Florea Voinea

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Florea Voinea
Florea Voinea (cropped) .jpg
Florea Voinea (1967)
Personnel
birthday April 21, 1941
place of birth Puchenii MoșneniRomania
size 177 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
Rafinăria 1 Ploieşti
1956-1959 Petrolul Ploiesti
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1959-1961 Prahova Ploieşti
1961 Petrolul Ploiesti 5 00(2)
1962 Steaua Bucharest 3 00(1)
1962 Viitorul Bucharest 1 00(1)
1962-1970 Steaua Bucharest 179 (102)
1970-1972 Olympique Nîmes 50 0(18)
1972-1973 Steaua Bucharest 15 00(3)
1973-1974 CSM Reșița 27 00(6)
1974-1975 Politehnica Timișoara 21 00(2)
1975-1976 AROUND Timișoara
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1963-1967 Romania 2 00(0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
Steaua Mizil
1 Only league games are given.

Florea Voinea (born April 21, 1941 in Puchenii Moşneni , Prahova County ) is a former Romanian football player . He played a total of 301 games in the Romanian Divizia A and the French Division 1 .

Career

societies

Florea Voinea began playing football in the city of Ploiesti near his home town. There he came in 1956 in the youth of Petrolul Ploieşti , where he did not succeed in the first team, so that he had his first appearances for local rivals Prahova Ploieşti in Divizia B from 1959 to 1961 . In 1961 he returned to Petrolul and played his first game in Romania's highest football league, Divizia A , on August 20, 1961 against CCA Bucharest (later Steaua Bucharest ) .

After Voinea had only made five appearances in the first half of the 1961/62 season , he joined Steaua Bucharest during the winter break , and hardly got a chance there on. After winning the UEFA youth tournament in the summer of 1962, this national team played in the following season under the name Viitorul Bucharest in Divizia A, so Voinea moved there. However, he returned to Steaua during the season and achieved the breakthrough with 14 goals in 15 games, which was crowned with the cup victory at the end of the season .

Voinea remained loyal to Steaua for almost eight years. While the club was subject to major fluctuations in performance in Divizia A during this time and was only able to win the championship in the 1967/68 season , four more cup wins jumped out in 1966 , 1967 , 1969 and 1970 .

In 1970 Voinea was given the opportunity to move abroad and joined Olympique Nîmes in the French Division 1 . There he had his share in one of the most successful years in the club's history, when in addition to the runner-up in the 1971/72 season, he also won the Coppa delle Alpi in the same year.

After two years in France, Voinea returned to Romania to Steaua in 1972, but could no longer build on previous performances, so that he moved to league rivals CSM Reșița in the summer of 1973 . After only a year he moved on to Politehnica Timișoara . In 1975 Voinea moved to UM Timișoara in Divizia B, where he ended his career a year later. Later Voinea worked as a sports teacher and from 1977 trained lower-class teams. From 1983 to 1984 he worked in Libya . He was the mid-1990s coach of Steaua Mizil in Divizia B .

National team

Voinea only played two games for the Romanian national football team , but without being able to score a goal. He made his debut on November 28, 1963 against Denmark . Although he was one of the most successful goalscorers in Divizia A , he was then no longer considered and only came to another use on October 29, 1967 against Poland .

successes

  • Romanian champion: 1968
  • Romanian cup winners: 1962 , 1966 , 1967 , 1969 , 1970
  • Youth European Champion: 1962
  • Coppa delle Alpi: 1972
  • French runner-up: 1972

Awards

On March 25, 2008 Voinea and the other still living members of the contingent, which had won the only title in Romania at national team level at that time, received the Order of Merit "Meritul sportiv" III from President Traian Băsescu . Class.

literature

  • Mihai Ionescu / Răzvan Toma / Mircea Tudoran: Fotbal de la A la Z . Mondocart Pres, Bucharest 2001, ISBN 973-8332-00-1 , p. 333 .

Individual evidence

  1. Un fotbalist numit… Mocanu , accessed on January 30, 2011 (Romanian).
  2. Decorarea unor personalităţi ale fotbalului românesc. March 25, 2008, accessed January 24, 2011 (Romanian).

Web links