Below are the squads for the Football at the 1979 Mediterranean Games, hosted in Split, Yugoslavia, and took place between 21 and 29 September 1979. [1]
Coach:
No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Goals | Club |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GK | Thabet El-Batal | 16 September 1953 (aged 26) | Al-Ahly | |||
GK | Adel El-Maamour | 30 November 1954 (aged 24) | Zamalek | |||
DF | Mohamed Salah | 19 July 1958 (aged 21) | Zamalek | |||
DF | Medhat Ramadan | 1 October 1958 (aged 20) | Al-Ahly | |||
DF | Maher Hammam | 3 October 1956 (aged 22) | Al-Ahly | |||
DF | Ibrahim Youssef | 1 January 1959 (aged 20) | Zamalek | |||
MF | Farouk Gaafar | 29 October 1952 (aged 26) | Zamalek | |||
MF | Wahid Kamil | Zamalek | ||||
MF | Mokhtar Mokhtar | 17 August 1952 (aged 27) | Al-Ahly | |||
MF | Fathi Mabrouk | 5 July 1951 (aged 28) | Al-Ahly | |||
MF | Hamdi Nouh | El-Mokawloon El-Arab | ||||
MF | Shawky Gharieb | 26 February 1959 (aged 20) | Ghazl El-Mahalla | |||
MF | Mohamed Nur | Al-Ittihad Alexandria | ||||
FW | Mussad Nur | 23 April 1951 (aged 28) | Al-Masry | |||
FW | Gamal Abdel-Hameed | 24 November 1957 (aged 21) | Al-Ahly | |||
FW | Sherif Abdel Moneim | Al-Ahly | ||||
FW | Ossama Khalil | 5 February 1954 (aged 25) | Ismaily |
Coach:
No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Goals | Club |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DF | Christos Ziakos | 5 February 1955 (aged 24) | Panathinaikos | |||
... Tziontzios | ||||||
... Kokisidis | ||||||
... Kumikidis | ||||||
... Tsirikas | ||||||
... Kourouzidis | ||||||
... Stantzalis | ||||||
... Miskos | ||||||
... Anajuston | ||||||
... Dadakos | ||||||
... Pisas | ||||||
DF | Takis Karagiozopoulos | 4 February 1961 (aged 18) | Veria | |||
... Chatzigiovanakis |
Coach: Just Fontaine
No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Goals | Club |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GK | Badou Zaki | 2 April 1959 (aged 20) | Wydad Casablanca | |||
DF | Jawad El Andaloussi | Raja Casablanca | ||||
DF | Mohamed "Chicha" Rabih | |||||
DF | Tahir Mustapha | US Sidi Kacem | ||||
MF | Aziz Bouderbala | 26 December 1960 (aged 18) | Wydad Casablanca | |||
MF | Abdelmajid Dolmy | 19 April 1953 (aged 26) | Raja Casablanca | |||
MF | Houcine Lahcen | FAR Rabat | ||||
MF | Kamel Smiri | MC Oujda | ||||
MF | Mohamed Timoumi | 15 January 1960 (aged 19) | US Touarga | |||
FW | Ahmed Alaoui | 1 January 1949 (aged 30) | RS Settat | |||
FW | Mohamed Boussati | Kenitra AC | ||||
FW | Jamal Jebrane | 20 August 1957 (aged 22) | Kenitra AC | |||
FW | Khalid Labied | 24 August 1955 (aged 24) | FUS de Rabat | |||
FW | Mustapha Mahrous | AS Salé | ||||
FW | Abdelmajid Shaita | 19 January 1954 (aged 25) | Wydad Casablanca |
Coach:
No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Goals | Club |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GK | Tomislav Ivković | 11 August 1960 (aged 19) | Dinamo Zagreb | |||
GK | Aleksandar Stojanović | 19 June 1954 (aged 25) | Red Star Belgrade | |||
DF | Srećko Bogdan | 5 January 1957 (aged 22) | Dinamo Zagreb | |||
DF | Ismet Hadžić | 7 July 1954 (aged 25) | Sloboda Tuzla | |||
DF | Miloš Hrstić | 20 November 1955 (aged 23) | NK Rijeka | |||
DF | Mišo Krstičević | 19 February 1958 (aged 21) | Hajduk Split | |||
DF | Boro Primorac | 5 December 1954 (aged 24) | Hajduk Split | |||
