Marian Pană

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Marian Pană
Personnel
birthday December 24, 1968
place of birth MoreniRomania
size 172 cm
position Left full-back
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1985-1988 Flacăra Moreni 34 (1)
1989-1990 AS Victoria Bucharest 25 (3)
1990 Flacăra Moreni 13 (0)
1990-1991 FC Argeş Piteşti 32 (9)
1991-1994 Dinamo Bucharest 65 (3)
1995 FC Argeş Piteşti 27 (4)
1996 Hapoel Haifa 8 (0)
1996 Dinamo Bucharest 4 (1)
1997 Chindia Târgovişte 9 (0)
1997 AS Rocar Bucharest 5 (0)
1998 FC Brasov 17 (0)
1999 Chindia Târgovişte 22 (4)
2000 Juventus Colentina Bucharest 5 (0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1991 Romania 2 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2002-2007 CS Otopeni
2009 Gloria Bistrița
2010 Dacia Mioveni
2010 Universitatea Cluj
2011 Unirea Alba Iulia
2011 Unirea Urziceni
2011 Farul Constanța
2011–2012 CS Mioveni
2013 Bihor Oradea FC
2013 FC Costuleni
2013-2014 CSM Metalul Reșița
2014 Farul Constanța
2015 CSM Metalul Reșița
2016– VfB Hohenems U-18
1 Only league games are given.

Marian Pană (born December 24, 1968 in Moreni ) is a former Romanian football player and current coach . He played a total of 217 games in the Romanian Divizia A and the Israeli Ligat ha'Al .

Career as a player

Pană's career began with Flacăra Moreni in his hometown. There he moved up in the 1985/86 season in the squad of the first team that played in Divizia B at the time and rose to the House of Lords at the end of the season . There he made his debut on November 16, 1986. At the end of the season he managed to stay with his club before he reached sixth place with Flăcara a year later . In the winter break of 1988/89 he left the club and moved to AS Victoria Bucharest in the capital. With his new club, he qualified for the UEFA Cup , where he fell out in the first round against FC Valencia .

After the Romanian revolution , Victoria was dissolved by the new political leadership during the winter break in 1989/90 , so that Pană returned to Moreni. At the end of the season he got down with his team from Divizia A. He then moved to FC Argeş Piteşti . In the 1990/91 season he was able to achieve nine goals for his new club. This made the top club Dinamo Bucharest aware of him and signed him in the summer of 1991. With Dinamo he won the 1992 championship, the only title of his career.

After Pană was hardly used in the first half of the 1994/95 season , he returned to Pitesti during the winter break. A year later he left the club and moved to Hapoel Haifa in the Israeli Ligat ha'Al . He was unable to assert himself there and returned to Romania six months later in the summer of 1996, where he was hired by his former club Dinamo Bucharest. Since he came in only four missions in the 1996/97 season , he joined the league competitor Chindia Târgovişte during the winter break . After relegation, he hired at AS Rocar Bucharest in Divizia B before moving to league rivals FC Brașov six months later . The relegated missed the desired promotion at the end of the season .

In the first half of 1998/99 he was no longer considered, so he returned to Târgovişte during the winter break, which had meanwhile been relegated to Divizia B. There he was able to fight for a regular place and finished the season with his team in the lower midfield. After a year he left the club and moved to league rivals Juventus Colentina Bucharest at the beginning of 2000 , where he ended his career in the summer of 2000.

National team

Pană played two games for the Romanian national team when national coach Mircea Rădulescu took him on an international trip to Egypt in December 1991. He was used in both games against the hosts .

Career as a coach

After the end of his active career, Pană worked as a football coach. In autumn 2002 he took over CS Otopeni in Divizia C as head coach. With Otopeni, he rose to Divizia B in 2004 . After he had previously missed promotion with the ambitious club, he was dismissed in March 2007 and replaced by Costel Orac .

In September 2009 Pană succeeded Sandu Tăbîrcă as head coach of Gloria Bistrița in Liga 1 . During the winter break he had to give way to Marius Șumudică . In early 2010 he took over the second division club Dacia Mioveni , with whom he missed the desired promotion. He then moved to the first division club Universitatea Cluj , where he worked as head coach from the beginning of the 2010/11 season . In early November 2010 he left the club again. At the beginning of 2011 he took over the second division side Unirea Alba Iulia , which he left after a few weeks to the relegation-threatened first division side Unirea Urziceni . After relegation, the second division Farul Constanța committed him in the summer of 2011, which he left on December 1, 2011 to take over the first division club CS Mioveni . With his new club he had to relegate at the end of the 2011/12 season .

Pană initially found no new club. In early 2013, second division FC Bihor Oradea signed him as the successor to Claudiu Niculescu . The club missed promotion to the House of Lords and the paths parted again. He was hired by FC Costuleni in the Moldovan Divizia Națională , but had to leave after three games. In September 2013, second division Metalul Reșița took him under contract as the successor to Alexandru Pelici . In April 2014 they parted ways again. At the beginning of the 2014/15 season he took over league rival Farul Constanța . He was released in November 2014. At the beginning of the 2015/16 season he worked again for two months in Reșița.

successes

As a player

  • Romanian champion: 1992

As a trainer

  • Promotion to League II: 2004

Web links