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| height_in =
| height_in =
| weight_lb =
| weight_lb =
| team =
| league = [[Women's Japan Basketball League]]
| team = Denso Iris
| league =
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1981|9|26}}
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1981|9|26|df=y}}
| birth_place = [[Belgrade]], [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|SFR Yugoslavia]]
| birth_place = [[Belgrade]], [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|SFR Yugoslavia]]
| nationality = Serbian / French
| nationality = Serbian<br> French (since 2003)
| coach_start = 2004
| coach_start = 2004
| coach_end =
| coach_end =
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| cteam4 = [[Serbia women's national basketball team|Serbia]]
| cteam4 = [[Serbia women's national basketball team|Serbia]]
| cyears5 = 2013–2016
| cyears5 = 2013–2016
| cteam5 = [[Union Lyon Basket Féminin|Union Lyon Basket]]
| cteam5 = [[ASVEL Féminin|Lyon Basket]]
| cyears6 = 2016–2018
| cyears6 = 2016–2018
| cteam6 = [[Galatasaray S.K. (women's basketball)|Galatasaray]]
| cteam6 = [[Galatasaray S.K. (women's basketball)|Galatasaray]]
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| cyears8 = 2018–2020
| cyears8 = 2018–2020
| cteam8 = [[Shanghai Swordfish]]
| cteam8 = [[Shanghai Swordfish]]
| cyears9 = 2020–present
| cyears9 = 2020–2022
| cteam9 = [[Denso Iris]]
| cteam9 = [[Denso Iris]]
| cyears10 = 2022–2023
| cteam10 = [[Fenerbahçe S.K. (women's basketball)|Fenerbahçe]]
| medal_templates = {{MedalSport|Women's [[basketball]]}}
| medal_templates = {{MedalSport|Women's [[basketball]]}}
{{MedalTeam | Head Coach for {{bkw|SRB}} }}
{{MedalTeam | Head Coach for {{bkw|SRB}} }}
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{{MedalBronze|[[FIBA Women's EuroBasket 2019|2019 Latvia/Serbia]]|}}
{{MedalBronze|[[FIBA Women's EuroBasket 2019|2019 Latvia/Serbia]]|}}
}}
}}
'''Marina Maljković''' ({{lang-sr-Cyrl|Марина Маљковић}}; born September 26, 1981) is a Serbian professional [[basketball]] coach. She currently serves as a head coach for the [[Denso Iris]] of the [[Women's Japan Basketball League]] and for the [[Serbia women's national basketball team]].
'''Marina Maljković''' ({{lang-sr-Cyrl|Марина Маљковић}}; born 26 September 1981) is a Serbian professional [[basketball]] coach. She currently serves as a head coach for the [[Serbia women's national basketball team]].


