Daniel Tudor
Daniel Tudor | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
Surname | Daniel Ovidiu Tudor | |
birthday | June 1, 1974 | |
place of birth | Alexandria , Romania | |
size | 193 cm | |
position | goalkeeper | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1993-1995 | Flacăra Moreni | 19 (0) |
1995-1998 | Dinamo Bucharest | 4 (0) |
1997 | → Flacăra Moreni (loan) | |
1998 | → Farul Constanța (loan) | 7 (0) |
1998-2000 | AS Rocar Bucharest | 33 (0) |
2000-2002 | Universitatea Craiova | 19 (0) |
2002-2003 | Dinamo Bucharest | 6 (0) |
2003-2006 | Video sound Székesfehérvár | 81 (1) |
2006-2008 | UTA Arad | 47 (0) |
2008-2010 | Unirea Urziceni | 13 (0) |
2011 | Juventus Colentina Bucharest | |
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
2011–2012 | CFR Cluj (goalkeeping coach) | |
2012-2013 | CFR Cluj (goalkeeping coach) | |
2013-2014 | FK Kuban Krasnodar (Goalkeeping Coach) | |
2015-2017 | FK Krasnodar (Goalkeeping Coach) | |
2017 | Terek Grozny (Goalkeeping Coach) | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Daniel Ovidiu Tudor (born June 1, 1974 in Alexandria , Teleorman County ) is a former Romanian football player and current coach . The goalkeeper played a total of 195 games in the Romanian League 1 and the Hungarian Nemzeti Bajnokság .
Career as a player
Tudor began his career with Flacăra Moreni in the second highest Romanian football league, Divizia B (now Liga II ). In 1995 he moved to the Romanian top club Dinamo Bucharest as a substitute goalkeeper . There he came on February 27, 1996 for his first assignment in Divizia A (today League 1 ). Since it was rarely used, it could be borrowed twice. In 1998 he left the club and joined AS Rocar Bucharest , who played in Divizia B at the time.
With Rocar Tudor succeeded in advancing to Divizia A. A year later he moved to league rivals Universitatea Craiova . Although he was never able to establish himself as number 1 at any of his stations for a long period of time, he returned to Dinamo Bucharest again in 2002. After just one year, Tudor moved to Hungary for Videoton Székesfehérvár in the country's top division, the Nemzeti Bajnokság . Here he made the leap to become a regular player straight away. In 2006 he was able to win the Hungarian Cup .
After winning the Cup, Tudor returned to Romania and from then on played for UTA Arad , which had just returned to League 1 . When UTA had to relegate after relegation in the 2006/07 season at the end of the following season , Tudor left the club and moved to Unirea Urziceni . There he achieved the greatest success of his career with the 2009 championship . The runner-up followed a year later .
In January 2011 Tudor left Unirea and moved to Juventus Colentina Bucharest in the Liga II . There he ended his active career six months later.
Career as a coach
In June 2011, Jorge Costa brought Tudor to CFR Cluj as a goalkeeping coach after retiring . Costa's successor Ioan Andone also resorted to Tudor's services, but his contract was not renewed in June 2012. When Paulo Sérgio took over CFR Cluj in October 2012, he also trusted Tudor. Also under Sérgio's successor Eugen Trică , before moving to FK Kuban Krasnodar in July 2013 . In November 2014 he left the club and joined local rivals FK Krasnodar in February 2015 . There he was released in early 2017. From June to October 2017 he was goalkeeping coach at Terek Grozny under Oleg Kononov .
successes
Web links
- Daniel Tudor in the database of weltfussball.de
- Daniel Tudor in the database of transfermarkt.de
- Daniel Tudor on romaniansoccer.ro (English)
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Tudor, Daniel |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Tudor, Daniel Ovidiu |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Romanian soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | June 1, 1974 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Alexandria |