Table of Contents
10 relations: Association football, FK ČSK Čelarevo, FK Inđija, Goalkeeper (association football), Inđija, Port F.C., Serbia, Serbian Cyrillic alphabet, Serbian SuperLiga, Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
- Expatriate association football managers
- People from Inđija
- Serbian expatriate sportspeople in Thailand
Association football
Association football, more commonly known as football or soccer, is a team sport played between two teams of 11 players each, who primarily use their feet to propel a ball around a rectangular field called a pitch.
See Milan Dević and Association football
FK ČSK Čelarevo
FK ČSK Čelarevo (Serbian Cyrillic: ФК ЧСК Челарево) is a football club from Čelarevo, a village near Bačka Palanka, Serbia.
See Milan Dević and FK ČSK Čelarevo
FK Inđija
Fudbalski klub Inđija Toyo Tires is a football club based in the city of Inđija, Serbia.
Goalkeeper (association football)
The goalkeeper (sometimes written as goal-keeper, abbreviated as GK, keeper, keeps, or goalie) is a position in association football.
See Milan Dević and Goalkeeper (association football)
Inđija
Inđija (India) is a town and a municipality located in the Srem District of the autonomous province of Vojvodina, Serbia.
Port F.C.
Port Football Club (สโมสรฟุตบอลการท่าเรือ), formerly known as Port Authority of Thailand, is a Thai professional football club based in Khlong Toei district of central Bangkok.
Serbia
Serbia, officially the Republic of Serbia, is a landlocked country at the crossroads of Southeast and Central Europe, located in the Balkans and the Pannonian Plain.
Serbian Cyrillic alphabet
The Serbian Cyrillic alphabet (Српска ћирилица / Srpska ćirilica) is a variation of the Cyrillic script used to write the Serbian language, updated in 1818 by the Serbian philologist and linguist Vuk Karadžić.
See Milan Dević and Serbian Cyrillic alphabet
Serbian SuperLiga
The Serbian Super League (Супер лига Србије / Super liga Srbije), stylized as Mozzart SuperLiga for sponsorship reasons, is a Serbian professional league for football clubs.
See Milan Dević and Serbian SuperLiga
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
The Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (commonly abbreviated as SFRY or SFR Yugoslavia), commonly referred to as Socialist Yugoslavia or simply Yugoslavia, was a country in Central and Southeast Europe.
See Milan Dević and Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
See also
Expatriate association football managers
- Denise Reddy
- Elena Sadiku
- Emilio Álvarez (Spanish footballer)
- Jacob Friis
- Jesús Ortiz (football manager)
- Johan Lange (football executive)
- Johan Mjällby
- Joseba Ituarte
- Milan Dević
- Omar Edwards
- Peter Leven
- Ramon Tribulietx
- Rubén Sellés
- Zoran Spišljak
People from Inđija
- Aleksandar Mesarović
- Antun Herceg
- Arsenije Sremac
- Bojan Banjac
- Bojan Rašić
- Branimir Kostić
- Branislav Čonka
- Dragana Radinović
- Dušan Ivković (footballer)
- Dušan Marković (footballer, born 1906)
- George Seitz (politician)
- Lazar Jovišić
- Milan Bubalo
- Milan Dević
- Milica Jurić
- Miloš Milinović
- Miroslav Raduljica
- Nenad Bogdanović
- Nicholas Petkovich
- Petar Relić (Yugoslav politician)
- Predrag Kodžo
- Radmila Mitrović
- Slobodan Popović
- Stevan Doronjski
- Suzana Ćirić
- Tomislav Colić
- Vladimir Tintor (footballer)
- Zoran Janković (footballer)
- Živan Ljukovčan
Serbian expatriate sportspeople in Thailand
- Aleksandar Jevtić
- Aleksandar Kristić
- Andrija Kaluđerović
- Bojan Beljić
- Bojan Dubajić
- Bojan Mamić
- Darko Rakočević
- Denis Ahmetović
- Dragan Đurđević
- Dušan Kljajić
- Goran Čaušić
- Ivana Luković
- Ljubomir Ristovski
- Milan Bubalo
- Milan Dević
- Miloš Bogunović
- Miloš Joksić
- Milovan Rajevac
- Nebojša Marinković
- Nemanja Ilić (footballer)
- Nikola Komazec
- Nikola Petković (footballer, born 1986)
- Ognjen Mudrinski
- Predrag Sikimić
- Rade Zalad
- Radovan Ćurčić
- Ranko Popović
- Rodoljub Paunović
- Saša Bogunović
- Slaviša Jokanović
- Sreten Sretenović
- Srđan Dimitrov
- Stefan Šćepović
- Uroš Stojanov
- Veljko Filipović
- Vladimir Ribić
- Zoran Janković (footballer)
- Zoran Mijanović
- Zoran Rajović
References
Also known as Milan Devic.

