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| manageryears1 = 1990–1992 | managerclubs1 = Velež | manageryears2 = 1993–1994 | managerclubs2 = Beauvais | manageryears3 = 1997–1998 | managerclubs3 = Raja Casablanca | manageryears4 = 1998–2002 | managerclubs4 = Lille | manageryears5 = 2002–2003 | managerclubs5 = Rennes | manageryears6 = 2003–2005 | managerclubs6 = Paris Saint-Germain | manageryears7 = 2005–2006 | managerclubs7 = Trabzonspor | manageryears8 = 2006 | managerclubs8 = Ittihad Jeddah | manageryears9 = 2008–2010 | managerclubs9 = Côte d'Ivoire | manageryears10 = 2010–2011 | managerclubs10 = Dinamo Zagreb | manageryears11 = 2011–2014 | managerclubs11 = Algeria | manageryears12 = 2014 | managerclubs12 = Trabzonspor | manageryears13 = 2015– | managerclubs13 = Japan }} Vahid Halilhodžić (born 15 October 1952) is a Bosnian football manager and former player who currently is the head coach of the Japanese national football team. Regarded as one of the best Yugoslav players in the 1970s and 1980s, Halilhodžić had successful playing spells with Velež Mostar, and French clubs Nantes and Paris Saint-Germain before retiring in the mid-1980s. He also appeared for the Yugoslav national team and was part of the squads which won the 1978 European Under-21 Championship before earning 15 full international caps for Yugoslavia. In the early 1990s he began managing and, after a short managing stint at his hometown club Velež, permanently moved to France in 1993. Since then he managed a number of teams in French-speaking countries and his achievements include winning the 1997 CAF Champions League with Moroccan side Raja Casablanca, leading the French side Lille OSC from second level to third place in Ligue 1 in less than three years, and winning the 2004 Coupe de France with Paris Saint-Germain. He also qualified for the 2010 FIFA World Cup with Côte d'Ivoire and the 2014 FIFA World Cup with Algeria. ==Playing career== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Vahid Halilhodžić」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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