Club Horvat played from 1945 until 1957 for
Dinamo Zagreb. In his last season with Dinamo he also appeared in three matches for Zagreb XI in the
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup in 1956–57. In 1957 he moved to West Germany, to join
Eintracht Frankfurt, where he stayed for two seasons. In his first season, under coach
Adolf Patek, Eintracht finished third in the regional
1957–58 Oberliga Süd. In the following year, this time under
Paul Oßwald, the club won the
1958–59 Oberliga title and went on to win the
1959 German football championship playoff, although Horvat did not play in the historic
final in Berlin, which pitched Eintracht against
Kickers Offenbach coached by Horvat's former manager at Dinamo
Bogdan Cuvaj.
International In the
Yugoslavia national team Horvat appeared from 1946 until 1956 in 60 fixtures. He took part in the
World Cup in
1950 and
1954. He also played with the Yugoslav team at the
1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki and won the silver medal. In the final, Yugoslavia lost to the rising star of the 1950s,
Hungary. In the quarterfinals of the 1954 World Cup the
Plavi lost due to an own goal from Horvat with 0–1. This goal was scored in the 10th minute and remained the fastest own goal in World Cup history until
2006 the
Paraguayan
Carlos Gamarra hit between his own posts against
England after three minutes. His final international was a November 1956
friendly match away against
England. ==Managerial career==