FCM Târgovişte
FCM Târgovişte | |||
Basic data | |||
---|---|---|---|
Surname | FC Municipal Târgovişte | ||
Seat | Târgovişte | ||
founding | 1950 | ||
Colours | Red Blue | ||
president | Ghiorghi Zotic | ||
Website | fcmtargoviste.ro | ||
First soccer team | |||
Head coach | Remus Gâlmencea | ||
Venue | Alpan Stadium in Șotânga ; until 2010: Stadionul Eugen Popescu in Târgovişte | ||
Places | 800; until 2010: 10,000 | ||
league | League III | ||
2012/13 | 8th place in season 4 | ||
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The FCM Târgovişte is a Romanian football club from Târgovişte . He played nine years in the highest Romanian football league, League 1 . Since 2009 he has been playing in the third highest division, Liga III .
history
The FCM Târgovişte was founded in 1950 under the name Energia Târgovişte . In the 1956 season the club played in the national Divizia C for the first time . After changing his name to Metalul Târgoviște in 1957 , he made it to the second division, Divizia B , in 1959 . This league was also only a transit point in the rise of Metalul. Just two years later managed Metalul the walkover and played in the season 1961/62 in the Divizia A .
This success was unique for more than 15 years, because Metalul immediately dismounted and even had to go to Divizia C in 1967. From 1969 to 1977 the club again belonged to Divizia B, in 1972 the club name was changed to CS Târgovişte (in German sports club Târgovişte ). CS's most successful period followed in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Between 1977 and 1984 the club belonged to Divizia A except for a short break, but mostly played against relegation. In the 1978/79 season , seventh place was the best ever ranking.
After relegation, CS was unable to build on previous years and had to go back to Divizia C in 1992. In the 1990s, the club developed into an elevator team. While after the renaming to Oțelul Târgovişte (in German Stahl Târgovişte ) in 1994 first the promotion to the Divizia B and a year later the march succeeded, followed shortly afterwards - from 1996 under the name CF Chindia Târgovişte - the opposite way: In the year In 2000, Chindia was relegated to Divizia C.
After rising again in 2003, the club changed its name to the still valid FC Municipal Târgovişte (in German Municipal Football Club Târgovişte ). In the summer of 2004, a few days before the start of the second division 2004/05 season , the highly indebted club was about to be dissolved and excluded from the league. On August 19, 2004, the businessman Ghiorghi Zotic took over the management of the club, paid off the debts to former players and coaches and committed the coach Marin Olteanu and 12 players from the third division ALPAN Universitatea Târgovişte within 16 hours . After the home defeat against Petrolul Moineşti , coach Olteanu resigned on October 16, 2004 and was replaced by Silviu Dumitrescu . After the away defeat on April 9, 2005 against Altay Constanța Dumitrescu was replaced by the previous assistant coach Gicu Dumitraşcu .
In 2005 relegation to Liga III could only be prevented due to the withdrawal of Unirea Focşani , whereupon the Slovenian Ivo Sajh coached the team in June 2005 . In November 2005 FCM was on a relegation zone after 14 game days and Daniel Ostafi took over as the new coach, but was dismissed at the end of March 2006 after two game days in the second half of the season. His successor Leonida Nedelcu , who supervised FCM Târgovişte in the second half of the season on twelve matchdays, could not prevent the sporting descent and was replaced by Ion Pitaru before the last matchday . After the end of the season, however, Altay Constanța was bought his second division place and on June 30, 2006 Octavian Grigore hired as the new coach. After disappointing results in the 2006/07 season , Grigore was initially replaced by Ilie Stan in October 2006 , who was dismissed at the end of the first half of the season in November 2006 after five league games and his successor Vasile Silaghi before his first league game in February 2007 by Marius Oprea , the previous coach of the second team from Rapid Bucharest . But in June 2007 Oprea Ion Constantin had to give way, who had recently won the relegation game for promotion to League III against Comprest Bucharest with the second team . This third division place was then assigned to ASC Clinceni Ilfov .
On June 23, 2007, the previous Pandurii Târgu Jiu player Adrian Bogoi signed a contract as player- coach for the 2007/08 season . From September 17, 2007, he was appointed a technical sports director in the form of the former national player Adrian Matei . He had previously gained coaching experience at Minerul Lupeni in Liga II and at AS Rocar Bucharest in Liga III, and after the sixth day of the second division he himself coached the team. After ten championship games, Matei was fired in November 2007 and replaced by Ion Constantin.
After a failed start to the 2008/09 season , Ion Constantin was demoted to Petre Gigiu's assistant coach on September 2, 2008 . However, this was dismissed eight game days later and Ion Constantin returned in late October 2008 for the away game at Universitatea Cluj as head coach. On April 14, 2009 he had to give up his office and was replaced by the twin brothers Gheorghe Becheanu and Haralambie Becheanu , who were previously coach at Petrolul Târgovişte in League IV . Of the last ten league games under their leadership, eight were lost, so that FCM Târgovişte in the summer of 2009 as penultimate in the table was relegated to the third-highest division, where the club has been playing since then. On September 19, 2009, the Becheanu brothers were dismissed after the weak start to the season in League III and two days later Ion Constantin returned again as a coach.
