Dumitru Adrian Mihalcea

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Adrian Mihalcea
Personnel
Surname Dumitru Adrian Mihalcea
birthday May 24, 1976
place of birth SloboziaRomania
size 180 cm
position Storm
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1995-1996 Dunărea Călărași 34 0(4)
1996-2001 Dinamo Bucharest 164 (68)
2001-2003 CFC genoa 41 (11)
2003-2004 Hellas Verona 25 0(4)
2004-2005 Dinamo Bucharest 17 0(1)
2005 Chunnam Dragons 3 0(0)
2005-2006 FC Vaslui 13 0(1)
2006-2010 Aris Limassol 76 (35)
2008-2009 →  AEL Limassol  (loan) 23 0(5)
2010 Astra Ploiesti 8 0(1)
2011 Unirea Urziceni 13 0(3)
2011–2012 CS Concordia Chiajna 18 0(1)
2012-2013 Unirea Slobozia 17 0(5)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1998-2003 Romania 16 0(0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2013-2015 Unirea Slobozia
2015 ACS Berceni
2016-2017 Dunărea Călărași
2017 UTA Arad
2017 CS Mioveni
2017– Romania (assistant coach)
1 Only league games are given.

Dumitru Adrian Mihalcea (born May 24, 1976 in Slobozia , Ialomița district ) is a former Romanian football player and current coach . He played a total of 397 games in the Romanian League 1 , the Italian Serie B , the Cypriot First Division and the South Korean K-League . With Dinamo Bucharest he won the Romanian championship in 2000. Since January 2016 he has been the head coach of Dunărea Călărași in the Romanian League II .

Club career

Mihalcea played for a long time for the Dinamo Bucharest team , with whom he won the national championship in 2000 and the Romanian Cup in 2000 and 2001 in a row.

2001 was his most successful year as a footballer, scoring 11 goals in 14 league games, arousing interest abroad. At the end of the year, Mihalcea was voted number 5 on the list of Footballer of the Year in Romania. The following season he moved to CFC Genoa in Serie B , where he immediately became the club's top scorer. In 2003 he was transferred to league rivals Hellas Verona , where he also had a good season with 5 goals in 20 games.

The return to his home country at Dinamo was disappointing for him, as he lost his regular place in the storm over the course of the season. Nevertheless, as one of the team captains, he won the trophy for the third time in 2005.

In the following year Mihalcea moved to South Korea to the Chunnam Dragons , but where he only came to five seasons. Since he had problems with the Asian lifestyle, he terminated the contract prematurely and returned to Romania. There he spent two months preparing for the coming season on his own and then signed a three-month contract with FC Vaslui . At this point he was no longer in the field of vision of the national team.

In the summer of 2006, Mihalcea tried his luck again abroad with the Cypriot second division club Aris Limassol to turn his career upside down. There he was also very successful and scored 27 goals in 48 games for his new club, which he also attracted attention in the country's top division. The following season he was loaned to first division AEL Limassol , where he was ultimately able to mark 5 goals in 23 games and one of the team captains of the club. In 2009, Mihalcea returned to the second division for Aris, where he was widely recognized as one of the top scorers in the club's history.

Since summer 2010 Mihalcea has been playing again in his Romanian homeland with Astra Ploieşti . After only half a year he moved to league rivals Unirea Urziceni . At the end of the 2010/11 season he had to relegate his club to League II . He then moved to CS Concordia Chiajna . He left this after a year and joined the second division club Unirea Slobozia . There he ended his active career in the summer of 2013.

National team

Mihalcea's international career fell well short of expectations when he was predicted to have a successful career following his goals for the Romanian U-21 national team . He made his debut on September 2, 1998 against Liechtenstein in his country's national team . In a total of 16 missions, he could not score a single goal and failed because of the nomination for the European Football Championship in 2000 . In 2003 he was finally sorted out and has not been called up for an international match since then.

Coaching career

Following his active career, Mihalcea was a coach at his previous club Unirea Slobozia in Liga II from summer 2013 . In March 2015, he left the club after being excluded from the 2015 relegation round . He took over the league competitor ACS Berceni . At the end of the season, his contract was not extended. In January 2016 he succeeded Ionel Ganea at Dunărea Călărași .

successes

Web links