logo
Meet the footballer who was sold by his club after having sex with Playboy model in the middle of the pitch: International star's ex-wife reveals how he 'fulfilled his dream' in wild act that left bosses furious

Meet the footballer who was sold by his club after having sex with Playboy model in the middle of the pitch: International star's ex-wife reveals how he 'fulfilled his dream' in wild act that left bosses furious

Daily Mail​7 days ago

Many a football player have been known for having an extravagant lifestyle thanks to the generous salaries they earn as professional sportspeople.
Earning such large amounts of money gives them enormous financial freedom to spend their wages however they wish.
This has seen eye-wateringly priced designer clothes from leading brands become almost as commonplace for footballers as the fast, flash and fiendishly expensive sports cars they drive.
But being given such liberty to do with wads of cash whatever they choose can also have its downsides, with the chance of a lifestyle that would make Epicurus himself jealous too good to turn down.
That is how one former pro - who was capped at senior level by his national team - was sold by his club after committing a scarcely believable act in the middle of their own stadium.
This is the story of a how a fun-loving former international star was said to have 'fulfilled his dream' by having sex in the middle of the pitch with his ex-wife, who was a former Playboy model.
Former defender Dino Drpic made 185 appearances during a nine-year spell at Croatian side Dinamo Zagreb.
He also played for Croatia 30 times at various different age-group levels and earnt a solitary cap for his country in 2007.
While he may be remembered fondly by Dinamo fans for his loyal service to the club - which came before stints in Germany, Greece, Ukraine and Malaysia - his name was also etched in controversy in wild fashion.
That came courtesy of a racy incident with his ex-wife Nives Zeljkovic, better known by her stage name Nives Celsius, who also found success as a singer and actress.
Speaking on Serbian talk show RTV Pink in January 2009, she said: 'Dino had arranged that people should turn on the stadium lights for us and he finally fulfilled his dream of having sex in the middle of a football pitch. It was very naughty.'
This was alleged to have provoked a furious reaction among club officials, who promptly sold him and made sure he never played for the club again - although he was linked with a move to Tottenham Hotspur as Spurs had Luka Modric and Vedran Corluka in their ranks at the time.
While he and Nives had two children together - Taisa and Leone - they divorced one another in 2014 after nine years of marriage.
Prior to their steamy encounter in the centre of Maksimir Stadium, they endured a frightful incident in the summer of 2008.
That saw a British couple try to snatch Leone after mistaking him for Madeleine McCann, who herself had disappeared from her bed aged three while on a family holiday in Portugal on May 3 2007.
The former couple were on holiday on the Croatian island of Krk with her sister when British tourists photographed Leone and tried to grab his arm.
Recounting the incident, she said: 'I am used to people taking photos of me and approaching me because we are famous in Croatia so I didn't react.
'I started getting suspicious when the British woman approached Leone and started chatting with him.
'Suddenly she grabbed him. However, when I went over she realised my child was a boy and apologised.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nuno Espirito Santo signs new contract but Nottingham Forest appear to make gaffe in statement announcing it
Nuno Espirito Santo signs new contract but Nottingham Forest appear to make gaffe in statement announcing it

The Sun

time34 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Nuno Espirito Santo signs new contract but Nottingham Forest appear to make gaffe in statement announcing it

NOTTINGHAM FOREST appeared to make a major gaffe in their announcing of Nuno Espirito Santo's new contract. Forest, surprisingly, announced a new deal for their Portuguese gaffer early on Saturday morning. 3 3 3 The former Porto and Spurs boss has inked a new three-year deal at the City Ground, although you wouldn't have known it if you looked at the Midlands club's website. Eagle-eyed fans spotted that Forest had mistakenly stated that Nuno inked an "x-year deal" in their statement announcing the new contract. A snippet of the club's official statement read: " Nottingham Forest is delighted to announce that Nuno Espírito Santo has signed a new contract with the Club. "The Forest Head Coach has been handed a new x-year deal by owner Evangelos Marinakis ahead of the 2025/26 campaign." Nuno, 51, is over the moon to have extended his stay at the City Ground, which is set to host UEFA Conference League football this coming season. He said: "I am delighted to be able to continue our journey at this fantastic football Club. 'Since we arrived at Forest, we have worked extremely hard to create a special bond between the players, the fans and everyone at the Club, which helped us achieve great things last season. "I would like to thank our owner, Mr. Marinakis, for his constant support and backing. JOIN SUN VEGAS: GET £50 BONUS "It is important to me to share a strong relationship with our ownership and we have thoroughly enjoyed working together ever since I arrived at Forest. 'Now is the time to work harder than ever as we strive for more special memories together.' Marinakis said of the new deal: "Nuno has made a great impact and performed very well during his time with us so far. 'He has demonstrated that he maximises player performance and is an expert at developing players, whilst also embedding our young talent into the first team set-up. 'We enjoy a strong and solid relationship together and, above all, we share the same dream and ambition of writing a new history for Nottingham Forest, competing in the Premier League and in Europe and winning trophies for our great club!' Forest will kick off their Premier League season on Saturday, August 17, away to Brighton. The Tricky Trees will play the first leg of their Conference League play-off on August 21.