==Club career==
==Club career==
As a daughter of a famous Serbian coach, four-times [[Euroleague Basketball|Euroleague]] winner [[Božidar Maljković]], Marina Maljković has been given an opportunity to start coaching career at the age of 16, when she became an assistant coach in [[Abeilles de Rueil]], a French club she was playing for at the time.<ref>[http://kosarka.rs/main.asp?dir=news&newsid=6605 Maljković: Srbija se ne odbija] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131214045828/http://kosarka.rs/main.asp?dir=news&newsid=6605 |date=2013-12-14 }} {{in lang|sr}}</ref> In 2002, she graduated from ''The College for Sports Coaches'' in Belgrade. In the same year, she became the head coach of the female section of [[KK Vizura|KK Ušće]], aged 21. She was the coach of the youth categories, and, at the same time, she managed to lead the senior team as the club advanced from the third to the [[First Women's Basketball League of Serbia|first league of Serbia and Montenegro]] in just two years. In 2007, Maljković became the head coach of the female section of [[ŽKK Vršac|ŽKK Hemofarm]], winning two league titles and two national cups in the following two years.<ref>[http://www.kss.rs/vesti/Arhiva/Vesti%20avgust%202011.htm Trenerska biografija Marine Maljković] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130915140207/http://kss.rs/Vesti/Arhiva/Vesti%20avgust%202011.htm |date=2013-09-15 }} {{in lang|sr}}</ref> In 2009, she moved to [[ŽKK Partizan]].<ref>[http://beonet.com/index.php?s=read&cat=2&id=66002 Maljković u Partizanu] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131212063057/http://beonet.com/index.php?s=read&cat=2&id=66002 |date=2013-12-12 }} {{in lang|sr}}</ref> In the following four years, Partizan has won four national championships, two national cups and two [[MŽRKL|Women's Adriatic League]] titles. Maljković has been the national champion of Serbia for six consecutive seasons, and has won six "Coach of the Year" awards. In September 2013, Maljković signed a two-year contract with [[Union Lyon Basket Féminin]], a club competing in the [[Ligue Féminine de Basketball]], the top women’s French professional basketball league.<ref>[http://www.lyoncapitale.fr/Journal/Lyon/Sport/Basket/Marina-Maljkovic-nouvelle-coach-du-Lyon-Basket-Feminin Marina Maljkovic nouvelle coach du Lyon Basket Féminin] {{in lang|fr}}</ref>
As a daughter of Serbian coach and four-time [[Euroleague Basketball|Euroleague]] winner [[Božidar Maljković]], Marina had the opportunity to start her coaching career early at the age of 16, when she became an assistant coach in [[Abeilles de Rueil]], a French club she was playing for at the time.<ref>[http://kosarka.rs/main.asp?dir=news&newsid=6605 Maljković: Srbija se ne odbija] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131214045828/http://kosarka.rs/main.asp?dir=news&newsid=6605 |date=2013-12-14 }} {{in lang|sr}}</ref> In 2002, she graduated from ''The College for Sports Coaches'' in Belgrade. In the same year, she became the head coach of the female section of [[KK Vizura|KK Ušće]], aged 21. She was the coach of the youth categories, and, at the same time, she managed to lead the senior team as the club advanced from the third to the [[First Women's Basketball League of Serbia|first league of Serbia and Montenegro]] in just two years. In 2007, Maljković became the head coach of the female section of [[ŽKK Vršac|ŽKK Hemofarm]], winning two league titles and two national cups in the following two years.<ref>[http://www.kss.rs/vesti/Arhiva/Vesti%20avgust%202011.htm Trenerska biografija Marine Maljković] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130915140207/http://kss.rs/Vesti/Arhiva/Vesti%20avgust%202011.htm |date=2013-09-15 }} {{in lang|sr}}</ref> In 2009, she moved to [[ŽKK Partizan]].<ref>[http://beonet.com/index.php?s=read&cat=2&id=66002 Maljković u Partizanu] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131212063057/http://beonet.com/index.php?s=read&cat=2&id=66002 |date=2013-12-12 }} {{in lang|sr}}</ref> In the following four years, Partizan has won four national championships, two national cups and two [[MŽRKL|Women's Adriatic League]] titles. Maljković has been the national champion of Serbia for six consecutive seasons, and has won six "Coach of the Year" awards. In September 2013, Maljković signed a two-year contract with [[Union Lyon Basket Féminin]], a club competing in the [[Ligue Féminine de Basketball]], the top women’s French professional basketball league.<ref>[http://www.lyoncapitale.fr/Journal/Lyon/Sport/Basket/Marina-Maljkovic-nouvelle-coach-du-Lyon-Basket-Feminin Marina Maljkovic nouvelle coach du Lyon Basket Féminin] {{in lang|fr}}</ref>


In June 2018, she signed for the [[Shanghai Swordfish]] of the [[Women's Chinese Basketball Association|WCBA]].<ref>{{cite web |title=DALEKO OD KUĆE! Marina Maljković ima novi posao! |url=https://www.espreso.rs/sport/kosarka/260701/daleko-od-kuce-marina-maljkovic-ima-novi-posao |website=espreso.rs |accessdate=13 June 2018}}</ref>
In June 2018, she signed for the [[Shanghai Swordfish]] of the [[Women's Chinese Basketball Association|WCBA]].<ref>{{cite web |title=DALEKO OD KUĆE! Marina Maljković ima novi posao! |url=https://www.espreso.rs/sport/kosarka/260701/daleko-od-kuce-marina-maljkovic-ima-novi-posao |website=espreso.rs |accessdate=13 June 2018}}</ref>

