Igor Bogdanović (Serbian Cyrillic: Игор Богдановић; born 25 September 1974) is a Serbian retired footballer who played as a striker.

Club career

During his journeyman career, Bogdanović played for numerous clubs in his country and abroad, winning league titles in Bulgaria (Litex Lovech) and Hungary (Debrecen).[1][2][3] He ended his career playing in the lower leagues of Hungary.[4]

International career

At international level, Bogdanović was capped twice for FR Yugoslavia, making both appearances at the 2001 Kirin Cup.[5] He previously played at the Millennium Super Soccer Cup, scoring two goals in five games and helping the team win the tournament.[6] However, these caps are not officially recognized by FIFA.

Career statistics

Club

Club Season League
Apps Goals
Kabel (loan) 1992–93
Vojvodina 1993–94 14 3
Borac Čačak (loan) 1994–95 19 5
Zemun 1995–96 30 14
1996–97 22 4
Litex Lovech 1997–98 15 6
1998–99 9 5
Vojvodina 1998–99 7 3
1999–2000 28 7
2000–01 31 13
2001–02 33 14
Red Star Belgrade 2002–03 16 3
2003–04 0 0
Debrecen 2003–04 14 7
2004–05 30 15
Gençlerbirliği (loan) 2005–06 4 2
Debrecen 2005–06 17 8
2006–07 11 1
Budapest Honvéd (loan) 2006–07 11 6
Győr (loan) 2007–08 14 5
Debrecen 2007–08 7 3
2008–09 0 0
Debrecen II 2008–09 2 0
Nyíregyháza Spartacus 2009–10 13 2
Szombathelyi Haladás 2009–10 10 2
Hajdúböszörmény 2010–11 26 3
2011–12 30 21
2012–13 23 21
2013–14 29 10
2014–15 22 9
Balkány 2015–16 30 49
2016–17 29 28
2017–18 6 4
2018–19 16 1
Career total 568 274

International

National team Year Apps Goals
FR Yugoslavia 2001 2 0
Total 2 0

Honours

Litex Lovech

Debrecen

References

  1. ^ "Bogdanovic, Igor" (in Hungarian). nela.hu. Archived from the original on 19 March 2020. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  2. ^ "Bogdanović Igor" (in Hungarian). magyarfutball.hu. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  3. ^ "BOGDANOVIC IGOR" (in Hungarian). hlsz.hu. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  4. ^ "BOGDANOVIC IGOR" (in Hungarian). mlsz.hu. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  5. ^ "Igor Bogdanović, international football player". EU-football.info. Retrieved 31 March 2024.
  6. ^ "Mirna Bosna" (in Serbian). glas-javnosti.rs. 25 January 2001. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
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