Aurel Țicleanu

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Aurel Țicleanu
Aurel Ticleanu 2.jpg
Personnel
Surname Aurel Țicleanu
birthday 20th January 1959
place of birth TeliucRomania
position midfield player
Juniors
Years station
1974-1976 Metalurgistul Sadu
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1976-1985 Universitatea Craiova 232 (10)
1985-1989 Sportul Studențesc Bucharest 77 0(9)
1989-1991 Olympiacos Nicosia
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1979-1986 Romania 44 (2)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1991-1992 UTA Arad
1992-1994 Oțelul Galați
1994 Universitatea Craiova
1996 Viromet Victoria
1997 AS Rocar Bucharest
1998-1999 Maghreb Fez
1999-2000 Astra Ploiești (assistant coach)
2000 Oțelul Galați
2001-2002 Tractorul Brașov
2002 FK Partizani Tirana
2002 Bangladesh (youth coach)
2002 Maghreb Fez
2002-2003 KS Dinamo Tirana
2003 KS Lushnja
2004 Hassania d'Agadir
2006-2007 Al-Sahel Abu Halifa
2007-2008 al-Jahra
2008-2009 Al-Shabab (U19 coach)
2009-2010 Al-Sahel Abu Halifa
2010 Universitatea Craiova
2011 Universitatea Craiova
2011 Al Ohud Club
2012 Al Tadamon
2012 Khaitan Sporting Club
2013 FC Brasov
2016 Qatar SC
2018– Romania U-17
1 Only league games are given.

Aurel "Chiose" Țicleanu (born January 20, 1959 in Teliuc , Hunedoara district ) is a former Romanian football player and current trainer and functionary . He played a total of 337 games in the highest Romanian football league, the Divizia A . He also took part in the European Football Championship in 1984 . He has been in charge of his country's U-17 national team since February 2017 .

Player career

Țicleanu started in his hometown Sadu with the local association Metalurgistul. There he was discovered in 1976 by the then trainer of Universitatea Craiova , Constantin Oțet , and brought to Craiova. He equally made it into the first team and came on May 25, 1977 its first use in the Divizia A . Țicleanu became a regular player and spent his most successful years in Craiova. In addition to winning the championship in 1980 and 1981, he reached the semi-finals of the UEFA Cup in the 1982/83 season , where the team was eliminated only on the away goals rule against Benfica Lisbon .

In 1985 Țicleanu left Craiova and moved to Sportul Studențesc Bucharest . In the 1985/86 season he played a major role in the club's greatest success to date, the Romanian runner-up. In 1989, Țicleanu received permission to move abroad and joined the Cypriot club Olympiakos Nicosia , where he retired his career in 1991.

National team

Țicleanu played a total of 44 games for the Romanian national soccer team and scored two goals. He made his debut on August 29, 1979 against Poland . National coach Mircea Lucescu nominated him for the 1984 European Football Championship in France, where he was substituted on for Marin Dragnea in the games against Spain and Germany .

Coaching career

After the end of his active career, Țicleanu began a career as a football coach . In 1991, he first took over UTA Arad in the second-rate Divizia B . After the targeted promotion had just been missed (UTA were deducted eight points for match-fixing), he took over Oțelul Galați in Divizia A in 1992 . With Oțelul he initially managed a placement in midfield. After relegation could only be avoided in the 1993/94 season , his contract was not extended.

After two games as interim coach at Universitatea Craiova in 1994, he took over Viromet Victoria in 1996 . This commitment did not last long either. In 1997 Țicleanu was sports director of FC Brașov , before he took over as head coach that same year AS Rocar Bucharest , which played in Divizia B.

After a few months he was released from Rocar and went to Morocco as a coach , where he trained in Maghreb Fez . In 1999 Țicleanu returned to Romania and was under Costică Ștefănescu assistant coach of Astra Ploieşti , before he was hired again in 2000 at Oțelul Galați. After 13 match days, the club separated from him again. Țicleanu took over the office of president, later the sports director of Universitatea Craiova, before he was head coach of Tractorul Brașov in Divizia B during the 2001/02 season .

Țicleanu did not stay long in Brașov . First he took over Partizan Tirana in 2002 before becoming the youth national coach of Bangladesh for a few months . In May 2002 he returned to Maghreb Fez, where he reached the final of the Moroccan Cup, but was defeated there by Hassania d'Agadir . In November 2002 he moved again to Albania, where he qualified for the final of the Albanian Cup on May 7, 2003 with KS Dinamo Tirana . Immediately after the game, Țicleanu resigned from his position four game days before the end of the season due to the disappointing performance in the championship. At the victorious cup final, Dinamo Tirana was looked after by Agim Canaj . Canaj was again Țicleanu's successor five months later, after he had resigned on October 18, 2003 at KS Lushnja .

After returning to Romania, Țicleanu was initially the sports director of third division club FC Ghimbav 2000 , before he took over the Moroccan club Hassania d'Agadir in summer 2004 . However, the contract was terminated in December 2004 by mutual agreement. Țicleanu returned to Brașov and founded a travel agency there with his wife. In early 2006 he moved to the Kuwaiti Premier League to Al-Sahel Abu Halifa and finished 7th with the team at the end of the season. In the following season, the number of first division teams was reduced from 14 to 8 and Al-Sahel succeeded in fifth place again to avoid relegation to Kuwaiti Division One .