The city administration had in the meantime fallen out with patron Ghiorghi Zotic and founded a new club with the CSM Târgovişte in 2008, which had already been promoted to League III in 2009, but took up a different season than FCM in the 2009/10 season. In March 2010, the contract relating to FCM's use of the Stadionul Eugen Popescu expired and was not renewed. Since then, the club has no longer played its home games in the district capital Târgovişte, but in the Alpan stadium in Șotânga, nine kilometers away . There he missed promotion to League II on the last match day of the 2009/10 season with a home defeat against Alro Slatina . Thereupon Cătălin Neculăescu-Zotic, whom his father-in-law Ghiorghi Zotic had appointed president of the association on May 27, 2009, resigned from his post. In mid-November 2010 Constantin moved to the youth division of the club and Ion Stăncescu was his successor for a short time. In January 2011, the previous player Cristian Bădoiu was first appointed as the new player-coach, but in fact training in the second half of the 2010/11 season was initially directed by Gigi Iordache and later by Ion Constantin. Cristian Bădoiu was introduced as the new head coach in July 2011.
After a weak start to the 2011/12 season, patron Ghiorghi Zotic Bădoiu moved to the youth division of Academia FCM Târgovişte on September 19, 2011 and replaced him on September 27, 2011 by Remus Gâlmencea , who until then had been Petrolul Târgovişte in League IV had trained.
CSM Târgovişte renamed itself Chindia Târgovişte in 2010 and, with the financial support of Gheorghe Popescu and Ion Crăciunescu, achieved promotion to League II as a relay opponent of FCM at the end of the 2010/11 season . A total of 12 players moved from FCM to Chindia in 2011, in return Chindia left 20 youth players to the third division club. Crăciunescu left the club in October 2011 to take on a leading position in refereeing at the Romanian Football Association.
successes
- Promotion in Divizia A: 1961, 1977, 1981, 1996
Known players
- Iulian Chiriță
- Narcis Coman
- Laurențiu Reghecampf
- Mircea Onisemiuc
- Claudius Sava
- Gheorghe Tătaru
- Christian Sagna
Former trainers
- Marin Olteanu (August 2004 - October 2004)
- Silviu Dumitrescu (October 2004 - April 2005)
- Gicu Dumitrașcu (April 2005 - June 2005)
- Ivo Sajh (June 2005 - November 2005)
- Daniel Ostafi (November 2005 - March 2006)
- Leonida Nedelcu (March 2006 - May 2006)
- Ion Pitaru (May 2006 - June 2006)
- Octavian Grigore (June 2006 - October 2006)
- Ilie Stan (October 2006 - November 2006)
- Vasile Silaghi (November 2006 - February 2007)
- Marius Oprea (February 2007 - June 2007)
- Ion Constantin (June 2007, November 2007 - September 2008, October 2008 - April 2009, September 2009 - November 2010, April 2011 - June 2011)
- Adrian Bogoi (June 2007 - September 2007)
- Adrian Matei (September 2007 - November 2007)
- Petre Gigiu (September 2008 - October 2008)
- Gheorghe Becheanu and Haralambie Becheanu (April 2009 - September 2009)
- Ion Stăncescu (November 2010)
- Cristian Bădoiu (January 2011, July 2011 - September 2011)
- Gigi Iordache (March 2011)
- Remus Gâlmencea (September 2011 -)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of July 4, 2011 , accessed on November 24, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of December 9, 2008 , accessed November 22, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of July 4, 2008 , accessed on November 20, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of April 28, 2006 , accessed on November 24, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of June 27, 2005 ( Memento of the original of April 25, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF file; 416 kB), accessed on November 19, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Consiliul Județean Dâmbovița , accessed on November 20, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of May 30, 2006 , accessed on November 19, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of July 3, 2006 , accessed on November 20, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of November 29, 2006 , accessed on November 19, 2011 (Romanian)
- ^ Reorganizare , accessed on November 19, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ ProSport of January 26, 2011 , accessed on November 19, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of June 25, 2007 , accessed on November 20, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of September 18, 2007 , accessed on November 20, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of December 18, 2007 , accessed November 20, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of September 3, 2008 , accessed on November 19, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Ziarul Dâmbovița of January 16, 2009 , accessed November 20, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ ProSport of April 14, 2009 , accessed on November 24, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ ProSport of April 15, 2009 , accessed on November 25, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ ProSport of September 21, 2009 , accessed on November 25, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ ProSport of March 12, 2010 , accessed on November 25, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ ProSport from June 11, 2010 , accessed on November 25, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ ProSport of June 22, 2010 , accessed on November 19, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ ProSport of November 24, 2010 , accessed on November 19, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ ProSport of March 7, 2011 , accessed on November 25, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ ProSport of May 2, 2011 , accessed on November 25, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ TV Partener of July 11, 2011 ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , accessed on November 25, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ TV Partener of September 19, 2011 , accessed on November 19, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ InfoTGV of September 27, 2011 ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , accessed on November 19, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Adevărul of July 1, 2011 , accessed November 25, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ Antena Dâmbovița of July 22, 2011 , accessed on November 24, 2011 (Romanian)
- ↑ ProSport of October 6, 2011 , accessed on November 25, 2011 (Romanian)
Web links
- Official website (Romanian)
- FCM Târgoviște on romaniansoccer.ro (English)