Want a pay rise? Take this French writer's hilarious advice
Want a pay rise? Take this French writer's hilarious advice

Telegraph

time34 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Want a pay rise? Take this French writer's hilarious advice

Georges Perec was attracted by formal challenges to writing: his most famous achievement was his novel La Disparition, written without using the letter 'e' once. (This is particularly hard in French, but the late Gilbert Adair managed to translate it into English, under the title A Void.) There was serious intent behind this; it was an echo of the Nazis' efforts to remove every single Jew from Europe. (In the case of Perec's mother, as well as about six million others, they succeeded.) The Art of Asking Your Boss for a Raise is much more light-hearted, but is still the result of an act of literary restriction: an attempt to mimic, in prose, the recursive nature of a flow chart. First published in 1968, this delightfully unclassifiable text, now reissued by Verso, is short and exhausting, and features no capital letters, punctuation (apart from dashes), inverted commas or any other of the normal accoutrements of the printed page. In short, it looks like this: it is never very wise to approach a line manager at a time when his gastric functions are likely to overshadow the professional and managerial capacities associated with his hierarchical rank it is far better to go see him in the morning but what the hell he himself told you to come see him at 2.30 pm you have to take life as it comes so now it is 2.30 pm and you go to see mr x … and so on. I could have stopped anywhere. You can either put up with this kind of thing or you can't, but once you slip into its rhythms, it becomes both beguiling and hilarious (although you wouldn't really want it any longer.) For me it recalls Molly Bloom's soliloquy at the end of Ulysses, or some of the madder expressions of Beckett's prose works (and Lucky's speech in Waiting for Godot); or indeed, Don Marquis's Archy and Mehitabel, a similarly unpunctuated and lower-case text. There's something about this style which is particularly suited to the downtrodden, and in my experience there are few more miserable and downtrodden people than office workers. It first appeared in the journal Enseignement programmé, which was devoted to exploring computer programming (in those days, still in its youth); as it happened, Perec's day job was as a lowly information storage and retrieval technician, grade IIIB, which meant, as Bellos notes in his introduction, 'his prospects of getting a raise were quite as dim as those of the narrator of this tale.' And yet there's a kind of insane but helpless cunning behind his efforts: which day would be best to ask? (None of them, of course.) Look at the cafeteria menu, Perec says. Is fish being served? Then be careful, for your line manager may have swallowed a fish bone and be 'in a really awful mood'. Bellos uses the word 'circumperambulate' to describe the futile odyssey you must make around the building to find out where 'he' is; he seems at times as elusive as Godot himself. When he does call you into his office 'abandon all rancour and refrain from observing [that] … he could have bloody well given you an appointment three weeks ago'. You know the protagonist will exhaust all the possibilities of the flow chart and still not get his raise; it would, of course, destroy the comedy if he did. Even in the 1960s, people were becoming uneasy about the prospect of losing their jobs to computers; Perec's own job was one of the more fragile canaries in that particular coalmine. So this book, although describing a world from over half a century ago, still rings true: not only do we have the eternal dehumanised tedium of the office, which has been evoked ever since offices were invented (think of Dickens's worn-out clerks, or Melville's rebellious Bartleby), but the long shadow of the algorithm. 'It would have been nice,' says Bellos wistfully at one point, 'to translate this text without apostrophes either, which are not needed in French, but that might have tried readers' patience a little too much.' He acknowledges that the text is 'quite unreadable in the ordinary way', and you could say that now that I have given you the gist, I have spared you the task of reading the book yourself. But there is something delightful about its intent, a sympathetic humanity which is deliberately at odds with the relentless, machine-like persistence of the prose. It's a text that repays attention, and is timeless.

Is England XV vs France XV on TV? How to watch rugby international for free
Is England XV vs France XV on TV? How to watch rugby international for free

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Is England XV vs France XV on TV? How to watch rugby international for free

Steve Borthwick 's England begin their summer business with a non-capped encounter with a youthful France XV at Allianz Stadium, Twickenham. Shorn of their British and Irish Lions tourists, Borthwick's squad are bound for the Americas with two Tests against Argentina followed by an encounter with the United States on the way home. First, though, comes a chance for a few fringe figures to impress in the summer sunshine against a visiting team hampered by the unavailability of the Top 14 semi-finalists. But such is the depth in French rugby that Fabien Galthie's team is still packed with talent as they gear up for a trip to New Zealand in July. Here's everything you need to know. When is England XV vs France XV? England XV vs France XV is due to kick off at 3.15pm BST on Saturday 21 June at Allianz Stadium, Twickenham. How can I watch it? Viewers in the United Kingdom can watch the action for free via RugbyPass TV. Team news Steve Borthwick names a strong England side, led by co-captains in Jamie George and George Ford that boast a combined 200 caps. At the other end of the spectrum, the uncapped full back Joe Carpenter, centre Seb Atkinson and flanker Guy Pepper will pull on a starting shirt for the first time, with fellow newbies Jack Kenningham and Oscar Beard awaiting opportunities off the bench. Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, meanwhile, makes his first appearance since December after injury. The French side is built with plenty of youth, with veterans in centre Gael Fickou and prop Rabah Slimani - fresh from winning the URC with Leinster - slightly incongruous within an otherwise largely inexperienced squad. Mickael Guillard was a breakthrough Six Nations star at lock but is utilised at No 8 here, while Theo Attissogbe will hope to build on three tries in three Tests so far in his young career. Line-ups England XV: 1 Fin Baxter, 2 Jamie George (co-capt.), 3 Joe Heyes; 4 Alex Coles, 5 Nick Isiekwe; 6 Ted Hill, 7 Guy Pepper, 8 Tom Willis; 9 Ben Spencer, 10 George Ford; 11 Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, 12 Seb Atkinson, 13 Henry Slade, 14 Tom Roebuck; 15 Joe Carpenter France XV: 1 Baptiste Erdocio, 2 Gaetan Barlot, 3 Rabah Slimani; 4 Hugo Auradou, 5 Tyler Duguid; 6 Alexandre Fischer, 7 Killian Tixeront, 8 Mickael Guillard; 9 Nolann Le Garrec, 10 Antoine Hastoy; 11 Alivereti Duguivalu , 12 Gael Fickou, 13 Emilien Gailleton, 14 Mael Moustin; 15 Theo Attissogbe

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store