Mircea Rednic

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Mircea Rednic
Rednic Mircea.jpg
during a press conference (2013)
Personnel
birthday April 9, 1962
place of birth HunedoaraRomania
size 175 cm
position Defender
Juniors
Years station
1976-1979 Corvinul Hunedoara
1979-1980 Luceafărul Bucharest
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1980-1983 Corvinul Hunedoara 96 0(6)
1983-1990 Dinamo Bucharest 212 (21)
1990-1991 Bursaspor 14 0(0)
1991-1996 Standard Liege 140 0(3)
1996-1997 VV St. Truiden 10 0(0)
1997-2000 Rapid Bucharest 89 0(2)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1981-1991 Romania 83 0(2)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1998 Rapid Bucharest
2000-2001 Rapid Bucharest
2001 FCM Bacau
2002-2003 Rapid Bucharest
2003-2004 al-Nasr
2004 Universitatea Craiova
2005 FC Vaslui
2005-2006 FC Vaslui
2006-2007 Dinamo Bucharest
2007-2008 Rapid Bucharest
2008-2009 Dinamo Bucharest
2009 Alania Vladikavkaz
2010-2011 FK Xəzər Lənkəran
2012 Astra Ploiesti
2012 Petrolul Ploiesti
2012-2013 Standard Liege
2013 CFR Cluj
2013-2014 KAA Gent
2015 Petrolul Ploiesti
2015-2016 Dinamo Bucharest
2016-2018 Royal Excel Mouscron
2018 Al-Faisaly FC
2018-2020 Dinamo Bucharest
2020– FC Politehnica Iași
1 Only league games are given.

Mircea "Puriul" Rednic (born April 9, 1962 in Hunedoara ) is a former Romanian football player and current coach .

He played a total of 83 international games and 561 games in Divizia A , the Süper Lig and the Belgian First Division . Rednic took part in the 1984 European Football Championship and the 1990 World Cup.

Player career

Mircea Rednic started playing football at Corvinul Hunedoara in 1976 . At the age of 17 he was accepted into the Luceafărul Bucharest football school for a year . In the second half of the 1979/80 season Rednic returned to Corvinul in Divizia B and in the same year made promotion to the highest Romanian football league. There he made his debut on August 2, 1980 in the win against AS Armata Târgu Mureş . Under coach Mircea Lucescu , he experienced Corvinul's most successful period in the early 1980s, which culminated in the 1982/83 season with participation in the UEFA Cup . After the season Rednic moved to Dinamo Bucharest , with whom he won the Romanian championship in 1984 and 1990 and the Romanian cup in 1984, 1986 and 1990. At this time, which was characterized by political intrigue, Dinamo mostly fought a duel at the top with Steaua, so that four runners-up championships jumped out during this period.

In the winter break of the 1990/91 season Rednic left - like many other strong Romanian players - Divizia A and moved to the Turkish Süper Lig in Bursaspor . However, he moved to Belgium in the summer of 1991 and joined Standard Liège , where he won the Belgian Football Cup in 1993 and was two Belgian runners-up. In 1996 he moved to VV St. Truiden within Belgium .

After Rednic only made ten appearances in St. Truiden and had meanwhile assumed Belgian citizenship, he returned to Romania in 1997 and played for Rapid Bucharest until the end of his active career in 2000 , with whom he won the Romanian Cup in 1998 and the Romanian football championship won, and was twice runner-up.

Rednic scored three goals in 47 European Cup games.

National team

Together with his teammates Ioan Andone and Romulus Gabor , Rednic made his debut on November 11, 1981 in Bern in the international match against Switzerland in the Romanian national soccer team . All three had been called up by the new national coach Mircea Lucescu, their player-coach at Corvinul Hunedoara at the time. In 1984 he took part in the 1984 European Football Championship in France and played all three matches. At the soccer World Cup in Italy in 1990 , Rednic was also in the squad and was used in all four games. In a total of 83 international matches, he scored two goals. He also played 11 international matches for the Romanian U21 national soccer team, with whom he won bronze at the Junior Soccer World Cup in 1981 .

Coaching career

After the end of his active career, Rednic began his coaching career in 2000 with his previous club Rapid Bucharest, where he had already jumped in for a game in December 1998. In October 2000 he succeeded Anghel Iordănescu and led the club at the end of the season in the UEFA Cup . Nevertheless, he was replaced by Viorel Hizo and hired at league competitor FCM Bacau , who had bought a place in Divizia A from FC Baia Mare after his sporting descent . Already after the first half of the 2001/02 season , however, the ways parted again.

