Yugoslavia & The Former Yugoslav Republics 1923-2009

Yugoslavia's National team
Red Star Belgrade
Yugoslavian & Serbian Leagues
1923-2009
Table showing all the top three places in the Yugoslav and Serb Leagues from 1923-2009 with highest league goalscorers.
Yugoslavian and Former Yugoslavian Republic League Champions 1923-2009
Tables showing the year by year League Champions for Yugoslavia and all the former Yugoslavian Republics from 1923 to 2009

The Yugoslav First League was the first club competition on a national level for clubs from Kingdom of Yugoslavia (also known as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes until 1930). The league was started in 1923 and the first four seasons had a cup tournament format, while the first round robin league competition was held in 1927. In the period from 1927 to 1940 seventeen seasons were completed.

It was governed at first by the Croatian-named Nogometni Savez Jugoslavije (Football Association of Yugoslavia), founded in April 1919 in Zagreb, until it dissolved in late 1929 after disagreements between the Zagreb and Belgrade branches of the association. This resulted in the association being moved to Belgrade in May 1930 where it adopted the Serbian name Fudbalski Savez Jugoslavije and continued operating the league until it was suspended in 1940 due to the outbreak of World War II.

The league continued after WWII under socialist Yugoslavia (1945-1991) and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1991-2003), before it was renamed Serbia and Montenegro. Montengrin clubs later formed their own league in 2006-07, leaving what was once the Yugoslavian League to Serbia alone.
FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLICS

Croatia and Slovenia both broke away from Yugoslavia in 1991, Macedonia in 1992, Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1993 (initially forming three seperate ethnic leagues before uniting in 2002-03), Montenegro split from Serbia in 2006 and Kosavo started their own Super League in 2007.
Serbia's National team
Successors to Yugoslav First League Timeline from 1990-91 Onwards
Timeline detailing the splits from the Yugoslav
First League from season 1990-91 onwards.
Luka Modric of Tottenham Hotspur & Croatia
Vedran Corluka of Tottenham Hotspur & Croatia
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