Radnički Niš Petković's playing career started in 1988 at
Radnički Niš. In the same year, he met his future wife Violeta. He became the youngest player ever to play an official match in the history of old
Yugoslav First League, debuting on 25 September 1988 when he was 16 years and 15 days old, against
Željezničar Sarajevo thus beating
Mitar Mrkela's record by 1 day. Radnički ended up winning 4–0 in that match. Petković's age record has since been broken by
Slavko Perović and
Danijel Aleksić. Petković still helps his first club, which has since then declined.
Red Star Belgrade In July 1992, Petković was bought by
Red Star Belgrade. Though not even 20 years of age, he arrived with a reputation as a skilled technical playmaker. As established Yugoslav internationals such as
Dejan Savićević,
Darko Pančev,
Vladimir Jugović, and
Siniša Mihajlović left the club during the same summer, Petković was given a first-team run straight away by new head coach
Milan Živadinović, appearing in 30 league matches and scoring 5 goals in his
first season in Belgrade. He ended up staying with Red Star until December 1995 (three and a half seasons), winning two
Yugoslav First League titles. His transfer to Real Madrid was principally agreed during summer 1995, but Red Star decided to hang on to him for the
1995–96 UEFA Cup where the club expected to do well after finally being allowed back on the European scene following years of
sporting sanctions due to regional conflicts. However, Red Star was eliminated by Swiss club
Neuchâtel Xamax in the preliminary round.
Real Madrid In December 1995, 23-year-old Petković joined the Spanish giants
Real Madrid. At the time of his arrival, the club was not where it wanted to be in the league, hovering just outside the European spots in 6th and 7th place. Playing under head coach
Jorge Valdano, Rambo made his league debut on 17 December versus
Celta de Vigo as a 65th-minute sub for the legendary club veteran
Míchel as Madrid won 1–0 at home. Petković would see action again on 3 January at home versus
Real Valladolid — Madrid was comfortably 4–1 ahead when Valdano threw Petković on for
Iván Zamorano in the 61st minute. What would turn out to be Petković's last appearance of the season for the club came the following week away at lowly
CP Mérida — Real let the 0–2 lead slip by conceding two goals and in the 81st minute Valdano sent Petković in for
Freddy Rincón in search of a goal, but the score stayed 2–2. Within a fortnight Petković was loaned out to
Sevilla without getting a chance to have a starting eleven appearance during his one month at the Bernabeu.
Loan to Sevilla Arriving to Estadio Sánchez Pizjuán in mid-January 1996, Petković was once again parachuted into a club battling turmoil. Sevilla was barely above the relegation zone with head coach
Juan Carlos Álvarez (already their second head coach of the season) on thin ice. Juan Carlos gave his new Serbian acquisition his debut at home on 24 January vs
Albacete as a starter. Playing upfront with
Davor Šuker as strike partner, Petković had an average outing as Sevilla drew 1–1 with
Castillan visitors, which cost head coach Juan Carlos his job. Four days later away at
Real Sociedad, new head coach
Víctor Espárrago gave Petković the starting assignment again alongside Šuker, but subbed him off for
Monchu early into the second half in the 53rd minute. The next week versus
Racing de Santander, Petković was moved back into attacking midfielder role just behind Šuker and Monchu, however Sevilla again lost 0–1 while Petković got subbed off in the 59th minute. The following week Petković got relegated to the bench, only getting a bit part as an 89th-minute sub as Sevilla improbably triumphed away at league-leaders Atletico Madrid, however, the week after that he was back in the starting assignment. Petković finished out the 1995–1996 La Liga season in Sevilla, appearing in 8 league matches (7 as a starter) and scoring 1 goal.
Return to Madrid During summer 1996, Petković returned from the loan spell in Sevilla. The Real
squad that he returned to was radically different from the one he had left six months earlier: from the new head coach
Fabio Capello over to attack-minded left back
Roberto Carlos from Inter Milan, right back
Christian Panucci from AC Milan, attacking midfielder
Clarence Seedorf from Sampdoria right down to the all new forward line with Petković's former Sevilla teammate Šuker, and fellow Yugoslav
Predrag Mijatović from Valencia. The competition for spots up front thus got even tougher. Despite having a reputation for cautious and defensive football, Capello played a three-man attack of
Raúl, Mijatović, and Šuker, with Seedorf just behind them. It became clear that Capello was not counting on Petković, as he did not play a match until coming on as late substitute in the fourth match of the season. A week later Petković came on as a late substitute at
Real Oviedo for his last Madrid appearance.
