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UEFABeograd ready for Futsal feastKMF Marbo Beograd are looking forward to the UEFA Futsal Cup second qualifying round with every confidence of progress.
Tough testSerbia and Montenegro's top team have the honour of staging Group B, which features FC Shakhtar Donetsk of Ukraine as well as last year's two finalists - MFK Dinamo Moskva of Russia and the team that beat them, Action 21 Charleroi of Belgium. It promises to be a tough test but, with two places in the semi-finals up for grabs, anything is possible at the renowned Hala Pionir on 29/30 January and 1 February.
Early daysThe Belgrade club was founded in 1970 under the name Mungosi. In those early days, the team was made up of former footballers who were keen to keep active, although without a formal domestic competition. They dominated the small-sided scene in the former Yugoslavia but things went quiet during the 1980s and 1990s.
Moving forwardThe club took a huge stride forward in 2001, when club officials decided to ensure their place among the top sides under the new name of Tempo Kompany. The club's identity would soon change again to its current incarnation, with the arrival of new investors in August 2003, and they have not looked back.
Ivaškovic memoryAside from sporting aspirations, Beograd have another reason to want to do well in this season’s UEFA Futsal Cup. The club remember fondly the legacy of former president Dragan Ivaškovic, who died in 1994. Ivaškovic was a firm believer in Futsal, and did much to help the club get where they are today, competing with Europe's élite.
Domestic successA successor has yet to be appointed, although Svetozar Otić is currently in charge of the club's affairs away from the action. Regarding the team itself, they won the Serbo-Montenegrin title in 2003/04 and 2004/05. In last year’s debut in the UEFA Futsal Cup, Beograd performed well in the first qualifying round and only lost out after a 7-3 defeat by the might of Boomerang Interviú.
Coaching expertiseBeograd are led by the coaching duo of Dejan Kneževic and Goran Ivancic, with the latter a former player and also assistant to national team coach Goran Savićević, the brother of the former AC Milan great Dejan Savicevic. There is strong strength in depth among the playing staff, with the goalkeeper Predrag Brzakovic perhaps the most significant name as he had a distinguished playing career in the eleven-a-side game.
Star namesOthers worth looking out for when the second qualifying round takes place are club captain Bojan Pavicevic, a regular international, and top scorer Predrag Rajic. All were key performers as Beograd breezed through Group 4 in the last round. Rajic struck a hat-trick in a 7-0 win against Dinamo Tirana of Albania, before repeating the feat in a 8-1 victory over Athina ’90 Athens of Greece. An incredible third treble came in the decisive 5-4 success against the mini-tournament’s Slovenian hosts KMN Svea Lesna Litija.
Strong supportRajic and co are sure to get plenty of support at the Hala Pionir, despite usually playing their games at the Hala Šumice in front of 1,500 fans. The Pionir, near the centre of Belgrade, is normally home to basketball but a sell-out crowd of 7,000 spectators is expected for the three days of the UEFA Futsal Cup. Organisers are hoping to lay on special surprises for those turning up, including fireworks, but few would doubt that it is the players on view who will provide the real explosive action.
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Luca Ranocchiari -->
luca.ranocchiari@futsalplanet.com