Francisc Ronnay
Francisc Ronnay | ||
![]() in the 1940s.
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Personnel | ||
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birthday | April 29, 1900 | |
place of birth | Arad , Austria-Hungary | |
date of death | June 6, 1967 | |
position | striker | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
1912-1920 | AMEF Arad | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1920-1935 | CAO Oradea | 30 (16) |
1935-1936 | Craiu Iovan Craiova | |
1936-1937 | CAO Oradea | 4 | (3)
1937 | Electrica Oradea | |
1943-1944 | Nagyváradi AC | |
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
1922-1932 | Romania | 8 | (3)
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
1936 | CAO Oradea | |
Nagyváradi AC | ||
1947 | CFR Bucharest | |
1947 | Romania | |
1950 | CCA Bucharest | |
1952-1953 | CA Câmpulung Moldovenesc | |
1953-1954 | CCA Bucharest | |
1954-1959 | Locomotiva / Rapid Bucharest | |
1962 | Crișana Oradea | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Francisc Ronnay (born April 29, 1900 in Arad , Austria-Hungary , † June 6, 1967 ) was a Romanian football player and coach . He denied 34 matches in the highest Romanian league, the Divizia A .
Career as a player
Ronnay started playing football at AMEF Arad in his hometown at the age of twelve . In 1920 he moved to CAO Oradea . With the club he was able to qualify twice for the finals of the Romanian football championship in the 1920s in a duel with local rivals Stăruința Oradea . The best result he was able to achieve in this period in 1924, when he reached the final with his team , but there was defeated by the leading Romanian club of that time, Chinezul Timișoara , with 1: 4.
When the professional league Divizia A was founded in 1932 , Ronnay and his team played in the upper house from the first year on. After the team had missed the finals twice, he was runner-up behind Ripensia Timișoara at the end of the 1934/35 season . In the 1933/34 season he was able to score twelve goals and thus brought the best goal yield of his career.
After a year with Craiu Iovan Craiova in Divizia B , Ronnay returned to CAO in 1936 and became player- coach . He sat himself four times in the first half of 1936/37 . After six months at Electrica Oradea in Divizia C , he ended his career. Only in 1944, when he was the coach of the CAO playing as Nagyváradi AC in the Hungarian Nemzeti Bajnokság , he came on a few more missions, so that at the age of 44 he won the Hungarian championship and his first title.
National team
Ronnay played eight games for the Romanian national soccer team between 1922 and 1932 , scoring three goals. He made his debut in Romania's first international match on June 8, 1922 against Yugoslavia , where he was able to achieve the first international goal of Romania. In the following years it was only rarely used. He played his last international match against Austria (amateurs) on October 16, 1932 , when he was able to mark the winning goal after 30 seconds.
Career as a coach
At the end of his active career, Ronnay was already working as a player- coach at his club CAO Oradea . However, his work in the 1936/37 season ended prematurely after six months. During the Second World War he acted again as the coach of CAO, which at that time played as Nagyváradi AC in the Hungarian Nemzeti Bajnokság . In 1944 he won the Hungarian championship with his team.
After the end of the war, Ronnay succeeded Coloman Braun-Bogdan as head coach of CFR Bucharest (later Rapid Bucharest ) in Divizia A in the summer of 1947 . This engagement ended prematurely despite a third place in the championship and Ronnay was replaced by Ioachim Moldoveanu during the winter break . During the first half of the season, in addition to his work for CFR, he had also looked after the Romanian national team in three games in autumn 1947 . There were clear defeats against Czechoslovakia and Hungary , so that there was only one draw against Poland on October 26, 1947.
In early 1950, Ronnay became head coach of CCA Bucharest (later Steaua Bucharest ). Despite winning the Cup in 1950 , he had to give way to Gheorghe Popescu at the end of the season . A year later he took over the team from CA Câmpulung Moldovenesc, which had just been promoted to Divizia A, and led the team to third place in the 1952 season . In the following season he was with his team in the middle of the season on the second place in the table when the club was dissolved. Like the team's best players, Ronnay CCA Bucharest also joined. There he won the championship at the end of the season but lost with his team in the cup final . After the first half of 1954 , the team was three points behind Flamura Roşie UT Arad in second place in the table when he had to make way for Ilie Savu .
For the second half of the season, Ronnay was the successor to Remus Ghiurițan again coach of CFR Bucharest, which now traded under Locomotiva . After eight points from 13 games, he had to relegate with Locomotiva, but managed to get promoted again immediately. He remained head coach for three more seasons and until his departure in 1959 had nothing to do with championship or relegation.
In the 1962/63 season , Ronnay looked after his former club CAO Oradea (now as Crișana Oradea ) at the start of the season in Divizia A, but was replaced after seven matchdays in the penultimate place by Constantin Woronkowski .
successes
As a player
As a trainer
Web links
- Francisc Ronnay in the database of weltfussball.de
- Francisc Ronnay in the Romanian Soccer database (Romanian)
- Francisc Ronnay on labtof.ro (Romanian)
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Ronnay, Francisc |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Romanian soccer player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | April 29, 1900 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Arad , Austria-Hungary |
DATE OF DEATH | June 6, 1967 |