On 19 April 2022 she signed with [[Fenerbahçe S.K. (women's basketball)|Fenerbahçe]] of the [[Women's Basketball Super League|Turkish Super League]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ntvspor.net/basketbol/fenerbahce-safiport-da-maljkovic-donemi-625ea6e9b908a41a6ccc18e9|title=
Spor Haberleri Basketbol Haberleri Fenerbahçe Safiport'da Maljkovic DönemiFenerbahçe Safiport'da Maljkovic dönemi|last=|first=|date=April 19, 2022|website=|publisher=NTV Spor|language=tr|access-date=April 19, 2022}}</ref>


==Serbian national team==
==Serbian national team==
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In August 2011, Maljković has been appointed head coach of the [[Serbia women's national basketball team]]. At the [[EuroBasket Women 2013]], Serbia national team managed to pass into the semifinals, which was the greatest national team success since the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991. Aged 32, Maljković was the youngest, and the only female head coach at the championship.<ref>[http://kosarka24.rs/index.php/reprezentacije/vesti-reprezentacije/3268-marina-maljkovic-jedina-zena-medu-selektorima Marina Maljković jedina žena među selektorima] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130625080147/http://www.kosarka24.rs/index.php/reprezentacije/vesti-reprezentacije/3268-marina-maljkovic-jedina-zena-medu-selektorima |date=2013-06-25 }} {{in lang|sr}}</ref>
In August 2011, Maljković has been appointed head coach of the [[Serbia women's national basketball team]]. At the [[EuroBasket Women 2013]], Serbia national team managed to pass into the semifinals, which was the greatest national team success since the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991. Aged 32, Maljković was the youngest, and the only female head coach at the championship.<ref>[http://kosarka24.rs/index.php/reprezentacije/vesti-reprezentacije/3268-marina-maljkovic-jedina-zena-medu-selektorima Marina Maljković jedina žena među selektorima] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130625080147/http://www.kosarka24.rs/index.php/reprezentacije/vesti-reprezentacije/3268-marina-maljkovic-jedina-zena-medu-selektorima |date=2013-06-25 }} {{in lang|sr}}</ref>


She led the team once again at the [[EuroBasket Women 2015|EuroBasket 2015]] in Budapest where they won the gold medal, and qualified for the [[Basketball at the 2016 Summer Olympics|2016 Olympics]], first in the history for the Serbian team.<ref>{{cite news|title=Serbia women win EuroBasket title, gain first Olympics berth|url=http://espn.go.com/olympics/basketball/story/_/id/13163843/serbia-women-win-eurobasket-title-rio-berth|accessdate=29 June 2015|work=espn.go.com|agency=Associated Press|date=29 June 2015}}</ref> In the autumn of 2015, she extended her contract with the [[Basketball Federation of Serbia]] to be the team's selector over next four years; she also requested that one third of her salary be forwarded to all 12 clubs of the [[First Women's Basketball League of Serbia]].<ref>{{cite news|title=Veliko srce Maljkovićeve za žensku košarku|url=http://www.b92.net/sport/kosarka/vesti.php?yyyy=2015&mm=10&dd=03&nav_id=1047036|accessdate=3 October 2015|work=b92.net|date=3 October 2015|language=Serbian}}</ref> In January 2017, she left the head coaching position.<ref>{{cite news|title=Maljkovićeva: Razlog emotivno i fizičko pražnjenje|url=http://www.b92.net/sport/kosarka/vesti.php?yyyy=2017&mm=01&dd=03&nav_id=1216559|accessdate=3 January 2017|work=b92.net|date=3 January 2017|language=Serbian}}</ref>
She led the team once again at the [[EuroBasket Women 2015|EuroBasket 2015]] in Budapest where they won the gold medal, and qualified for the [[Basketball at the 2016 Summer Olympics|2016 Olympics]], first in the history for the Serbian team.<ref>{{cite news|title=Serbia women win EuroBasket title, gain first Olympics berth|url=https://www.espn.com/olympics/basketball/story/_/id/13163843/serbia-women-win-eurobasket-title-rio-berth|access-date=29 June 2015|work=[[ESPN]]|agency=Associated Press|date=29 June 2015}}</ref> In the autumn of 2015, she extended her contract with the [[Basketball Federation of Serbia]] to be the team's selector over next four years; she also requested that one third of her salary be forwarded to all 12 clubs of the [[First Women's Basketball League of Serbia]].<ref>{{cite news|title=Veliko srce Maljkovićeve za žensku košarku|url=http://www.b92.net/sport/kosarka/vesti.php?yyyy=2015&mm=10&dd=03&nav_id=1047036|accessdate=3 October 2015|work=b92.net|date=3 October 2015|language=Serbian}}</ref> In January 2017, she left the head coaching position.<ref>{{cite news|title=Maljkovićeva: Razlog emotivno i fizičko pražnjenje|url=http://www.b92.net/sport/kosarka/vesti.php?yyyy=2017&mm=01&dd=03&nav_id=1216559|accessdate=3 January 2017|work=b92.net|date=3 January 2017|language=Serbian}}</ref>


