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1983–84 Yugoslav Cup


FieldValue
titleYugoslav Cup
year1983–84
other_titlesMarshal Tito Cup
countryYugoslavia
winnersHajduk Split
count7
secondRed Star
scoring_leaderZdenko Adamović
Milko Đurovski
(3 goals each)
prev_season1982–83
next_season1984–85

Milko Đurovski (3 goals each)

The 1983–84 Yugoslav Cup was the 36th season of the top football knockout competition in SFR Yugoslavia, the Yugoslav Cup (), also known as the "Marshal Tito Cup" (Kup Maršala Tita), since its establishment in 1946.

Calendar

RoundDateFixturesClubs
First round21 September 19831632 → 16
Second round16 November 1983816 → 8
Quarter-finals18 April 198488 → 4
Semi-finals2 May 198444 → 2
Final9 and 24 May 198422 → 1

First round proper

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamHNK Rijeka win 6 – 5 on penaltiesNK Osijek win 7 – 6 on penalties
1OFK Titograd0–3FK Sarajevo
2Proleter Zrenjanin1–3Radnički Niš
3Vitez0–0HNK Rijeka
4OFK Belgrade1–0FK Partizan
5Lokomotiva Vinkovci1–1NK Osijek
6Vojvodina1–0Borac Čačak
7Drina Zvornik1–0Velež Mostar
8Belasica0–1Dinamo Zagreb
9Dubočica2–0Olimpija Ljubljana
10Metalac Sisak2–1Vardar
11NK Maribor0–1Hajduk Split
12Sloboda Tuzla3–0Radnički Pirot
13GOŠK-Jug3–1Budućnost Titograd
14Crvena Zvezda3–2FC Prishtina
15Galenika Zemun2–1Željezničar Sarajevo
16Dinamo Vinkovci2–1Spartak Subotica

Second round proper

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamMetalac Sisak win 5 – 4 on penalties
1NK Osijek2–2Metalac Sisak
2FK Sarajevo4–1Dinamo Vinkovci
3Radnički Niš2–1OFK Belgrade
4Dinamo Zagreb2–0Sloboda Tuzla
5HNK Rijeka2–1Drina Zvornik
6Hajduk Split6–2Galenika Zemun
7Dubočica0–1Crvena Zvezda
8GOŠK-Jug1–0Vojvodina

Quarterfinals

Tie noHome teamScoreAway team
1Dinamo Zagreb2–0Radnički Niš
2Metalac Sisak1–0GOŠK-Jug
3HNK Rijeka1–4Crvena Zvezda
4FK Sarajevo0–4Hajduk Split

Semifinals

Tie noHome teamScoreAway team
1Crvena Zvezda2–1Dinamo Zagreb
2Hajduk Split2–1Metalac Sisak

Final

Summary

The 1984 Yugoslav Cup Final was contested by Hajduk Split and Red Star over two legs, played at the Poljud Stadium in Split and the Red Star Stadium in Belgrade. Hajduk Split won 2–1 on aggregate, winning the first leg in Split with goals from Blaž Slišković and Zoran Vulić, while the second leg in Belgrade ended in a goalless draw.

Hajduk had reached the final ten times previously, winning six titles (1967, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1977). It was their first silverware in five years after their 1978–79 Yugoslav First League win.

First leg

Vulić

{{Football kitpattern_la =pattern_ra =pattern_b =leftarm = FBFAFAbody = FBFAFArightarm = FBFAFAshorts = 0540A0socks = 0540A0title = Hajduk Split{{Football kitpattern_la =_red_stripespattern_b =_whitestripespattern_ra =_red_stripesleftarm = FFFFFFbody = FF0000rightarm = FFFFFFshorts = FFFFFFsocks = FF0000title = Red Star
YUG Petar Nadoveza
YUG Gojko Zec

|}

Second leg

{{Football kitpattern_la =_red_stripespattern_b =_whitestripespattern_ra =_red_stripesleftarm = FFFFFFbody = FF0000rightarm = FFFFFFshorts = FFFFFFsocks = FF0000title = Red Star{{Football kitpattern_la =pattern_ra =pattern_b =leftarm = FBFAFAbody = FBFAFArightarm = FBFAFAshorts = 0540A0socks = 0540A0title = Hajduk Split
YUG Gojko Zec
YUG Petar Nadoveza

|}

Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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