The Communist authorities disbanded Građanski Zagreb, forcing Brozović to move to the newly formed army club Partizan, with whom he won the league title in the 1946–47 season. He also won the Yugoslav Cup in 1947.
From 1948 to 1953, Brozović played for Sarajevo. In the 1948–49 season, he as a player-manager, won the Yugoslav Second League with Sarajevo. He became a club legend at the club. He ended his playing career at Sarajevo in 1953.
Brozović won a silver medal for Yugoslavia in football at the 1948 Summer Olympics.[3] He played four matches and scored no goals.[1]
His final international for Yugoslavia was an August 1948 Balkan Cup match against Poland.[4]
Managerial career
Brozović started managing Sarajevo in 1948 as a player-manager. He won the Yugoslav Second League in the 1948–49 season. After ending his playing career in 1953, he became a full-time manager. Brozović left Sarajevo in 1956, and was immediately named manager of Sarajevo's fierce city rivalŽeljezničar. Brozović promoted the club to the Yugoslav First League in 1957. He managed Željezničar until 1958.
In 1959, Brozović once again became the manager of Sarajevo. He stayed at the club until 1961. Five years later, in 1966, for the fourth time in his career, Brozović became the manager of Sarajevo. As manager, he won the club's historic, first ever Yugoslav First League title in the 1966–67 season. After the end of the season, he left Sarajevo in the summer of 1967. He would return to Sarajevo once again and manage the club from 1969 to 1970.
Death
Brozović died in Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2006, at the age of 89.