On 14 December 2017, Maljković has been appointed head coach of the Serbia national team for the second time.<ref>{{cite web|title=VELIKI POVRATAK Marina Maljković selektor Srbije|url=http://sport.blic.rs/kosarka/domaca-kosarka-i-aba/veliki-povratak-marina-maljkovic-selektor-srbije/nql9sl4|website=sport.blic.rs|accessdate=15 December 2017}}</ref>
On 14 December 2017, Maljković has been appointed head coach of the Serbia national team for the second time.<ref>{{cite web|title=VELIKI POVRATAK Marina Maljković selektor Srbije|url=http://sport.blic.rs/kosarka/domaca-kosarka-i-aba/veliki-povratak-marina-maljkovic-selektor-srbije/nql9sl4|website=sport.blic.rs|accessdate=15 December 2017}}</ref>
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===Club competitions===
===Club competitions===
As head coach:
As head coach:
* [[EuroCup Women|EuroCup]] champion: '''1''' <small>(with [[Galatasaray S.K. (women's basketball)|Galatasaray]]: [[2017–18 EuroCup Women|2017–18]])</small>
* [[EuroLeague Women|EuroLeague]] champion: '''1''' <small>(with [[Fenerbahçe S.K. (women's basketball)|Fenerbahçe]]: [[2022–23 EuroLeague Women|2022–23]])</small>
* [[EuroCup Women|EuroCup]] champion: '''1''' <small>(with [[Galatasaray S.K. (women's basketball)|Galatasaray]]: [[2017–18 EuroCup Women|2017–18]])</small>
* [[MŽRKL|Women's Adriatic League]] champion: '''2''' <small>(with [[ŽKK Partizan|Partizan]]: 2011–12, 2012–13)</small>
* [[MŽRKL|Women's Adriatic League]] champion: '''2''' <small>(with [[ŽKK Partizan|Partizan]]: 2011–12, 2012–13)</small>
* [[Women's Basketball Super League|Turkish Women's Basketball Super League]] champion: '''2''' <small>(with [[Fenerbahçe S.K. (women's basketball)|Fenerbahçe]]: [[2021–22 Women's Basketball Super League|2021–22]], [[2022–23 Women's Basketball Super League|2022–23]])</small>
* Challenge round champion: '''1''' <small>(with [[ASVEL Féminin|Lyon Basket]]: 2014)</small>
* [[First Women's Basketball League of Serbia|Serbian League]] champion: '''6''' <small>(with [[ŽKK Vršac|Hemofarm]]: 2007–08, 2008–09 and [[ŽKK Partizan|Partizan]]: 2009–10, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2012–13)</small>
* [[First Women's Basketball League of Serbia|Serbian League]] champion: '''6''' <small>(with [[ŽKK Vršac|Hemofarm]]: 2007–08, 2008–09 and [[ŽKK Partizan|Partizan]]: 2009–10, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2012–13)</small>
* [[Milan Ciga Vasojević Cup|Serbian Cup]] winner : '''4''' <small>(with [[ŽKK Vršac|Hemofarm]]: 2007–08, 2008–09 and [[ŽKK Partizan|Partizan]]: 2010–11, 2012–13)</small>
* [[Milan Ciga Vasojević Cup|Serbian Cup]] winner : '''4''' <small>(with [[ŽKK Vršac|Hemofarm]]: 2007–08, 2008–09 and [[ŽKK Partizan|Partizan]]: 2010–11, 2012–13)</small>
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===National team competitions===
===National team competitions===
As head coach:
As head coach:
* [[Basketball at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|2016 Summer Olympics]]: {{bronze medal}}
* [[EuroBasket Women 2015]]: {{gold medal}}
* [[EuroBasket Women 2015]]: {{gold medal}}
* [[EuroBasket Women 2021]]: {{gold medal}}
* [[EuroBasket Women 2021]]: {{gold medal}}
* [[EuroBasket Women 2019]]: {{bronze medal}}
* [[EuroBasket Women 2019]]: {{bronze medal}}
* [[Basketball at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|2016 Summer Olympics]]: {{bronze medal}}


