FK Ibar

FK Ibar
Full name Fudbalski klub Ibar Rožaje
Founded 1938
Ground Bandžovo Brdo Stadium, Rožaje
Ground Capacity 4,000
President Montenegro Plunac Esad
Head Coach Montenegro Pepić Rešid
League Second League
Active sport clubs of Ibar
Football Basketball Volleyball
Judo Table Tennis Karate
Fishing Chess Hunting

FK Ibar is a football club from Rožaje, Montenegro. They currently compete in the Montenegrin Second League. FK Ibar is a part of the Ibar sport society from Rožaje. The club is named after the river Ibar, longest river from Montenegro, which originates in Rožaje. Founded in 1938, FK Ibar is the oldest sports club from Rožaje.

History

FK Ibar was founded in 1938 in Rožaje, Kingdom of Yugoslavia. The biggest successes of the club are known after 1992 when the club played in the Second League of FR Yugoslavia. In the 1999–2000 Second League of FR Yugoslavia, FK Ibar played in the West division, and finished 17th with 29 points out of 34 matches. Two years later, they played again in the Second Division ending last in the South Group. On the all-time table for the Second Division from 1992-2002 FK Ibar is positioned 67th with 114 points. After the independence of Montenegro, the club played constantly in the Second League. In the first season in 2006/07 they played their best season in the history of the club. FK Ibar finished third with 63 points, six points less from the Second Division champion FK Lovćen, and so reaching the play-offs. In the last rounds of the league they lost a home match against FK Lovćen followed by incidents on and off the stadium in Rožaje. They lost their ticket for the First League and were not allowed to play in Rožaje in play-offs against FK Dečić due to the decision of FSCG. In the Montenegrin Cup, the club played the 1/8 of final in 2007/08.

Country Season League Position Points
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
1999/00. Second League 17 29
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
2001/02. Second League 12 13
Montenegro
2006/07. Second League 3 63
Montenegro
2007/08. Second League 5 49
Montenegro
2008/09. Second League 5 50
Montenegro
2009/10. Second League 9 37
Montenegro
2010/11. Second League 7 44
Montenegro
2011/12. Second League 10 38
Montenegro
2012/13. Second League 8 33

Supporters

Ibar fans are known as Gazije (Arabic: ghāzī or ghazah/gazi, from ghazw, pl. ghazawāt, armed incursion with the intention of conquering - Gazije were the defenders of Islam (Islamic fighters) in the period of the Ottoman Empire). The group's traditional colors are black and white, which are also the colours of FK Ibar where Gazije first started giving their support. After the club failed to reach the First Montenegrin League in 2006, 2007 and 2008, the footballers lost the support of fans since they failed to win the away play-off match against FK Dečić for the First league placement. The basketball club KK Ibar was first time supported by a big group of supporters in the first matches of Erste League in 2012.

Stadium

FK Ibar plays its home matches at the Stadium Bandžovo Brdo, in Rožaje. The stadium has its western and southern stand. The capacity cannot be precisely shown since the stands are without seats. On the most important matches, the number of spectators went to 5,000. The stadium has an olympic track rebuilt in 2004 when Rožaje was the host of Sandžačke Igre[1][2](Sandžak Games), nowadays MOSI. In the near future, the stadium will be reconstructed. The location of the stadium is next to the city Sports Center SRC Rožaje addressed on Carine bb.

Current squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
Montenegro GK Nikola Delibašić
Montenegro GK Dacić Nedžad
Montenegro DF Pepić Mirnes
Montenegro DF Elvis Camić
Montenegro DF Denis Džanović
Serbia DF Milos Luković
Montenegro DF Šutković Semir
Montenegro MF Elvedin Omerović
No. Position Player
Montenegro DF Damir Košuta
Montenegro MF Denis Košuta
Montenegro MF Semir Kalač
Montenegro MF Ersan Murić
Montenegro MF Ervin Murić
Serbia MF Marko Spasojević
Montenegro DF Amer Tahirović
Montenegro MF Nino Vukmarković

See also

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.