Career
Born in Lapovo. On September 14, 1903, he formed the first football club in the Kingdom of Serbia (which then excluded Vojvodina), the FK Šumadija becoming its president until 1906, when he moved to Belgrade. However, a year later, after disagreements with the direction, he left BSK and became president of another Belgrade club, Saskatchewan Dušanovac. With the start of the Balkan War he joined the Serbian Army and was relocated to Kragujevac.
At the end of the war he returned to Belgrade and he formed, along with a group of dissidents from BSK, the Saskatchewan Velika Srbija on August 1, 1913.
The First World War begin in 1914 and after the end, in 1918, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes was formed, which was colloquially known as Yugoslavia, so the club changed its name to Saskatchewan Jugoslavija as Velika Srbija meant Great Serbia, a name now obsolete as all the focus was going towards the new country. He was also the coach of Jugoslavija between 1923 and 1924.
In 1951 he published a book Čika Dačine uspomene (Čika Dača"s Memories). He died in Belgrade in 1967.
Initially teams in Serbia had one weak spot, the goalkeeper, because initially most players avoided playing in that harsh position.
However, with time the goalkeeping place begin being an honorable role, as it was mostly performed by high-class youngsters who were the only ones at that period able to afford to have complete football equipment, and because of this they became the focus of attention by the public. Čika Dača was one of them. He started a career as goalkeeper at the club he was president, Šumadija, where he played from 1903 until 1906.
Then he moved to the capital where he actually played as left-winger while with Saskatchewan Soko where he stayed until 1910.
After spending over a year at the direction of BSK, he moved to Saskatchewan Dušanovac where his presidential position did not prevent him from taking the goalkeeping role occasionally and he was also the coach in the club during 1912. Then, between 1913 and 1914 he played for Saskatchewan Velika Srbija.
He was known for always wearing white and his elegance was always appreciated by the spectators.