As an assistant coach:
As an assistant coach:
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== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[List of EuroBasket Women winning head coaches]]
* [[List of EuroBasket Women winning head coaches]]
* [[List of EuroLeague Women winning coaches]]


==References==
==References==
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{{Navboxes |list1=
{{Navboxes |list1=
{{Fenerbahçe SK 2022–23 Euroleague Women champions}}
{{Galatasaray (women's basketball) coach navbox}}
{{Galatasaray 2017–18 EuroCup Women champions}}
{{Galatasaray 2017–18 EuroCup Women champions}}
{{Galatasaray (women's basketball) coach navbox}}
{{Serbia squad – EuroBasket Women 2015}}
{{Serbia squad – EuroBasket Women 2015}}
{{Serbia Women Basketball Squad 2016 Summer Olympics}}
{{Serbia Women Basketball Squad 2016 Summer Olympics}}
{{Serbia squad – EuroBasket Women 2019}}
{{Serbia squad – EuroBasket Women 2019}}
{{Serbia squad – EuroBasket Women 2021}}
{{Serbia squad – EuroBasket Women 2021}}
{{Slobodan Piva Ivković Award for Lifetime Achievement navbox}}
}}
}}


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[[Category:Serbia national basketball team coaches]]
[[Category:Serbia national basketball team coaches]]
[[Category:ŽKK Partizan coaches]]
[[Category:ŽKK Partizan coaches]]
[[Category:Fenerbahçe S.K. (women's basketball) coaches]]
[[Category:Serbia and Montenegro sports coaches]]
[[Category:Expatriate basketball coaches]]
[[Category:Coaches at the 2024 Summer Olympics]]
[[Category:Coaches at the 2016 Summer Olympics]]

Latest revision as of 11:40, 12 September 2024

Marina Maljković
Marina Maljković in 2013
Personal information
Born (1981-09-26) 26 September 1981 (age 43)
Belgrade, SFR Yugoslavia
NationalitySerbian
French (since 2003)
PositionHead coach
Coaching career2004–present
Career history
As coach:
2004–2007Ušće Belgrade
2007–2009Hemofarm
2009–2013Partizan Belgrade
2011–2017Serbia
2013–2016Lyon Basket
2016–2018Galatasaray
2017–presentSerbia
2018–2020Shanghai Swordfish
2020–2022Denso Iris
2022–2023Fenerbahçe
Medals
Women's basketball
Head Coach for  Serbia
Olympic Games
Bronze medal – third place 2016 Rio de Janeiro Team
EuroBasket Women
Gold medal – first place 2021 France/Spain
Gold medal – first place 2015 Hungary/Romania
Bronze medal – third place 2019 Latvia/Serbia

Marina Maljković (Serbian Cyrillic: Марина Маљковић; born 26 September 1981) is a Serbian professional basketball coach. She currently serves as a head coach for the Serbia women's national basketball team.

