 38 goals in 63 matches from 1946-56. Bobek won two Olympic silver medals (1948, 1952), but also played for Yugoslavia in the 1950 and 1954 World Cup.