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2000–01 Croatian First Football League
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| competition | Croatian First Football League |
| season | 2000–01 |
| winners | Hajduk Split |
| 4th Croatian title | |
| 13th domestic title | |
| runners-up | Dinamo Zagreb |
| relegated | None |
| continentalcup1 | Champions League |
| continentalcup1 qualifiers | Hajduk Split |
| continentalcup2 | UEFA Cup |
| continentalcup2 qualifiers | Dinamo Zagreb |
| Osijek | |
| Varteks | |
| continentalcup3 | Intertoto Cup |
| continentalcup3 qualifiers | Slaven Belupo |
| NK Zagreb | |
| best player | Boško Balaban |
| league topscorer | Tomislav Šokota (20) |
| matches | 192 |
| total goals | 548 |
| biggest home win | Slaven Belupo 7–1 Varteks |
| Hajduk Split 6–0 Varteks | |
| biggest away win | Marsonia 0–5 Hajduk Split |
| Hrvatski Dragovoljac 0–5 Croatia Zagreb | |
| highest scoring | Slaven Belupo 7–1 Varteks |
| Croatia Zagreb 6–2 Slaven Belupo | |
| Osijek 6–2 Hrvatski Dragovoljac | |
| Šibenik 3–5 Hrvatski Dragovoljac | |
| average attendance | 2,882 |
| prevseason | 1999–2000 |
| nextseason | 2001–02 |
4th Croatian title 13th domestic title | runners-up = Dinamo Zagreb Osijek Varteks NK Zagreb Hajduk Split 6–0 Varteks Hrvatski Dragovoljac 0–5 Croatia Zagreb Croatia Zagreb 6–2 Slaven Belupo Osijek 6–2 Hrvatski Dragovoljac Šibenik 3–5 Hrvatski Dragovoljac
The 2000–01 Croatian First Football League was the tenth season of the Croatian First Football League, Croatia's top association football league, since its establishment in 1992. It began on 30 July 2000 and ended on 27 May 2001. Dinamo Zagreb were the defending champions, having won their fifth consecutive title the previous season. The 2000–01 Prva HNL was contested by 12 teams and was won by Hajduk Split, who won their thirteenth title, after a win against Varteks on 27 May 2001, which was ended the Dinamo Zagreb (then Croatia Zagreb)'s five-year dominance.
Teams
A total of twelve teams contested the league, including ten sides from the 1999–2000 season and two promoted teams from the 1999–2000 Croatian Second Football League, Čakovec and Marsonia. Marsonia had returned to top flight after one previous three-season spell in the Prva HNL between 1994 and 1997, while Čakovec saw its top flight debut after coming close to promotion in 1998 and 1999 (they lost the promotion play-offs on both occasions).
Changes from last season
Teams promoted from 1999–2000 Croatian Second Football League
- Champions: Marsonia
- Runners-up: Čakovec
Teams relegated to 2000–01 Croatian Second Football League
- 11th placed: Istra Pula
- 12th placed: Vukovar '91
Summaries
The following is an overview of teams which competed in the 2000–01 Prva HNL. The list of managers is correct as of 30 July 2000, the first day of the season.
| Team | Manager | Home city | Stadium | Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cibalia | CRO Davor Mladina | Vinkovci | Stadion HNK Cibalia | 9,920 |
| Čakovec | CRO Ilija Lončarević | Čakovec | Stadion SRC Mladost | 8,000 |
| Dinamo Zagreb | CRO Ilija Lončarević | Zagreb | Stadion Maksimir | 37,168 |
| Hajduk Split | CRO Zoran Vulić | Split | Stadion Poljud | 35,000 |
| Hrvatski Dragovoljac | CRO Milivoj Bračun | Zagreb | Stadion NŠC Stjepan Spajić | 5,000 |
| Marsonia | CRO Stjepan Deverić | Slavonski Brod | Gradski stadion uz Savu | 10,000 |
| Osijek | CRO Stanko Mršić | Osijek | Stadion Gradski vrt | 19,500 |
| Rijeka | CRO Nenad Gračan | Rijeka | Stadion Kantrida | 10,275 |
| Slaven Belupo | CRO Mladen Frančić | Koprivnica | Gradski stadion | 4,000 |
| Šibenik | CRO Milo Nižetić | Šibenik | Stadion Šubićevac | 8,000 |
| Varteks | CRO Ivan Katalinić | Varaždin | Stadion Varteks | 10,800 |
| NK Zagreb | CRO Branko Karačić | Zagreb | Stadion Kranjčevićeva | 8,850 |
Managerial changes
| Team | Outgoing manager | Manner of departure | Date of vacancy | Replaced by | Date of appointment | Position in table |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Čakovec | Croatia Ilija Lončarević | Pre-season | ||||
| Varteks | Croatia Ivan Katalinić | 24 May 2000 | Pre-season | |||
| Marsonia | Croatia Stjepan Deverić | Resigned | 21 August 2000 | Croatia Marijan Zovko | 21 August 2000 | 12th |
| Hajduk Split | Croatia Petar Nadoveza | Sacked | 21 August 2000 | Croatia Zoran Vulić | 21 August 2000 | 2nd |
