Colțea Bucharest

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Colțea Bucharest
This info box has a problem * Error when submitting * Parameter name unknown: '1'
Full name Colțea Bucharest
place
Founded 1913
Dissolved unknown
Club colors
Stadion Sf.Elefterie
Top league Divizia C
successes
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete home
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / incomplete outward

Colțea Bucharest was a Romanian football club from Bucharest . He took part in the tournaments for the Romanian football championship in the romantic era of Romanian football . An offshoot of the club, Colțea Brașov , won the Romanian championship in 1928.

history

Colțea Bucharest was founded by students in 1913 and was the first football club in Bucharest to have exclusively Romanian members. Since the already existing Bucharest clubs Olympia Bucharest , Colentina Bucharest , Bucharest FC and Cercul Atletic Bucharest were founded and dominated by foreign workers, four students from downtown Bucharest ( Colțea ) decided - partly driven by national pride - to found a new club . From 1915, the new team always took part in the tournaments for the Romanian championship without being able to intervene in the fight for the title.

After the expansion of the Romanian national territory by the Treaty of Trianon in 1920, Colțea founded an offshoot in Brașov, which was able to win the Romanian championship in 1928 under the name Colțea Brașov . In addition, an offshoot was established in Ploiesti. Colțea Bucharest itself was no longer able to qualify for the final round of the championship after changing the mode in 1921, as the competition within Bucharest was too strong. The team played from now in the regional league Bucharest - except for the season 1937/38, when they in Divizia C played.

After the end of the Second World War , the association was dissolved.

Stadion

Colțea Bucharest initially played its home games on the Sf.Elefterie square , where the Bucharest trade fair is now located. Later home games were also played on the Pleșoianu and Bolta Rece (home of Bucharest FC and Olympia Bucharest ).

Web links