SARAJEVO, Aug 21 (Reuters) - First-half goals from defender Mladen Krstajic and Striker Darko Kovacevic earned Yugoslavia a
2-0 win away to Bosnia in a friendly international played under heavy security on Wednesday.
Hundreds of police were deployed in and around the Kosevo
Olympic Stadium as organisers had feared ethnic crowd trouble
mainly from Bosnian Serbs supporting the Yugoslav team.
But Yugoslavia's fans showed up in small numbers and were
sealed off and no incidents were reported with them.
Home fans, however, threw stones and bottles at police
outside the stadium after the match but were quickly dispersed.
Yugoslavia went ahead when Krstajic headed in a Mihajlovic
free kick in the 34th minute. Kovacevic doubled the score in the
42nd after a defensive blunder left him alone with the ball
eight metres from the goal and he blasted it home.
The Yugoslavs, missing several familiar names such as
Predrag Mijatovic or Slavisa Jokanovic, dominated from the
outset but Kovacevic, Dejan Stankovic and Bosnia-born Savo
Milosevic missed several clear chances.
Bosnian coach Blaz Sliskovic also omitted several
foreign-based names, like Rayo Vallecano's Elvir Bolic and
Galatasaray's Elvir Baljic, to try new players and paid a dear
price for it.
Apart from Bayern Munich's utility player Hasan
Salihamidzic, who the crowd finally rewarded with applause
instead of boos for a tireless display, no other Bosnian player
left his mark on the match.
PENALTY APPEAL
The Bosnians had an appeal for a penalty turned down in the
eighth minute when Sinisa Mihajlovic pulled lone forward Samir
Muratovic's jersey to stop his burst into the box and that was
as close as they came to scoring in the first half.
There were 19 substitutions in the second half which
resulted in a drop in the pace.
The Yugoslavs' disciplined performance ensured they kept
their lead despite Bosnia's late attempts to score at least a
consolation goal in front of a disappointingly low home crowd of
13,000 in the 36,000-seat stadium.
'I expected a stronger Bosnian side but with several of
their key players missing our victory was never in doubt,'
Yugoslavia's coach Dejan Savicevic said.
Sliskovic said: 'Despite the result, which I think is not
fair to us, I think we played well.'
Some Sarajevans said before the match that it was organised
prematurely and a lot of them appeared to have decided to
boycott it.
The game, a warm-up for the European championship qualifiers
starting next month, was the first between the teams on the
territory of the old Yugoslav federation, from which Bosnia
seceded in 1992, sparking three years of war.
They met in the January 2001 Millennium Cup in India.
Bosnia play Romania, Denmark, Norway and Luxembourg in group
two of the European qualifiers, starting at home to the
Romanians on September 7 or 8.
Yugoslavia are away to Italy in their group nine opener on
October 12 or 13 and they also face Finland, Wales and
Azerbaijan.