Yugoslavia 2012
Labud @
15.01.2012
This is, in my modest opinion, how would national team of Yugoslavia look today. I would like all of you to tell me what you think about it, but in my opinion, it would be a great team.
nvr @
15.01.2012
Ibrahimovic is a Swedish international. Sweeden was not ex-Yugoslavia last time I checked.
mojojojo101 @
16.01.2012
His parents are Bosnian/Croatian immigrants so you could claim he may have played for Yugoslavia had it stayed intact... pretty poor though.
I'd probably replace him with either Vucinic or Kuzmanovic as another midfielder
nvr @
17.01.2012
AFAIK his parents immigrated well before Yugoslavia dissolved and he was born, raised and taught his football in Sweeden. Some players choose to play for their ancestral homelands but players with big potentials rarely do.
Labud @
17.01.2012
@NVR...Zlatan's parents are from Bosnia, and he wanted to play for the same country, but our stupid "experts" asked money from him to even concider him to play. That's why he plays for Sweeden. In former Yugoslavia, that wouldn't happened.
@Mojojojo...Vucinic i great striker, but Zlatan is better ;) and if you think this team is poor...no comment really.
nvr @
18.01.2012
Rumours are plentiful about where he wanted to play in his youth. Bosnian sources claim he always wanted to play for Bosnia, Swedish claim his heart was always on Sweden.
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This is, in my modest opinion, how would national team of Yugoslavia look today. I would like all of you to tell me what you think about it, but in my opinion, it would be a great team.
Ibrahimovic is a Swedish international. Sweeden was not ex-Yugoslavia last time I checked.
His parents are Bosnian/Croatian immigrants so you could claim he may have played for Yugoslavia had it stayed intact... pretty poor though.
I'd probably replace him with either Vucinic or Kuzmanovic as another midfielder
AFAIK his parents immigrated well before Yugoslavia dissolved and he was born, raised and taught his football in Sweeden. Some players choose to play for their ancestral homelands but players with big potentials rarely do.
@NVR...Zlatan's parents are from Bosnia, and he wanted to play for the same country, but our stupid "experts" asked money from him to even concider him to play. That's why he plays for Sweeden. In former Yugoslavia, that wouldn't happened.
@Mojojojo...Vucinic i great striker, but Zlatan is better ;) and if you think this team is poor...no comment really.
Rumours are plentiful about where he wanted to play in his youth. Bosnian sources claim he always wanted to play for Bosnia, Swedish claim his heart was always on Sweden.