In 2007 Țicleanu took over for one season training with league rivals al-Jahra , with whom he was bottom of the table in 2008. Although there was no relegation from the Kuwaiti Premier League that season, he signed a contract as U19 coach with Al-Shabab in Saudi Arabia in July 2008 . On August 1, 2009 Țicleanu was again coach of Al-Sahel Abu Halifa, but this time in the Kuwaiti Division One. In March 2010 he was dismissed for failure and two months later the Saudi Arabian second division Al Ohud Club from Medina appointed him as his new coach. However, Țicleanu did not take office, whereupon the club turned to FIFA in July 2010 . From June 25, 2010 he coached FC Universitatea Craiova , but was sacked on August 22, 2010 after only five championship games by Adrian Mititelu, the club's patron. In mid-January 2011 he brought Țicleanu back as club president after incumbent Silvian Cristescu had been dismissed. Țicleanu sat after the short-term dismissal of Laurențiu Reghecampf in the away game against Oțelul Galați one last time in the dugout and on May 7, 2011 dissolved his contract with Universitatea.

On July 5, 2011, a year late, a coaching engagement with the Saudi Arabian second division Al Ohud Club from Medina came about . Țicleanu was released in mid-December 2011 and signed a three-month contract with the Kuwaiti second division club Al Tadamon in mid-February 2012 , where he replaced the recently deceased Brazilian coach Jorge Anadon . After the missed promotion Țicleanu returned to Brașov in May 2012 , but quickly found a new employer in Kuwait in Khaitan Sporting Club , the league competitor of Al Tadamon. On June 23, 2012, he received a contract there until the end of the year and then returned to Romania.

In March 2013 Țicleanu initially supported Ilie Balaci and Adrian Mititelu in their attempt to build a new team for Universitatea Craiova , but decided in early April 2013 to accept the position of technical director at the second division Corona Brașov . At the end of the 2012/13 season , Corona rose to League 1, but Țicleanu's contract was no longer renewed in June 2013. On August 19, 2013 Țicleanu replaced Adrian Szabo as a coach at the first division club FC Brașov . However, due to disagreements with Ioan Neculaie, the club's patron, he was dismissed on September 23, 2013 after three games without defeat and replaced by Alexandru Pelici . Țicleanu has been with the Romanian Football Association since April 2014.

In June 2016, Țicleanu took over the coaching position at Qatar SC, succeeding Sebastião Lazaroni . At the end of the year he left the club. In February 2018 he succeeded Sorin Colceag as coach of the Romanian U-17 national team .

successes

As a player

As a trainer

  • Moroccan Cup Finalist: 2002

Others

Țicleanu has been an honorary citizen of his hometown Sadu since December 2001 and an honorary citizen of Craiova since 2003 . In 1981 he married for the first time. This marriage, which was divorced in 1999, has a son and a daughter. Țicleanu is now married for the second time and has another daughter.

Individual evidence

  1. Gazeta de Sud of May 21, 2002 , accessed February 26, 2011 (Romanian)
  2. Albanian season statistics 2002/03
  3. ^ Albanian seasonal statistics 2003/04
  4. Interim balance sheet Țicleanus in 2006 (Romanian)
  5. Newspaper article on Țicleanu's return to Kuwait (Romanian) ( Memento from September 23, 2009 in the Internet Archive )
  6. worldcoachs.com of March 11, 2010 , accessed on January 4, 2014 (English)
  7. worldcoachs.com of May 27, 2010 , accessed on January 4, 2014 (English)
  8. worldcoachs.com of July 9, 2010 , accessed January 4, 2014 (English)
  9. Prosport from June 22, 2010 , retrieved (Romanian) 26 July 2010
  10. Prosport from August 23, 2010 , accessed on August 28, 2010 (Romanian)
  11. fcuniversitatea.ro of January 20, 2011 , accessed on January 23, 2011 (Romanian)
  12. fcuniversitatea.ro of January 12, 2011 , accessed on January 23, 2011 (Romanian)
  13. ProSport of May 7, 2011 , accessed on July 28, 2011 (Romanian)
  14. ProSport of July 6, 2011 , accessed on July 28, 2011 (Romanian)
  15. worldcoachs.com from December 16, 2012 , accessed on January 4, 2014 (English)
  16. Au lăsat zăpada pentru nisipul arabilor! Țicleanu și Geolgău before antrena in Kuwait! , accessed January 4, 2014 (Romanian)
  17. worldcoachs.com from June 23, 2012 , accessed on January 4, 2014 (English)
  18. ProSport of April 4, 2013 , accessed on January 4, 2014 (Romanian)
  19. Gazeta Sporturilor of June 20, 2013 , accessed January 4, 2014 (Romanian)
  20. ProSport from August 19, 2013 , accessed on January 4, 2014 (Romanian)
  21. ProSport of September 23, 2013 , accessed on January 4, 2014 (Romanian)
  22. Cetățeni de Onoare ai Municipiului Craiova ( Memento of January 4, 2014 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on January 4, 2014 (Romanian)

Web links