Danijel Ljuboja

The next season, Ljuboja soon became an important member of the first team and began his goalscoring form, including a hat-trick in a 5–1 win over Créteil on 15 April 2000.He also made two appearances in the UEFA Cup competition, scoring twice against Belgian side Standard Liège but the club was knocked out, having lost 2–0 in the first leg.The season after, Ljuboja soon formed an important strike partnership with newly signing Mamadou Niang, which was short-lived as he moved from Strasbourg to PSG.In December 2003, Ljuboja was linked with Ligue 1 rival Paris Saint-Germain[4] and two unknown Premier League clubs.However, in September 2004, Ljuboja was disgusted with Halilhodžic after he wasn't included in a match against Monaco[8] and was omitted from the first team despite lack of attackers at the club.[9] Ljuboja told L'Equipe that Halilhodžic didn't give him explanations ahead of a match and that he was 100 percent committed at PSG.[20] After joining Stuttgart, Ljuboja said he left PSG, not for the revenge he received last season but to keep his dream alive ahead of a World Cup.In August 2006, Ljuboja was transferred on loan to Champions League participant Hamburger SV for one year with the option to buy the player afterwards.At the end of July, he was linked a move to Italian side Siena, but the transfer did not materialize[citation needed].[citation needed] After four years in Germany, Ljuboja returned to France on 23 July 2009 signing with Grenoble Foot 38.He made his league debut in the club's opening match of the season, a 2–0 defeat at home to Marseille on 8 August 2009, coming on for Josip Tadić.[35] On 29 September 2011, he scored and provided an assist in a 3–2 win over Israeli side Hapoel Tel Aviv in the Europa League group stage.He scored his first and only goal in a 3–2 win over Wales national football team back in 2003 in a UEFA Euro 2004 qualifying match.
Ljuboja with a fan at Legia Warsaw .
Legia WarsawVinkovciSR CroatiaSFR YugoslaviaForwardDinamo VinkovciOsijekRed Star BelgradeSochauxStrasbourgParis Saint-GermainVfB StuttgartHamburger SVVfL WolfsburgGrenobleSerbiaSerbian CyrillicfootballerSerbia and Montenegro2006 FIFA World CupNK Dinamo VinkovciNK OsijekMontpellierseasonCréteilAmara Traoré2000–01 seasonCoupe de France finalUEFA CupStandard LiègeMamadou NiangCoupe de FrancePauletaFabrice PancrateVahid HalilhodžićMonacoBarcelonaMálagaSouthamptonTottenham HotspurUEFA Champions LeagueMallorcaMarseilleBoltonArminia BielefeldBayer LeverkusenRennesP.A.O.K.Jon Dahl TomassonChampions LeagueDFB-PokalStuttgarter KickersBorussia DortmundFrankfurtFulhamRegionalligaVfB Stuttgart IIGrenoble Foot 38Josip TadićBoulogneBordeauxArles-AvignonPolishEkstraklasaKS CracoviaGórnik ZabrzeHapoel Tel Aviv2012 Polish CupSV RiedKorona Kielcethe leaguethe cupMiroslav RadovićRC LensSerbia and Montenegro national teamWales national football teamUEFA Euro 20042012–13Polish Cup2011–12Piłka Nożna Foreigner of the Year90minut.plReprezentacija.rsSerbia and Montenegro squadJevrićErgićDragutinovićDuljajVidićGavrančićKoromanKežmanMiloševićStankovićP. ĐorđevićKovačevićN. ĐorđevićDudićD. PetkovićVukićŽigićKrstajićStojkovićI. Petković