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Toni Savevski

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Toni Savevski
Personal information
Full name Stanislav Savevski
Date of birth (1963-06-14) 14 June 1963 (age 62)
Place of birth Bitola, SR Macedonia, SFR Yugoslavia
Height 1.72 m (5 ft 8 in)
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
Pelister
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1980–1988 Vardar 181 (10)
1988–2001 AEK Athens 357 (52)
Total 538 (62)
International career
1988–1989 Yugoslavia 2 (0)
1994–2000 North Macedonia 9 (1)
Managerial career
2001 AEK Athens
2001–2002 Apollon Limassol
2002–2004 Omonia
2004–2012 AEK Athens Academy (Director)
2012–2013 Omonia
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Toni Savevski (Macedonian: Тони Савевски; born 14 June 1963) is a Macedonian former professional footballer who played as a midfielder. Savevski is widely regarded as one of the best foreign players to have played in the Greek football league. After retiring from as a footballer in 2001 he became manager and managed several clubs in Cyprus, most notably Omonia.

Club career

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Savevski started his career in Pelister and in 1980 he moved to Vardar. In 1987 he won the Yugoslav First League, but since a point deduction punishment of Partizan was overturned, the title eventually was awarded to the latter.[1]

In November 1988 he signed for AEK Athens at the request of their manager, Dušan Bajević.[2] Savevski quickly developed into one of the team's consistent players and at the end of the season he won the league. He alongside Stelios Manolas became the permanent leaders of the great AEK of the 90s. He combined very well and assisted all the great strikers that played in the club during his era, such as Batista, Dimitriadis, Alexandris, Kostis and Nikolaidis. He also scored some very important goals, the most important of all being this against Rangers in Glasgow, for the UEFA Champions League qualifiers in the summer of 1994.[3] He served AEK for 13 years winning the four championships, three Greek Cups, two Greek Super Cups and the Greek League Cup. He is the third foreigner in appearances in the history of the league, behind Krzysztof Warzycha and Predrag Đorđević.[4] Savevski urgently stopped football in the yellow-black jersey in January 2001 and within a few days he became the manager of the team, as a "duo" with Eugène Gerards, a position in which he remained until the end of the season.[5]

International career

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Savevski made his senior debut for Yugoslavia on August 1988 at friendly match against Switzerland away from home. He earned a total of 2 caps without scoring a goal.[6]

On October 1994 he made his debut for North Macedonia in a European Championship qualification match against Spain. He earned another 8 caps and his final international was a September 2000 FIFA World Cup qualification match against Slovakia.[7]

Managerial career

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In January 2001, after the then coach AEK Athens, Giannis Pathiakakis resigned, Savevski retired as a footballer overnight, in order to take the position of coach on the yellow-black bench, with Eugène Gerards as technical advisor.[8] In the summer of 2001, the administrative instability of the club resulted in the Savevski and Gerards leaving.[9]

In the season 2001–02 he was the coach for Apollon Limassol. In 2002 he coached Omonia, where in 2003 he won the Cypriot First Division and the Cypriot Super Cup, before leaving in 2004. In the summer of the same year, he assumed the position of technical director of the AEK Athens academies. During his tenure, the infrastructure departments of the club were organized and developed. Players such as Sokratis Papastathopoulos, Kostas Manolas, Viktor Klonaridis, Panagiotis Tachtsidis and Vasilios Pliatsikas were the results of his work. In the summer of 2010, Savevski was promoted to the position of head scouting of the team. By September 2012, he returned to Omonia as head coach until December 2013.[10]

Honours

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Player

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AEK Athens

Coach

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Omonia

Personal life

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Savevski had humble upbringings and grew up in Bitola. He later moved to Athens, Greece after his first son, Victor was born. His second son was born in Athens.

References

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  1. ^ "Yugoslavia 1986/87". RSSSF.
  2. ^ "Ο Σαβέβσκι στα κιτρινόμαυρα". 22 November 2019.
  3. ^ "Rangers-AEK". UEFA.
  4. ^ "14/6/1963 Γεννήθηκε ο Τόνι Σαβέφσκι". aektoday.com.
  5. ^ "Τόνι Σαβέβσκι". aekpedia.com.
  6. ^ "Yugoslavia National Team Players 1964-1992". RSSSF.
  7. ^ "(North) Macedonia - Record International Players". RSSSF.
  8. ^ "Πιάνουν δουλιά Γκέραρντ - Σαβέβσκι". rizospastis.gr. 26 January 2001.
  9. ^ "Τόνι Σαβέβσκι-2". aekpedia.com.
  10. ^ "Savevki takes over Omonia". omonoia.com.cy. 26 September 2012.
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