DF | Vedran Rožić | 2 November 1954 (aged 24) | Hajduk Split | |||
DF | Nenad Starovlah | 29 July 1955 (aged 24) | Željezničar Sarajevo | |||
DF | Zoran Vujović | 26 August 1958 (aged 21) | Hajduk Split | |||
MF | Nikica Cukrov | 6 March 1954 (aged 25) | HNK Rijeka | |||
MF | Rajko Janjanin | 18 January 1957 (aged 22) | Dinamo Zagreb | |||
MF | Dragan Okuka | 2 April 1954 (aged 25) | Velež Mostar | |||
MF | Blaž Slišković | 30 May 1959 (aged 20) | Velež Mostar | |||
FW | Predrag Pašić | 18 October 1958 (aged 20) | FK Sarajevo | |||
FW | Miloš Šestić | 8 August 1956 (aged 23) | Red Star Belgrade | |||
FW | Zlatko Vujović | 26 August 1958 (aged 21) | Hajduk Split |
Coach: Mahieddine Khalef
No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Goals | Club |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GK | Mehdi Cerbah | 3 April 1953 (aged 26) | JE Tizi Ouzou | |||
GK | Mohamed Aït Mouhoub | 5 November 1952 (aged 26) | MP Alger | |||
DF | Mahmoud Guendouz | 4 February 1953 (aged 26) | MA Hussein Dey | |||
DF | Mahieddine Safsafi | 14 March 1957 (aged 22) | MA Hussein Dey | |||
DF | Mohamed Chaïb | 20 May 1957 (aged 22) | RS Kouba | |||
DF | Chaâbane Merzekane | 18 March 1959 (aged 20) | MA Hussein Dey | |||
DF | Rezki Maghrici | 5 May 1953 (aged 26) | JE Tizi Ouzou | |||
DF | Abdelkader Horr | 10 November 1953 (aged 25) | DNC Alger | |||
MF | Smaïl Slimani | 31 December 1956 (aged 22) | USK Alger | |||
MF | Ali Fergani (c) | 21 September 1952 (aged 27) | JE Tizi Ouzou | |||
MF | Ali Bencheikh | 9 January 1955 (aged 24) | MP Alger | |||
MF | Lyès Bahbouh | 6 April 1957 (aged 22) | JE Tizi Ouzou | |||
MF | Lakhdar Belloumi | 29 December 1958 (aged 20) | MP Alger | |||
FW | Tedj Bensaoula | 1 December 1954 (aged 24) | MP Oran | |||
FW | Abdeslam Bousri | 28 January 1953 (aged 26) | MP Alger | |||
FW | Bachir Douadi | 11 December 1953 (aged 25) | JE Tizi Ouzou | |||
FW | Salah Assad | 13 March 1958 (aged 21) | RS Kouba |
Coach:
No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Goals | Club |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GK | Jean-Pierre Mottet | 1 April 1959 (aged 20) | Lille OSC | |||
GK | Raymond Esclassan | 18 October 1958 (aged 20) | FC Grenoble | |||
DF | Jean-Louis Bérenguier | 28 February 1958 (aged 21) | SC Toulon | |||
DF | Jean-Claude Lafargue | 23 December 1959 (aged 19) | Paris FC | |||
DF | Dominique Trenoras | 27 May 1952 (aged 27) | ÉDS Montluçon | |||
DF | Jacques Raymond | 30 November 1950 (aged 28) | RC Franc-Comtois | |||
DF | Jean-Claude Fagès | 8 September 1958 (aged 21) | AS Monaco | |||
DF | Philippe Krug | 16 May 1957 (aged 22) | FC Mulhouse | |||
DF | Daniel Bruno | 6 November 1959 (aged 19) | Olympique Lyonnais | |||
MF | Paul Brot | 18 February 1950 (aged 29) | AJ Auxerre | |||
MF | Jacques Manic | 26 February 1949 (aged 30) | AAJ Blois | |||
MF | Roger Ricort | 7 January 1959 (aged 20) | AS Monaco | |||
FW | José Duch | 1 May 1950 (aged 29) | FC Gueugnon | |||
FW | Alain Couriol | 24 October 1958 (aged 20) | AS Monaco | |||
FW | Antoine Trivino | 13 June 1952 (aged 27) | AS Cannes | |||
FW | José Touré | 24 April 1961 (aged 18) | FC Nantes | |||
FW | Fabrice Picot | 20 May 1960 (aged 19) | FC Nantes |
Boro Primorac is a Bosnian professional football manager and former player who most recently managed Croatian First Football League club Hajduk Split.
