Ion Oblemenco

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Ion Oblemenco
Ion Oblemenco 4.jpg
Oblemenco in the jersey of Universitatea Craiova
Personnel
birthday May 13, 1945
place of birth CorabiaRomania
date of death September 1, 1996
Place of death AgadirMorocco
size 182 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
1958-1960 Progresul Corabia
1960–1962 Electroputere Craiova
1962-1964 CS Craiova
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1964-1966 Rapid Bucharest 8 00(3)
1966-1977 Universitatea Craiova 264 (167)
1977-1988 FCM Galați
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1967-1970 Romania U23 12 00(5)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1979-1980 Universitatea Craiova (Assistant Trainer)
1980-1982 Universitatea Craiova
1982-1984 Chimia Râmnicu Vâlcea
1985 FC Olt Scorniceşti
1992-1993 Universitatea Craiova
1996 Hassania d'Agadir
1 Only league games are given.

Ion Oblemenco (born May 13, 1945 in Corabia , Romanați district , today in Olt district , † September 1, 1996 in Agadir , Morocco ) was a Romanian football player and coach . He denied 272 games in the highest Romanian football league, the Divizia A .

Player career

societies

Ion Oblemenco started playing soccer in his hometown of Corabia . In 1960 he moved to the nearby city of Craiova . There he went through the youth teams, but began his career in the 1963/64 season at Rapid Bucharest , where he came to his first appearance in Divizia A on July 5, 1964 in the game against seinemtiința Craiova and immediately scored a goal. With Rapid, Oblemenco was runner-up three times in a row, but was rarely used.

In the summer of 1966 he returned to Craiova and from then on went on the hunt for goals for Universitatea Craiova . Already in his first season he had his breakthrough and he was the top scorer in Divizia A. He was able to repeat this success in the seasons 1969/70 , 1971/72 and 1972/73 . In the following season , Oblemenco was not able to prove his accuracy as usual, but won the first Romanian championship in the club's history after the runner-up in the previous year.

In 1977, Oblemenco left Craiova, having won the Romanian Cup for the first time that same year , and went to Divizia B at FCM Galați . There he ended his career a year later.

National team

Although Oblemenco was one of the most successful Romanian strikers of the 1970s, he never played a single international match .

Success as a player

  • Romanian champion: 1974
  • Romanian Cup Winner: 1977
  • Romanian runner-up: 1965, 1966, 1973
  • Romanian top scorer: 1967, 1970, 1972, 1973

Coaching career

Ion Oblemenco as coach of FC Universitatea Craiova (1982)

After the end of his active career, Oblemenco began at the beginning of the 1979/80 season as an assistant coach of his former club Universitatea Craiova , before becoming head coach of the reigning champions the following year. He was not only able to defend this title on the sidelines the following year , but also to bring the double to Craiova for the first time together with the cup win.

After the runner-up in 1981/82 Oblemenco left Uni Craiova and took over the league rival Chimia Râmnicu Vâlcea , whom he led to relegation twice before he was replaced by Lucian Cataragiu in the winter break of 1984/85 . He then coached FC Olt Scorniceşti for a short time at the beginning of the 1985/86 season before he was replaced by Constantin Oțet after seven matchdays .

In 1990 Oblemenco returned to Uni Craiova and initially worked in various functions in the association's environment. In the 1992/93 season he took over the post of head coach as the successor to the dismissed Sorin Cârțu . In March 1993 he was replaced by Marian Bondrea . In 1996 he moved abroad and took over the Moroccan club Hassania d'Agadir . On September 1, 1996, he died during a league game as a result of a heart attack in the dugout.

Success as a trainer

Others

After his death, Oblemenco was posthumously made an honorary citizen by the city of Craiova . The old Ion Oblemenco stadium in Craiova also bore his name from 1996 until it was demolished in 2015. The city's new stadium, which opened in 2017, is again called the Ion Oblemenco Stadium .

Web links