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Stadion Stanovi (English: Stanovi Stadium) is a football stadium in Zadar, Croatia. It serves as the home ground for football club HNK Zadar. The stadium has a capacity of 5,860, of which 2,860 are seated. In the current form, the stadium was completed for the 1979 Mediterranean Games held in Split. Due to new license conditions set by the ...
As Zagreb, being the national capital, is the only Croatian city to enjoy a special status within Croatia's regional administrative framework (being both a city and a county), the mayor of Zagreb likewise also enjoys a status equal to that of a county prefect (Croatian: župan) of one of Croatia's other 20 counties (Croatian: županija).
The 2022–23 season was the 112th season in the existence of GNK Dinamo Zagreb and the club's 32nd consecutive season in the top flight of Croatian football.In addition to the domestic league, Dinamo Zagreb participated in this season's editions of the Croatian Cup, the Croatian Super Cup and the UEFA Champions League.
Na Vosa Vakaviti ; Nederlands ... 11.0 13.0 13.5 13.7 11.2 10.4 10.4 10.9 ... Column 4 is calculated for the territory now defined as the City of Zagreb (Narodne ...
Dinamo managed to reach the group stage of the Champions League in 2011 after beating Neftçi Bakı (3–0 at home, 0–0 away), HJK Helsinki (2–1 away, 1–0 at home) and Malmö FF (4–1 at home, lost 2–0 away). They were drawn in group D alongside Real Madrid, Lyon and Ajax. Dinamo finished last in the group stage, with a −19 goal ...
Last updated on 29 January 2025 after match Dinamo Zagreb - Milan 2:1 Source: UEFA.com 1 Includes two matches where Dinamo played as hosts away from their home stadium (the 1991–92 UEFA Cup fixture against Trabzonspor, played in Klagenfurt, Austria on 17 September 1991, and the 1993–94 Champions League first round fixture against Steaua ...
St. George Killing the Dragon by Anton Dominik Fernkorn [2] located in the southwest corner; made in 1853 in Vienna, the sculpture was bought and brought to Zagreb by Juraj Haulik in 1867, when it was placed at the entrance of Maksimir Park. In 1884 it was handed over to the City of Zagreb and then moved first to Strossmayer square before being ...
During the 1920s Zagreb's population increased by 70 percent, the city's largest demographic boom. In 1926 Zagreb introduced the region's first radio station, and in 1947 the Zagreb Fair was the first in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. The area between the railway and the Sava saw considerable new construction after World War II.