The 1979 Mediterranean Games, officially known as the VIII Mediterranean Games, and commonly known as Split 1979, were the 8th Mediterranean Games. The Games were held in Split, Yugoslavia, from 15 to 29 September 1979, where 2,408 athletes from 14 countries participated. There were a total of 192 medal events from 26 different sports.
Frane Matošić was a Croatian football player and coach who played as a striker. He is regarded as one of Hajduk Split's greatest players and he is the club's all-time leading goalscorer.
Miloš Hrstić is a Yugoslav retired football player.
Vedran Rožić is a retired Croatian football player and Hajduk chairman. He played 12 years at Hajduk Split and has 390 official caps. He played 10 times for Yugoslavia. He played with the team at the 1979 Mediterranean Games.
Nenad Starovlah is a Bosnian professional football manager and former player. He also holds Cypriot citizenship.
Joško Vlašić is a Croatian athletics coach and a former decathlete who represented Yugoslavia. Vlašić's greatest competitive success was winning the decathlon gold medal at the 1983 Mediterranean Games, but he is best known for coaching his daughter Blanka Vlašić, a world champion high jumper.
Vladimir Milić is a retired Serbian shot putter who represented SFR Yugoslavia.
Petar Skansi was a Croatian professional basketball player and coach. During his playing career, he played for Jugoplastika and Maxmobili Pesaro. He was named one of FIBA's 50 Greatest Players in 1991. He was a member of the Yugoslavia national team that silver medalled at the 1968 Summer Olympics.
The 1979 Mediterranean Games football tournament was the 8th edition of the Mediterranean Games men's football tournament. The football tournament was held in Split, Yugoslavia between 21 and 29 September 1979 as part of the 1979 Mediterranean Games and was contested by 8 teams.
Yugoslavia hosted the 1979 Mediterranean Games in Split and finished first in the medal table with 127 medals.
The Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia participated at ten Mediterranean Games from 1951 to 1991, with the exception of 1955. Yugoslavia was the host of the Mediterranean Games in 1979 in Split, when it finished first on the medal podium.
Athletics at the 1979 Mediterranean Games were held in Split, Yugoslavia.
Italy competed at the 1979 Mediterranean Games in Split, Croatia, Yugoslavia.
Tunisia (TUN) competed at the 1979 Mediterranean Games in Split, Yugoslavia.
Algeria (ALG) competed at the 1979 Mediterranean Games in Split, Yugoslavia.
Lebanon–Yugoslavia relations were historical foreign relations between Lebanon and now split-up Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Both countries self-identified with the wider Mediterranean region and shared membership in the Non-Aligned Movement. Formal bilateral relations between Lebanon and Yugoslavia were established in 1946. Lebanon participated at the 1961 First Conference of Heads of State or Government of the Non-Aligned Movement in Belgrade. Both countries experienced significant instabilities and conflicts with weak central authorities which in Yugoslav case led to complete dismemberment of federal institutions and violent breakup of the state. Instability in both countries led to the establishment of special courts; the Special Tribunal for Lebanon and International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.
The swimming competition at the 1979 Mediterranean Games was held in Split, Yugoslavia.
The fencing competition at the 1979 Mediterranean Games was held in Split, Yugoslavia.
The wrestling tournament at the 1979 Mediterranean Games was held in Split, Yugoslavia.