Loan to Santander Petković got loaned out to
Racing de Santander in January 1997. He then briefly returned to Real before being discovered by
Vitória in a friendly tournament in which both clubs were involved. In the
rubro-negro baiano he started his successful Brazilian career, winning two
Bahia State Championships and a
Copa do Nordeste. He stayed until 1999 at Vitória, when he joined
Venezia of Italy, after an 8 billion
lire transfer.
Flamengo Petkovic did not succeed at Venezia, and quickly returned to Brazil, where he joined
Flamengo of Rio de Janeiro. In Flamengo his skills were fundamental in helping the team win the last two titles of the historic three in a row series against
arch-rivals Vasco, from 1999 to 2001. One month later, another free kick goal by Petkovic, against
São Paulo, allowed Flamengo to win the
Copa dos Campeões and return to
Copa Libertadores next year. Hugely popular at the time, he was known as "Pet" by the supporters. However, at
2001 Campeonato Brasileiro, Flamengo finished only one position above the relegated teams. The club also lost, in January 2002, the
Copa Mercosul final against the
Argentine side
San Lorenzo, in a match in which Petkovic was sent off.
Vasco da Gama In 2002, he moved to
Vasco da Gama, where he stayed until 2004. He played for a short time at the Chinese club
Shanghai Shenhua during this period where they won the
2003 league title. Unfortunately, in 2013 the
Chinese Football Association would revoke the league title after it was discovered the Shenhua General manager Lou Shifang had bribed officials to be biased to Shenhua in games that season. During his second spell at Vasco he helped his team avoid relegation at Campeonato Brasileiro, being the club's top scorer and top assistant. Vasco failed to record a win the 10 matches without Petkovic, acquiring only 10% of available points; with him the
cruzmaltinos obtained 45.7% of these points.
Fourth team in Brazil: Fluminense After a half-year in
Saudi Arabia, where he played for
Al-Ittihad, he returned to
Rio de Janeiro in August 2005, now to play for
Fluminense. Already 33 years old, Petković had to face a certain mistrust from the club's fans due to his association with Flamengo. However, his amazing performance in his third match against
Cruzeiro Esporte Clube, put an end to fan's misgivings, as he scored twice in a 6–2 away win. His first was the 1000th goal score by the Fluminense in the Brazilian Championship, earning Petković a commemorative plate in his honour at the club's headquarters. In this goal, Petkovic passed through three opponents in a short space, shooting just in time to avoid the oncoming goalkeeper. In the second one, he placed a powerful left-foot shot from outside the penalty box. After other great exhibitions, he received his second consecutive Silver Ball in the Brazilian federation annual award ceremony. After a bad season in 2006, when Fluminense had to fight relegation, he left the club.
Return to Flamengo On 20 May 2009
Flamengo announced the free transfer signing of Petkovic, despite previously having taken the club to court over unpaid wages in the amount of US$9 million. Though the two parties managed to settle the outstanding financial issues out of court prior to his signing, Petković's return was still met with a lot of scepticism, even outright opposition, from many people within the club as well as outside observers all of whom had doubts about his ability to perform at such an age. Some also expressed concern over the fact that he missed the
Rio de Janeiro state championship part of the season, meaning that he hadn't played any competitive football in the 6 months since his dismissal from Mineiro. However, much to the surprise of many people, 37-year-old Petkovic played a pivotal role for Flamengo, scoring 8 goals (including 2
direct from corners) and leading the club's challenge to eventually win its
sixth Brazilian Championship title, the first of his career. He overcame being left out of the team by manager
Cuca when his replacement in July,
Andrade, included him in the team and allowed him to help the club rise from 14th place. Petkovic was praised by the Brazilian press for a number of outstanding performances, including a brace he scored in round 30 for a 2–0 win away at league leaders
Palmeiras on 18 October 2009, as well as his round 34 contribution on 8 November away at Atlético Mineiro where the team recorded important 1–3 win. On 20 November 2009 he was inducted into the Brazilian Hall of Fame in the Maracana, thus becoming only the fifth non-Brazilian and third European to receive such an honour in Brazil. Then on 7 December, as the season finished and Flamengo celebrated their title, Petković won the traditional Bola de Prata (Silver Ball) organized by the sports magazine
Placar and
ESPN Brasil for best midfielder of the 2009 Brazilian Championship. It was the third time that he was awarded the prize. Starting the new season from the very beginning, Petkovic entered his first match of the
2010 Rio state championship as a late substitute and scored a goal on what was virtually his first touch of the contest at
Volta Redonda on 20 January 2010. On 5 June 2011, Petković retired as a professional player after playing the first half of the league match against
Corinthians. To commemorate his retirement, all Flamengo players had Petkovic's name on the back of their jerseys in the match. ==International career==