Budućnost Teenage Savićević played at Budućnost's youth setup from January 1983 until summer 1984, a period during which he recorded nine league appearances (most of them substitute) for the full squad as well. The club signed him to a 4-year
stipend-based agreement, which was not a professional contract. Furthermore, throughout this period, he had been receiving regular call-ups to the
Yugoslavia national under-20 football team as well as SR Montenegro youth select team (alongside future notable professionals such as
Božidar Bandović and
Refik Šabanadžović) that competed at annual tournaments against other Yugoslav republics' select squads. On 5 October 1983, week 10 of the
league season, due to an injury incurred by the starting forward
Željko Janović, head coach Folić gave the seventeen-year-old Savićević his first full-squad starting appearance at home versus
Red Star Belgrade and the youngster ended up scoring on an 81st minute put-back that he chased down ahead of Red Star's defender
Zoran Banković and its goalkeeper
Tomislav Ivković. Savićević's first-ever top-flight goal ended up being the winning one as Budućnost recorded a famous 1-0 league victory over the heavily favoured Belgrade visitors.
1984–85 season: regular playing time In the summer of 1984, in preparation for the upcoming
1984–85 league season, newly arrived head coach
Josip Duvančić made seventeen-year-old Savićević a full squad member at the expense of the thirty-two-year-old club legend
Ante Miročević who was essentially incentivized to retire by being given a position on the club's coaching staff. With a new coach in addition to two established player acquisitions—goalkeeper
Rade Zalad from
Partizan and striker
Radomir Savić who arrived from
Spartak Subotica having previously attained some big match pedigree at
Red Star Belgrade and
FK Sarajevo—expectations were raised. After two consecutive seasons of finishing barely above the relegation zone, now with a squad featuring long-time club regulars Duško Vlaisavljević, forward
Žarko Vukčević, Muhamed Koljenović, Rade Vešović, defender
Zoran Vorotović, striker
Željko Janović, midfielder
Dragoljub Brnović, and defender
Slavko Vlahović, the club was hoping for a top half of the table league performance. However, the season quickly turned into yet another disaster as Budućnost barely avoided relegation again with Duvančić sacked only six months into the league campaign. For Savićević personally, the campaign marked a bit of a breakthrough as he recorded 29 league appearances, scoring six goals and clearly establishing himself as the club's best young asset.
1985–86 season: professional contract During the summer 1985 transfer window, not content with waiting around for the Budućnost management to accommodate him financially, soon to be nineteen-year-old Savićević looked to leave the club in search of a professional contract. To that end, he went to Red Star Belgrade on his own initiative and got to the club's technical director
Dragan Džajić who in turn had retired referee look at Savićević's stipend agreement at Budućnost with a view of examining the legal basis for a possible transfer. Zečević reportedly determined that in order to transfer to Red Star at this time, despite not being under a professional contract with Budućnost, Savićević would still require Budućnost's permission, which the Titograd club was unlikely to give. Another option was for Red Star to financially compensate Budućnost in order to let the player go, however, the Belgrade club was not sufficiently interested in Savićević at this particular time to do that. As a parting bit of career advice on this occasion, Džajić reportedly counseled Savićević not to sign a professional contract with Budućnost at all and then come to Red Star two years later in 1987 on a free transfer once his stipend agreement expires. Wanting the security of a professional contract, Savićević continued pursuing it, going straight to
Nikšić the same summer and getting a verbal commitment from
FK Sutjeska that seemed ready to pay a large sum to Budućnost in order to have the talented youngster. However, the move soon fell through and Savićević was back home in Titograd where Budućnost offered him a four-year professional contract, which he decided to accept thus putting his stipend agreement with the club out of effect. Discovering the young player's outspoken nature, as well as absence of qualms about openly discussing details of his personal life and professional career, Yugoslav print media began giving colourful Savićević a lot of attention, with numerous print interviews and electronic media appearances, with space not just in sports outlets, but lifestyle ones as well. Savićević thus underscored his desire not to leave Titograd just for the sake of leaving without a clear plan for what happens after he joins the bigger club, mentioning Titograd and Yugoslavia as his "natural setting" before considering transferring abroad. Also signing with Red Star on the same day was
Darko Pančev, a twenty-two-year-old natural striker with great goalscoring pedigree from
Vardar Skopje. The young creative midfielder and prolific striker duo thus joined the squad led by twenty-three-year-old attacking midfielder
Dragan Stojković who had already established himself as the team leader. The club additionally had a supremely talented nineteen-year-old midfielder
Robert Prosinečki as well as a potent up-and-coming all-around squad.
