Željko Pavličević

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Željko Pavličević
Pavličević with Shimane Susanoo Magic in 2012
Personal information
Born (1951-03-26) 26 March 1951 (age 73)
Zagreb, PR Croatia, FPR Yugoslavia
NationalityCroatian
Career information
Playing career1969–1975
PositionHead coach
Coaching career1975–present
Career history
As player:
1969–1975Lokomotiva
As coach:
1975–1984Cibona (assistant)
1985–1986Cibona
1986–1987OAR Ferrol
1989–1990TAU Vitoria
1990–1991Pop 84
1991–1993Panathinaikos
1996–1997Split CO
2003–2006Japan
2007–2008Zagreb
2010–2013Shimane Susanoo Magic
2013–2014Wakayama Trians
2015–2016Chiba Jets
2017–2018Bambitious Nara
2019–2020Al-Muharraq
2021–2023Eastern
Career highlights and awards
As head coach

Željko Pavličević (born 26 March 1951) is a Croatian professional basketball coach and former player. He currently serves as the head coach for Eastern in ASEAN Basketball League.[1]

Early life[edit]

Pavličević began playing basketball in 1969 for the junior team of Lokomotiva in the city of Zagreb. He was studying at the Faculty of Chemical Technology at the basketball school.

Coaching career[edit]

Cibona[edit]

Having passed all the categories in the club, (cadets, juniors etc.) in 1975, Pavličević became Mirko Novosel's assistant coach in the senior team of Cibona (until then WIT). In 1984–85 he was promoted to head coach, but only in domestic competitions (in EuroLeague led Mirko Novosel).

In his first season as head coach with Cibona, won the Yugoslav Cup and the Yugoslav League (against Jugoplastika & Crvena zvezda ). As assistant coach he took part in the winning of the first title of European Champions Cup (the predecessor of today's EuroLeague) with Cibona in Athens Peace and Friendship Stadium against Real Madrid. The following season, (1985–86) as head coach of Cibona both in domestic and European competitions and with the roster weakened by the loss of Andro Knego in Cajamadrid, but refreshed with newcomer Dražen Petrović, won the Yugoslav Cup and became back to back European champion in Budapest against the Soviet champions Žalgiris. This match was marked by the participation of the two best European players, Petrović and the Lithuanian center Arvydas Sabonis.

Spain[edit]

After the three seasons with Cibona, Pavličević accepted his first international bid and coached the Spanish club OAR Ferrol, later becoming the club's sports director. During the 1989–90 season, he was hired by the Spanish first league club of Taugrés Vitoria.

Pop 84[edit]

In the summer of 1990, Pavličević accepted the offer from back-to-back European champions of Pop 84 the former Jugoplastika to lead the team following the exodus of Dino Rađa (il Messaggero Roma), Duško Ivanović (Girona) and Goran Sobin (Aris). Despite the changes, Pop 84 dominated and won all three trophies. Yugoslav Cup (finals with Cibona), the Yugoslav League (final playoffs against the rising power of Partizan) and third European title for the club and other personal title against FC Barcelona in Paris. He was awarded coach of the year. Players included Toni Kukoč, Zoran Savić, Velimir Perasović, Zoran Sretenović, Žan Tabak, Petar Naumoski and Luka Pavićević. Božidar Maljković led Barcelona, which is connected to Split by winning the previous two league titles in Europe.

Panathinaikos[edit]

For the 1991–92 season, Pavličević joined Panathinaikos and created the backbone of the club's future success. In 1992–93 with the arrival of Nikos Galis, Stojan Vranković, Arijan Komazec and Tiit Sokk the team won only the Greek Cup against Aris. The Championship final against arch-rival Olympiacos was controversial, given the club's decision not to play a third decisive game. The next season (1993–94) despite the coming of Alexander Volkov and participation in the Final Four of Tel Aviv, he was fired in late 1993.

Decline[edit]

Pavličević was sports director of selection for the Basketball Association of Croatia from 1996 to 1998. At the invitation of Croatia Osiguranje during the 1996–97 season he coached the team again. In early 2003 Japanese Basketball Federation offered him a position coaching the Japanese national basketball team. It was a cycle of four years as a preparation for the World Basketball Championship in Japan in 2006. The national team progressed significantly, and held the largest seminar for coaches in the history of Japan with over 900 participants. In 2007–08 he coached Zagreb, with which he won the Krešimir Ćosić Cup, the first trophy in the club's history.

At the invitation of Shimane Susanoo Club Magica, member BJL (Japanese professional league) in summer 2010, he became head coach and remained for three seasons, reaching the playoffs each season. He coached Wakayama Trians NBL National basketball L. Japan in 2013–14.

Coaching record[edit]

Legend
Regular season G Games coached W Games won L Games lost W–L % Win–loss %
Playoffs PG Playoff games PW Playoff wins PL Playoff losses PW–L % Playoff win–loss %
Team Year G W L W–L% Finish PG PW PL PW–L% Result
Shimane Susanoo Magic 2010–11 50 24 26 .480 6th in Western 2 0 2 .000 Lost in 1st round
Shimane Susanoo Magic 2011–12 52 28 24 .538 6th in Western 3 1 2 .333 Lost in 1st round
Shimane Susanoo Magic 2012–13 52 33 19 .635 3rd in Western 4 2 2 .500 Lost in 2nd round
Wakayama Trians 2013–14 54 41 13 .759 1st in Western 6 2 4 .333 Runners-up in NBL
Chiba Jets 2015–16 34 13 21 .382 Fired - - - -
Bambitious Nara 2017–18 34 7 27 .206 Fired - - - -

Career achievements[edit]

Club competitions[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Pokorio je Europu s Draženom i Kukočem, a sada uživa u novom poslu: Puno sam toga vidio, ali ovo je za mene veliko iznenađenje!". tportal.hr. 17 October 2019. Retrieved 17 August 2020.

External links[edit]