Yugoslavia the Cup

The Cup final was familiar duel: Crvena zvezda vs Hajduk. One more chapter in the long rivalry between Serbian and Croatian leading clubs and increasingly getting more than football rivalry, but into nationalistic struggle. Crvena zvezda prevailed thanks to early goal – Darko Pancev scored in the 12th minute.
Hajduk lost the Cup final and thus ended the season without a trophy, despite having a cluster of stars: Bokšić, Bilić, Štimac, Jerkan, Asanović, Pudar, Jurković, Jarni. Well, rather future stars, but still it was a team of plenty of talent. But Crvena zvezda was stronger presently. Apart from the lost final, Hajduk left Yugoslavia without a team for the Cup Winners Cup: they were banned from UEFA and Crvena zvezda were going to play in the European Champions Cup.
Crvena zvezda won a double this year, confirming their superiority. It was their 13th Cup and 5th double. Remarkable season, which increasingly meant more than football – it was Serbian victory, Serbian dominance over the rest of the country, over Croats, in particular. Nationalism was getting the upper hand, although disintegration of Yugoslavia was not envisioned yet – but it was coming and football was big part of it. But Yugoslavia was still one country and to a point Crvena zvezda symbolized this unity: Serbians, Montenegrans, Macedonians, even a Croat made the squad. Plus a worthy foreigner, perhaps representing the political turmoil of Eastern Europe best, was here: Miodrag Belodedici. The Romanian of Serbian descent, already famous as a member of the great Steaua (Bucharest) team, run away from his native land and took asylum in Yugoslavia. In Romania ‘the traitor’ was promptly sentenced to jail in absentia, but Crvena zvezda was glad to have him in its defensive line and very likely Yugoslav citizenship was quickly granted. But the situation was rapidly changing… by the summer of 1990 the Communist regime of Romania fell down and the political change brought among other things anullment of Belodedici’s sentence – he was able to play again for Romania and there was no need anymore to be called Belodecic (the Yugoslav spelling of his name). The irony of the times: Belodedici became Romanian again, but soon his teammates will seize to be Yugoslavs and become Croats (Prosinecki), Macedonians (Pancev, Kanatlarovski, Najdoski), and so on. For the moment, though, Crvena zvezda practically had the squad eventually winning the European Champions Cup in the very near future – Dragan Stojkovic (the best Yugoslav star at the moment), Belodedici, Prosinecki, Pancev, Sabanadzovic, Savicevic, Najdoski, Mrkela, Stojanovic, etc. The strongest Yugoslav squad for sure, but what was missing was largely the coach leading them to European glory: presently the former club legend Vladimir Petrovic was at the helm, but international success was achieved with his successor Ljupko Petrovic.
Life was good: a double! Life was good – this team had great potential, great future. Politics were nothing, football was everything… what a grave illusion.