Name: Nenad Gračan
Nickname: "Doktor"
Country:

Croatia
Club: HNK Rijeka
Position: *
CMF,
AMFSide: RF/BS
Age: 20-24 years (23/10/1962)
Height: 184 cm
Weight: 78 kg
Attack:
81Defence:
54Balance:
82Stamina:
80Top Speed:
76Acceleration:
78Response:
75Agility:
75Dribble Accuracy:
88Dribble Speed:
78Short Pass Accuracy:
86Short Pass Speed:
78Long Pass Accuracy:
88Long Pass Speed:
79Shot Accuracy:
78Shot Power:
85Shot Technique:
77Free Kick Accuracy:
81Curling:
82Header:
72Jump:
71Technique:
86Aggression:
76Mentality:
74Keeper Skills:
50Team Work:
82Injury Tolerance:
CCondition:
6Weak Foot Accuracy:
6Weak Foot Frequency:
5Consistency:
5Growth Type:
Early PeakCARDS:P20: Talisman
S02: Passer
S05: 1-touch Play
S16: 1-footed Roulette
SPECIAL ABILITIES: Tactical Dribble - Playmaking - Passing - 1 touch Pass
Attack / Defence Awareness Card: Attack Minded
INFO:Nenad Gračan was one of the most talented players in Croatian history whose promising career was finished when the Rambo Mladen Mladenović broke his leg when he was only 24 years old in 1986. Nenad was excellent playmaker with great passing range, especially long passes. Player with sublime ball skills, dribblings, feints, technique and above all his vision for making lethal passes which compensated his lack of pace. He was strong and elegant with powerful shot, good free kick taker and shooter. Gračan started playing professionally for hometown side NK Rijeka, amassing nearly 150 official appearances. He then moved to another club in Croatia, HNK Hajduk Split, for which he appeared intermittently over the course of four full seasons. Late into 1989, Gračan signed with La Liga club Real Oviedo. Joined by compatriots Janko Janković and Nikola Jerkan in his second season, he helped the Asturias team finish sixth and qualify for the UEFA Cup, contributing with 26 matches, and eventually appearing in more than 100 games overall. Aged almost 31, Gračan left Oviedo and returned to his country, now independent. After two years of inactivity, he played a handful of games with first professional club Rijeka, but retired shortly after. In the following decade, he took up coaching, starting with his last team as a player, but he rarely settled. Gračan was capped 10 times for Yugoslavia, but never attended any major international tournament. In 1984, the 21-year old helped the Olympic squad win the bronze medal in Los Angeles, appearing in all but one games and scoring in the quarterfinals against West Germany (5–2).