Vlade Đurović

[2] His father Danilo fought the war in a unit headed by the well-known communist commander Slaviša Vajner Čiča [sr], and, by the time the conflict ended, rose to the rank of major in the Yugoslav secret police, UDBA, all of which facilitated his relocation to Belgrade where the new, communist, authorities provided him with an apartment unit in a newly-built housing complex as the country transformed from a pre-war monarchy into a Stalinist people's republic.

[3] After two years of playing the power forward position in the club's juniors, seventeen-year-old Đurović was attached to the full squad by its head coach Bora Stanković.

In 1983 he won the championship title with Šibenka but only for sixteen hours,[5] as the Board of Directors of the Basketball Association of Yugoslavia, to an urgently convened session, decided to cancel the game and ordered a rematch in Novi Sad.

In the same year reached with Šibenka, the final of FIBA Korać Cup[6] but was defeated for the second[7] consecutive time by the same team, the French Limoges CSP of Richard Dacoury and Ed Murphy.

He stayed there just one year and led the team to the league title against back-to-back European Champions Cibona although Zadar struggled to the playoff finals with handicap seat.

Τhere depending on the competition, which began gradually to grow, succeed maintaining Panionios in the first four league positions and some march to their quarterfinals of Korac Cup in 1990 and 1993.

On 17 April 1996 Đurović got a job in Limoges until the end of the season with a view to lead the team in winning the French Cup and the second position for participation in playoffs.