1988–89 season: in the army and the sporting company Barely a few days after signing with Red Star Belgrade, twenty-one-year-old Savićević promptly was called in to serve the mandatory
Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) stint that would keep him out of action for the entire
1988–89 league season. The other new high-profile acquisition Pančev also got called up to the army right after signing. Many, including Savićević himself who stated so directly, speculated that the timing of the call-ups was FK Partizan's (Yugoslav army club with many ties to top military authorities) revenge on both players for signing with their biggest rivals. and Marjan tournament in Split during spring 1989. Describing his time in the JNA's sporting company, Savićević said: "The players all served in Belgrade, which in and of itself was a perk since it meant we weren't in some godforsaken remote location. Furthermore, we only spent time in the barracks in the morning while in the afternoon we'd be at the stadium training. We were certainly privileged compared to other JNA soldiers". or
DM30 million (≈ £9.4 million) ahead of the
1992–93 season as part of the £34 million worth of transfer fees club owner
Silvio Berlusconi injected into the team that summer. The player had reportedly been on the club's radar for more than a season, with Milan's sporting director
Ariedo Braida coming to Belgrade in April 1991 to personally assess him at the European Cup semi-final return leg versus Bayern. Furthermore, sports agent Predrag Naletilić was the main operational liaison involved in the transfer. Not taken with the Montenegrin's superior technical abilities, though recognizing his talents, Capello's assessment of Savićević was that he played "a Yugoslav style—he was the star and the others had to run for him". Furthermore, from the start of the
Champions League competition in September 1992, Savićević was completely omitted from the squads selected for the European matches. Savićević and Capello quickly developed an antagonistic relationship with the former frustrated at being regularly dropped from the first team, and the latter unwilling to change the winning formula that had the team on an undefeated run in the league dating back to May 1991 (the streak would eventually end after 58 matches in March 1993 versus
Parma). In November 1992, when asked how he copes with leaving out world class players such as Savićević or Papin, Capello responded: By December 1992, Savićević was so unhappy with his status at the club that he made a firm decision to leave during the winter transfer window as he had offers from Marseille and
Atlético Madrid that ended up falling through and the player staying put. It was not until 24 January 1993 that Savićević scored his first league goal for Milan—a 78th-minute penalty kick effort at home versus
Genoa that turned out to be the game-winner. Finally opening his scoring account encouraged Savićević somewhat, and two weeks later he got another one versus lowly Pescara. His shining moment in the otherwise forgettable debut league season in Italy came on 7 March 1993 at home versus
Fiorentina when he scored a second-half brace for a 2–0 Milan win. In mid-March 1993, Savićević finally made his European debut for Milan, entering the Champions League
group stage match versus Porto as a 77th-minute substitute for
Marco Simone. Three weeks later, in early April 1993, he got the full ninety minutes
away at IFK Göteborg followed by another full ninety minutes two weeks after that
at home versus PSV Eindhoven. To cap off the frustrating season, in late May 1993, Savićević was not included in the team Capello took to Munich to face
Olympique de Marseille in the
1993 UEFA Champions League Final as the three foreigners chosen were van Basten, Rijkaard, and Papin. At the end of the campaign, following his less-than-mediocre season, Savićević's fate at the club was being decided among Milan brass. Capello wanted him out while Berlusconi was adamant about the player staying and getting more opportunities to play. The playing setup Capello employed throughout this season was an extremely defensive 4–4–2 that resulted in the entire squad scoring only 36 goals in 34 league matches while letting in only 15, as they won their third consecutive Serie A title. Further solidifying the defensive focus was the November 1993 arrival of Desailly who became a regular right away. Still, for the Montenegrin's inspirational and creative play, Milan-based journalist Germano Bovolenta of
La Gazzetta dello Sport hailed Savićević as
Il Genio (The Genius), a nickname that initially drew snickers and even occasional ridicule from other Italian journalists—especially those writing for the
Turin-based
Tuttosport and
Rome-based
Corriere dello Sport—but would eventually gain wider acceptance in the country after Savićević's performance in the 1994 Champions League Final. For the time being, as of late 1993, his footballing talents had continually been admired by club president Berlusconi whom Savićević developed great rapport with, as it was basically Berlusconi's personal support that kept Savićević from leaving the club during various low points of the player's relationship with Capello. Still, the season would end on a high note for Savićević. His performance in the
1994 UEFA Champions League Final at
Athens'
Olympic Stadium on 18 May would turn out to be his greatest moment in football and arguably one of the finest individual displays seen in the competition. He had already given indications of improved form and confidence in the second part of the
Champions League season, scoring twice during March 1994 right after the winter break in consecutive home-and-away matches versus Werder Bremen (though the goal at San Siro came as result of an atrocious mistake by Werder defender). Still, despite smoothly finishing top of the group and easily winning the one-match semifinal, Milan was in a bit of disarray heading into the final as both central defenders
Franco Baresi and
Alessandro Costacurta, the core of Capello's tactical defensive setup, were suspended. Considering that the opponent was the high-flying
Johan Cruijff's
Barcelona "
dream team" with
Romário,
Hristo Stoichkov,
Ronald Koeman,
José Mari Bakero,
Pep Guardiola, etc., Capello made a decision to fight fire with fire by sending out a lot more offense-minded formation. The changed approach suited Savićević just fine: he created the opening goal for
Daniele Massaro and then scored a spectacular 35-yard half volley for 3–0 to put the game beyond Barcelona's reach. The sheer audacity and technical brilliance of the goal – decision to go for a well-placed lob from the right edge of the penalty area on Barca goalkeeper
Andoni Zubizarreta who was slightly off his line in a situation when most would get closer and opt for a hard-driven shot as no defender was near – won Savićević much praise and accolades.