On May 16, 2002 Rednic returned to Rapid as the successor to the dismissed Viorel Hizo and won the Romanian Cup . He was able to top this success in the following season and won the championship in 2003 . After the first half of the 2003/04 season he received an offer from abroad and moved to Al-Nasr from Riyadh in the Saudi Arabian Premier League . After a few months he returned to Romania and on March 29, 2004, he succeeded Nicolò Napoli at Universitatea Craiova . After he was able to place himself with the club at the end of the season in the front midfield, he was dismissed in September 2004 while lying on the penultimate place in the table.

On January 14, 2005 committed the second division top rider FC Vaslui Rednic as the successor to Ioan Sdrobiş, who was dismissed in November 2004 . At the end of the 2004/05 season , the relay win and thus promotion to the highest Romanian league, Divizia A, was certain. Rednic then left the club because he had an offer from a Belgian club, but was signed again on September 13, 2005 as the successor to Basarab Panduru . He led the promoted team from penultimate place to relegation , before his former club Dinamo Bucharest signed him as head coach on June 12, 2006 . In the 2006/07 season he won the Romanian football championship with Dinamo. After a mixed start to the season and the end in qualifying for the Champions League , Rednic resigned as coach of Dinamo on September 2, 2007. From October 9, 2007 to March 21, 2008 he was again coach of Rapid Bucharest. After riots at the Bucharest derby against Steaua , he resigned.

On April 1, 2008 it was announced that Rednic would train again at Dinamo Bucharest after the 2007/08 season . He took office in June 2008 and gave it up in June 2009 after the end of the season because of differences of opinion with the club's management. Until the end of the year he trained Alania Wladikawkas in the Russian 1st Division , but missed promotion to the Premjer League (later the club moved up for FK Moscow ). In the summer of 2010 he worked in Azerbaijan as the coach of FK Xəzər Lənkəran . With this he became runner-up in 2011 and won the Azerbaijani Cup . After five winless championship games in a row, Rednic had to give up his position on December 4, 2011. On March 29, 2012 he replaced the Portuguese Toni, who had been dismissed three days earlier, as coach of the Romanian first division club Astra Ploieşti .

successes

As a player

  • World Cup participant: 1990
  • European Championship participant: 1984
  • 3rd place at the U-20 World Cup: 1981
  • Romanian champion: 1984 , 1990 , 1999
  • Romanian runner-up: 1985 , 1987 , 1988 , 1989 , 1998 , 2000
  • Romanian Cup Winner: 1984 , 1986 , 1990 , 1998
  • Semi-finals in the European Champion Clubs' Cup: 1984
  • Semi-finals in the European Cup Winners' Cup: 1990
  • Belgian cup winner: 1993
  • Belgian runner-up: 1993, 1995

As a trainer

  • Romanian champion: 2003 , 2007
  • Romanian Cup Winner: 2002
  • Romanian Supercup winner: 2002, 2003, 2007
  • Azerbaijani Cup Winner: 2011
  • Azerbaijani runner-up: 2010/11

Awards

On March 25, 2008, Rednic was awarded the Order of Merit "Meritul sportiv" III by the Romanian President Traian Băsescu for his services in the national team. Class excellent.

literature

  • Mihai Ionescu, Răzvan Toma, Mircea Tudoran: Fotbal de la A la Z . Mondocart Pres, Bucharest 2001, ISBN 973-8332-00-1 , p. 307 .

Individual evidence

  1. Ziarul de Iași of May 17, 2002 , accessed on January 22, 2012 (Romanian)
  2. Gazeta de Sud of March 30, 2004 , accessed April 2, 2011 (Romanian)
  3. Evenimentul from January 14, 2005  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , accessed on January 29, 2012 (Romanian)@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.evenimentul.ro  
  4. Evenimentul from September 13, 2005  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , accessed January 30, 2012 (Romanian)@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.evenimentul.ro  
  5. Gazeta Sporturilor, December 4, 2011 , accessed April 20, 2012 (Romanian)
  6. ProSport of March 29, 2012 , accessed on April 20, 2012 (Romanian)
  7. Decorarea unor personalităţi ale fotbalului românesc. March 25, 2008, accessed January 24, 2011 (Romanian).

Web links