Club career

[edit]

As a daughter of Serbian coach and four-time Euroleague winner Božidar Maljković, Marina had the opportunity to start her coaching career early at the age of 16, when she became an assistant coach in Abeilles de Rueil, a French club she was playing for at the time.[1] In 2002, she graduated from The College for Sports Coaches in Belgrade. In the same year, she became the head coach of the female section of KK Ušće, aged 21. She was the coach of the youth categories, and, at the same time, she managed to lead the senior team as the club advanced from the third to the first league of Serbia and Montenegro in just two years. In 2007, Maljković became the head coach of the female section of ŽKK Hemofarm, winning two league titles and two national cups in the following two years.[2] In 2009, she moved to ŽKK Partizan.[3] In the following four years, Partizan has won four national championships, two national cups and two Women's Adriatic League titles. Maljković has been the national champion of Serbia for six consecutive seasons, and has won six "Coach of the Year" awards. In September 2013, Maljković signed a two-year contract with Union Lyon Basket Féminin, a club competing in the Ligue Féminine de Basketball, the top women’s French professional basketball league.[4]

In June 2018, she signed for the Shanghai Swordfish of the WCBA.[5]

On 19 April 2022 she signed with Fenerbahçe of the Turkish Super League.[6]

Serbian national team

[edit]

Maljković was an assistant coach of the Serbia and Montenegro national Under-18 team, which has achieved fourth place at the 2004 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship for Women, as well as Serbia and Montenegro national Under-19 team at the 2005 FIBA Under-19 World Championship for Women, which has won the silver medal after finals loss to the team USA.

In August 2011, Maljković has been appointed head coach of the Serbia women's national basketball team. At the EuroBasket Women 2013, Serbia national team managed to pass into the semifinals, which was the greatest national team success since the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991. Aged 32, Maljković was the youngest, and the only female head coach at the championship.[7]

She led the team once again at the EuroBasket 2015 in Budapest where they won the gold medal, and qualified for the 2016 Olympics, first in the history for the Serbian team.[8] In the autumn of 2015, she extended her contract with the Basketball Federation of Serbia to be the team's selector over next four years; she also requested that one third of her salary be forwarded to all 12 clubs of the First Women's Basketball League of Serbia.[9] In January 2017, she left the head coaching position.[10]

On 14 December 2017, Maljković has been appointed head coach of the Serbia national team for the second time.[11]

Career achievements

[edit]

Club competitions

[edit]

As head coach:

National team competitions

[edit]

As head coach:

As an assistant coach:

Honours

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Maljković: Srbija se ne odbija Archived 2013-12-14 at the Wayback Machine (in Serbian)
  2. ^ Trenerska biografija Marine Maljković Archived 2013-09-15 at the Wayback Machine (in Serbian)
  3. ^ Maljković u Partizanu Archived 2013-12-12 at the Wayback Machine (in Serbian)
  4. ^ Marina Maljkovic nouvelle coach du Lyon Basket Féminin (in French)
  5. ^ "DALEKO OD KUĆE! Marina Maljković ima novi posao!". espreso.rs. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  6. ^ "Spor Haberleri Basketbol Haberleri Fenerbahçe Safiport'da Maljkovic DönemiFenerbahçe Safiport'da Maljkovic dönemi" (in Turkish). NTV Spor. April 19, 2022. Retrieved April 19, 2022.
  7. ^ Marina Maljković jedina žena među selektorima Archived 2013-06-25 at the Wayback Machine (in Serbian)
  8. ^ "Serbia women win EuroBasket title, gain first Olympics berth". ESPN. Associated Press. 29 June 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
  9. ^ "Veliko srce Maljkovićeve za žensku košarku". b92.net (in Serbian). 3 October 2015. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  10. ^ "Maljkovićeva: Razlog emotivno i fizičko pražnjenje". b92.net (in Serbian). 3 January 2017. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
  11. ^ "VELIKI POVRATAK Marina Maljković selektor Srbije". sport.blic.rs. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  12. ^ "Tomislav Nikolić povodom Dana državnosti odlikovao 84 ličnosti i institucije". Blic. 13 February 2017. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
[edit]