1994–95 season As a result of his much publicized Champions League final outstanding performance, Savićević's stock at Milan was raised to the point of club chairman and CEO
Adriano Galliani contacting him during the summer 1994 offseason to seek input regarding the club's intent of acquiring
David Ginola from
Paris Saint-Germain and
Faustino Asprilla from
Parma. Speaking to Galiani from a vacation, Savićević was reportedly vehemently against both proposed moves due to increasing the number of squad foreigners to five or six thus limiting his playing opportunities, even telling Galliani that if Ginola and Asprilla are brought in he would not show up for training camp and would be seeking to be transferred out of the club. versus
Bari at
Stadio San Nicola, the site of his European Cup triumph with Red Star. In the second leg of the
1994 UEFA Super Cup Final against
Arsenal in Milan, he set up Daniele Massaro's goal to give Milan a 2–0 aggregate victory. Despite the team's mid-table Serie A form in 1995, Savićević continually played well for the
rossoneri in the Champions League en route to their third successive final that, for him, culminated in a spectacular
semi-final versus
Paris Saint-Germain, where he scored twice in the return leg at San Siro. Two weeks prior in the first leg at the
Parc des Princes, Savićević set up Boban in injury time for the only goal of the match. Despite his brilliant performance against PSG and his statistical importance to the team in 1995, he was not part of the team Capello took to
Vienna for the
1995 Champions League Final due to 'injury', even though Savićević insisted he was fit. In the final, a very negative and defense-minded Milan side created few opportunities and ultimately lost 1–0 to
Louis van Gaal's young
Ajax side.
1995–96 season New foreign arrivals
Paulo Futre and
George Weah as well as the signing of
Roberto Baggio increased the competition in both midfield and attack, but 29-year-old Savićević managed to turn in a successful season with 23 league appearances and six league goals as Milan managed to recapture the
league title. His brightest moments occurred in the
Derby della Madonnina as he finally scored a goal versus the cross-town rivals
Inter. On more than one occasion Savićević displayed his amazing technical skills and ball control such as when he dribbled and danced around Parma defenders
Fernando Couto and
Luigi Apolloni to set up Baggio for the opening goal against Parma at San Siro, before scoring one of his own in the eventual 3–0 win.
Later seasons Savićević's final seasons at Milan were less successful. The
1996–97 season saw the arrival of several new players, as well as manager
Óscar Tabárez; Milan started the season with a 2–1 loss in the
1996 Supercoppa Italiana to Fiorentina, with Savićević scoring Milan's only goal of the match. A series of disappointing results in the league saw Milan's former coach
Arrigo Sacchi return to the club as a replacement. Milan failed to retain their league title, finishing the season in a disappointing eleventh place, The
following season saw Fabio Capello recalled to the Milan bench and several more arrivals. Milan once again failed to qualify for Europe, placing tenth in Serie A, although they managed to reach the
final of the
Coppa Italia; Savićević's final goal for Milan came in the first leg of the quarter-finals of the tournament, on 8 January 1998, a 5–0 win against cross-city rivals Inter. Savićević was released by Milan during the summer 1998 transfer window. In his total time at the San Siro, he won seven trophies, including three scudetti (
Serie A championships) – 1992–93, 1993–94, 1995–96 - one European Cup – 1993–94 - and one
European Super Cup, totalling 144 appearances and 34 goals between 1992 and 1998. In spite of his skill and success with Milan, he was also criticized in the Italian media during his time with the club for his poor work rate and lack of consistency, in particular for not always running or trying against smaller teams, and his performances regularly blew hot and cold.
Return to Red Star In January 1999, following six months away from playing competitive football, thirty-two-year-old Savićević returned to his former club Red Star Belgrade under head coach
Vojin Lazarević. Coming back to
Marakana, the site of his great career successes, the club was third in the
league at the winter break, behind
Partizan and reigning league champions
FK Obilić. Featuring a solid young team core of
Goran Drulić,
Goran Bunjevčević and
Branko Bošković, the club had just sold its best young prospect
Perica Ognjenović to
Real Madrid, while simultaneously bringing in
Mihajlo Pjanović from
OFK Beograd. Veteran Savićević—who was immediately given the captain's armband—made his debut as the league restarted following the winter break. His most notable outing took place on 20 March 1999 against
cross-town rivals Partizan where he earned the man of the match performance. Four days later
NATO attacked FR Yugoslavia, forcing the league season to be interrupted and eventually ended prematurely. In total, Savićević made three league appearances during his second stint with Red Star.
Rapid Wien He played his final two seasons with the Austrian side
Rapid Wien, before retiring in 2001, after persistent injury struggles. ==International career==