FK Trayal Kruševac

Trayal
Full nameFudbalski Klub Trayal
NicknameGumari (Tiremen)
Founded1933; 92 years ago (1933)
GroundMladost Stadium
Capacity10,331
PresidentMiloš Kocić
Head coachDejan Branković
LeagueSerbian First League
2024–25Serbian First League, 10th of 16
Websitefktrayal.rs

Fudbalski klub Trayal (Serbian Cyrillic: Фудбалски клуб Трајал) is a professional football club from Kruševac, Serbia. They compete in the Serbian First League, the second tier of the national league system.

History

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The football club was formed in 1933 as a part of the "Obilićevo" sports association. It was named after the local gunpowder company "Obilićevo". They played the first match in November 1933 and beat Trgovački, also from Kruševac, with 6–0.[1]

After World War II the gunpowder company changed its name to "Miloje Zakić" and by mid-70s developed into what is today a tire manufacturer Trayal Corporation.[2] The football club changed its name accordingly to Trayal.

The club remained in local and regional leagues for most of its history until after the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. At the time, Trayal was playing in Serbian League Timok which was a 3rd tier of competition in FR Yugoslavia. The next 1999–2000 season saw the expansion of the Second League and Trayal gained promotion to the national level for the first time. Playing in the Second League group East, they finished mid-table in their first season.

Trayal remained in the Second League East for three consecutive seasons until they were relegated in the 2001–02 season due to the reduction of the number of participating teams. The Trayal Corporation was privatized a few years later and the club fell back to obscurity.

Trayal's current rise started in 2016 when the club was taken over by Vladan Gašić, the son of the former Minister of Defence and the current director of the Security Intelligence Agency, Bratislav Gašić.[3] The club took on from the half-season when they were near the bottom of the Rasina District First League (5th tier) with 18 points less than the first-ranked team Šanac. In the second part of the championship they recorded all 15 victories and in the end finished first with 3 points more than the closest competition. Between 2016 and 2018 they had three successive promotions and went from the 5th tier to the 2nd tier again.

They compete in the 2nd tier since 2018–19 Serbian First League.

Honours

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Serbian League East (III)

  • 2017–18

Zone League West (IV)

  • 2016–17

Rasina District First League (V)

  • 2012–13, 2015–16[4]

Seasons

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Season League Cup
Division P W D L F A Pts Pos
2015–16 5 – Rasina District First League 30 20 0 10 83 42 60 1st
2016–17 4 – Zone League West 30 24 3 3 96 21 75 1st
2017–18 3 – Serbian League East 30 19 9 2 53 19 66 1st
2018–19 2 – Serbian First League 37 15 7 15 38 40 32 9th Preliminary round
2019–20 2 – Serbian First League 30[a] 7 10 13 21 30 31 13th Round of 32
2020–21 2 – Serbian First League 34 9 8 17 31 44 35 15th Round of 32
2021–22 3 – Serbian League East 28 20 8 0 42 9 68 1st Round of 32
2022–23 2 – Serbian First League 30 9 8 13 29 37 35 13th
2023–24 3 – Serbian League East 30 30 0 0 82 16 90 1st Round of 32
2024–25 2 – Serbian First League 30 8 7 15 30 39 28[b] 14th
2025–26 2 – Serbian First League
Notes
  1. ^ The season was shortened due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Serbia.
  2. ^ 3 point deducted

Players

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Current squad

[edit]
As of 29 September 2025[5][6]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK  SRB Aleksandar Simić
3 DF  SRB Aleksa Petrović
4 DF  SRB Nikola Marinković (on loan from Napredak Kruševac)
5 DF  SRB Veljko Đokić
6 MF  JPN Yu Horike
7 DF  SRB Ilija Matejević
8 MF  SRB Marko Stanojević (captain)
9 FW  NGA Atule Collins (on loan from Spartak Subotica)
10 FW  SRB Filip Đurović
11 MF  SRB Lazar Nikolić
12 GK  SRB Vuk Vukadinović
13 DF  SRB Vladimir Nedeljković
14 FW  UZB Abubakir Muydinov
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 FW  SRB Ognjen Milošević
18 FW  SRB David Ivić (on loan from Železničar Pančevo)
19 MF  SRB Bratislav Simić
20 FW  SRB Vladimir Mijailović
21 MF  SRB Jasin Rašljanin
23 DF  SRB Vanja Đorđević (on loan from Partizan)
24 MF  SRB Veljko Milenković
25 DF  SRB Toplica Ćilerdžić
27 DF  SRB Igor Cvetojević
28 FW  SRB Ognjen Živković
29 FW  SRB Danijel Ranđelov
30 MF  SRB Bogdan Dunjić
31 DF  SRB Dušan Punoševac

Out on loan

[edit]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player

Team management

[edit]
Executive Board
President Serbia Miloš Kocić
Honorary president Serbia Vladan Gašić
General secretary Serbia Nebojša Popović
Sporting director Serbia Nemanja Milisavljević
Director of stadium Serbia Radoslav Jeftović
Economic Serbia Dragica Mihajlović
Serbia Jasmina Radenković
Serbia Igor Petrović
Digital marketing Serbia Dušan Zdravić
PR manager Serbia Vesna Vujčić
First Team Staff
Head coach Serbia Dejan Branković
Assistant coach Serbia Bojan Marjanović
Serbia Predrag Pavlović
Analyst Serbia Stefan Filipović
Goalkeeper coach Serbia Filip Anđelković
Physiotherapist Serbia Miloš Mihajlović
Serbia Marija Stevanović
Serbia Mihailo Petković
Coach Serbia Mirko Milutinović
Doctor Serbia Marko Petković
Serbia Filip Petrović
Second assistant coach Serbia Bojan Miladinović

Managerial history

[edit]
Coach from until
Serbia Miljojko Gošić 1 July 2017 4 September 2018
Serbia Goran Lazarević 4 September 2018 10 September 2019
Serbia Predrag Pešić 11 September 2019 24 October 2019
Serbia Nenad Sakić 1 November 2019 30 June 2020
Serbia Dragan Tadić (interim) 1 July 2020 14 August 2020
Serbia Goran Lazarević 14 August 2020 30 June 2021
Serbia Miljojko Gošić 21 July 2021 Present

References

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  1. ^ FK „Trajal“ obeležio 85 godina postojanja at krusevacgrad.rs (in Serbian) 8-4-2018.
  2. ^ "Trayal corporation". trayal.rs. Archived from the original on 2017-12-01.
  3. ^ GAŠIĆI RUŠE MIŠKOVIĆA Sin bivšeg ministra preuzeo FK "Trajal" at blic.rs (in Serbian) 17-8-2016.
  4. ^ FK Trajal results at srbijasport.net (in Serbian).
  5. ^ "Fudbaleri" (in Serbian). fktrayal.rs. Retrieved 23 November 2024.
  6. ^ "Tim" (in Serbian). prvaliga.rs. Retrieved 3 August 2025.
[edit]
  • [1] at srbijasport.net
  • [2] at srbijafudbal.com