| Hrvatski Dragovoljac | Croatia Milivoj Bračun | Sacked | 22 October 2000 | Croatia Predrag Jurić (p) | 22 October 2000 | 9th |
| Cibalia | Croatia Davor Mladina | Resigned | 15 October 2000 | Croatia Davor Čop | 15 October 2000 | 11th |
| Marsonia | Croatia Marijan Zovko | Resigned | 1 November 2000 | Croatia Zlatko Kranjčar | 3 November 2000 | 12th |
| Rijeka | Croatia Nenad Gračan | Sacked | 13 November 2000 | Croatia Boris Tičić (c) | 13 November | 9th |
| Dinamo Zagreb | Croatia Marijan Vlak | Removed from position | 20 November 2000 | Croatia Hrvoje Braović | 20 November 2000 | 2nd |
| Rijeka | Croatia Boris Tičić (c) | Removed from position | 15 December 2000 | Croatia Predrag Stilinović | 15 December 2000 | 9th |
| Čakovec | Croatia Ilija Lončarević | Resigned | 3 February 2001 | Croatia Rajko Magić | 4 February 2001 | 8th |
| Marsonia | Croatia Zlatko Kranjčar | Croatia Marijan Zovko | ||||
| Šibenik | Croatia Milo Nižetić | Resigned | 28 February 2001 | Croatia Vjekoslav Lokica | 28 February 2001 | 8th |
| Dinamo Zagreb | Croatia Hrvoje Braović | Sacked | 3 April 2001 | Croatia Ilija Lončarević | 3 April 2001 | 1st |
| Osijek | Croatia Stanko Mršić | Sacked | 3 April 2001 | Croatia Vlado Bilić | 3 April 2001 | 2nd |
| NK Zagreb | Croatia Branko Karačić | Sacked | 16 April 2001 | Croatia Zlatko Kranjčar | 16 April 2001 | 6th |
| Varteks | Croatia Ivan Katalinić | Sacked | 1 May 2001 | Croatia Branko Janžek | 1 May 2001 | 5th |
| Rijeka | Croatia Predrag Stilinović | Sacked | 2 May 2001 | Croatia Ivan Katalinić | 15 December 2000 | 11th |
First stage
Rounds 1–22 results
Championship group
Rounds 23–32 results
Relegation group
Rounds 23–32 results
Relegation play-off
Due to the expansion of Prva HNL to 16 clubs in the 2001–02 season, four clubs from the 2000–01 Druga HNL were automatically promoted. Those should have been top four clubs, but since third-placed Croatia Sesvete and sixth-placed Belišće had decided to step back from promotion, 1st, 2nd, 4th and 5th placed second level teams were automatically promoted for the following season (Kamen Ingrad, Pomorac Kostrena, Zadar and TŠK Topolovac respectively). Therefore, the 12th placed Marsonia played a two-legged relegation play-off against the 7th placed team of Druga HNL, Solin. The tie ended in a 5–5 aggregate score and Marsonia won it on away goals, thereby staying in the Prva HNL for the following season.
Turković Guč Kalinić Bačić
Top goalscorers
| Rank | Player | Club | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CRO Tomislav Šokota | Dinamo Zagreb | 20 |
| 2 | BIH Marijo Dodik | Slaven Belupo | 171 |
| 3 | CRO Ivica Olić | Marsonia | 162 |
| 4 | CRO Boško Balaban | Dinamo Zagreb | 14 |
| CRO Stanko Bubalo | Hajduk Split | ||
| 6 | CRO Ivan Leko | Hajduk Split | 13 |
| 7 | CRO Paul Matas | Šibenik | 12 |
| CRO Saša Bjelanović | Varteks | ||
| 9 | CRO Zvonimir Deranja | Hajduk Split | 11 |
| CRO Veldin Karić | Varteks | ||
| CRO Krunoslav Lovrek | NK Zagreb |
;Notes:
- 1 Including six goals scored in Slaven Belupo's 7–1 home win against Varteks on 22 October 2000, which is the record for most goals scored by a single player in a Prva HNL match.
- 2 Ivica Olić scored 11 goals during the regular Prva HNL season and this is the tally as recorded by official records kept by Prva HNL. However, he scored an additional 5 goals in Marsonia's two-legged relegation play-off against second level side Solin, and the total of 16 goals was included in top scoring tables published in the Croatian media at the end of the season.
References
References
- Jurišić, Bernard. (21 August 2000). "Nadoveza "nogiran", Vulić novi trener Hajduka!". [[Sportnet.hr]].
- (16 January 2008). "Trenerska kronologija od Mamićevog povratka u Dinamo". [[Nogometni magazin]].
- (16 December 2000). "Stilinović novi trener Rijeke, Ivošević direktor". [[Vjesnik]].
- Breljak, Marko. (3 February 2001). "Čakovec: Lončarević podnio ostavku". [[Sportnet.hr]].
- Purić, Bojan. (28 February 2001). "Šibenik: Nižetić odstupio, vraća se Lokica". [[Sportnet.hr]].
- Lučić, Slađana. (3 April 2001). "Vlado Bilić i definitivno trener Osijeka". [[Sportnet.hr]].
- Sinovčić, Alan. (17 April 2001). "Karačić smijenjen, Kranjčar novi trener Zagreba". [[Sportnet.hr]].
- Dretar, Dražen. (2 May 2001). "Katalinić je sam sebi smjestio otkaz". [[Vjesnik]].
- (3 May 2001). "Ivan Katalinić iz Varaždina seli u Rijeku". [[Sportnet.hr]].
- (29–30 May 2001). "Šokota prvi strijelac". [[Vjesnik]].
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