Žarko_Varajić

Žarko Varajić

Žarko Varajić

Montenegrin basketball player and executive (1951–2019)


Žarko Varajić (Serbian Cyrillic: Жарко Варајић; 26 December 1951 – 23 June 2019) was a Montenegrin basketball player and executive. He represented the Yugoslavia national team internationally.

Quick Facts Personal information, Born ...

Early career

Growing up in Nikšić, Varajić pursued football in the FK Sutjeska youth system before fully devoting to basketball by switching to the basketball club within the same sports society — KK Sutjeska — and playing for its youth teams.

Playing career

In 1970, eighteen-year-old Varajić joined KK Bosna, a club competing in the second-tier level of Yugoslav basketball.[1] With young players such as Anto Đogić, Rođeni Krvavac, and center Zdravko Čečur on its roster, the club sought a league promotion to the top-tier level Yugoslav First League, a feat that had been eluding them for decades.

During the summer of 1971, the club's head coaching post was taken over by the 24-year-old Bogdan Tanjević, who had just retired from playing. The young squad led by a young rookie head coach, and with the new acquisition of 22-year-old Svetislav Pešić from KK Partizan, the only player on the roster to have previously played top-tier level basketball,[2] managed to gain promotion to the top-tier level Yugoslav First League. Varajić proved to be a formidable tandem with team-mate Mirza Delibašić, a tandem rivaled only by Dražen Dalipagić and Dragan Kićanović in Partizan.[3]

Bosna won the 1979 FIBA European Champions Cup in Grenoble, France where Varajić scored 45 points – the record for the number of points scored in the finals of the FIBA European Champions Cup (later called the EuroLeague) – against the Italian club Emerson Varese by a score of 96–93.[4]

National team career

Varajić was a member of the senior Yugoslav national basketball team. He played with Yugoslavia in 126 games.

Mostly used as backup to Dražen Dalipagić at small forward, Varajić won medals at the following tournaments: silver at the 1976 Montreal Summer Olympic Games, gold at the 1977 EuroBasket, and bronze at the 1979 EuroBasket. He furthermore won golds at the 1974 Balkan Championship, 1975 Mediterranean Games, and 1976 Balkan Championship.

Post-playing career

Personal life

Varajić came to Sarajevo at the age of seventeen in 1970 to study and play. He lived there until the break-out of the Bosnian War in early 1992, and since then he lived in Belgrade. He graduated from the University of Physical Education, Academy for Basketball Coaches - Basketball and Academy for Sports Managers Section.

Death

Varajić died on 23 June 2019. He was interred in the Alley of Distinguished Citizens in the Belgrade New Cemetery on 28 June 2019.[5]

Awards and honors as a player

KK Bosna

  • Yugoslav League Champion: (1978, 1980, 1983)
  • Yugoslav Cup Winner: (1978, 1984)
  • FIBA Korać Cup Runner-up: (1978)
  • FIBA European Champions Cup (EuroLeague) Champion: (1979)
  • FIBA Intercontinental Cup Runner-up: (1979)
  • Super Oscar for the best European player in all European Cups: (1979)
  • The highest national honor of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Honored May 25, 1980)
  • The highest national honor of the City of Sarajevo (Honored April 6, 1979)
  • Three golden pins of SOFKA of Yugoslavia
  • Decoration of ``Nemanja``, the first order of FR Yugoslavia
  • Decoration of the Yugoslav Flag, the first order

Yugoslav senior national team

See also


References

  1. Tomašević, Aleksandar (16 March 1978). "Kad se Skenderijom prolomi "Varaja majstore!"". Ven. Retrieved 7 September 2015.
  2. Sofić, Ibrahim (4 April 2014). "Boša o tituli iz 1979: Neki drugi svijet". Al Jazeera Balkans. Retrieved 7 September 2015.
  3. bhbasket.ba (2019-06-23). "Skenderija je pjevala: Kinđe i Varaja, pobjeda do kraja" (in Bosnian). Retrieved 2019-08-31.
  4. KSS (2019-06-28). "Žarko Varajić sahranjen u Aleji zaslužnih građana" (in Serbian). Retrieved 2019-08-31.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Žarko_Varajić, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.