Pavel Badea

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Pavel Badea
Personnel
birthday June 10, 1967
place of birth CraiovaRomania
size 172 cm
position midfield player
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1983-1992 Universitatea Craiova 202 (43)
1992-1995 Lausanne Sports 100 (12)
1995-1996 Universitatea Craiova 19 0(4)
1996-1998 Suwon Bluewings 80 (11)
1998-1999 Bellmare Hiratsuka 23 0(5)
1999 Kashiwa Reysol 19 0(0)
2000-2001 Avispa Fukuoka 58 0(8)
2001-2002 FC Extensiv Craiova 13 0(6)
2002-2004 Universitatea Craiova 37 0(5)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1990-1992 Romania 9 0(2)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2003 Universitatea Craiova
2004-2005 Universitatea Craiova
1 Only league games are given.

Pavel Badea (* 10. June 1967 in Craiova ) is a former Romanian football player , coach and official . The midfielder played a total of 380 games in the Romanian Divizia A , the South Korean K-League and the Japanese J. League before ending his career in 2004.

Career as a player

Pavel Badea's career began in his hometown Craiova at Universitatea Craiova , which was one of the best Romanian football clubs at the time. There he moved up into the squad of the first team at the age of 16 and came on May 5, 1984 for his first assignment in the highest Romanian football league, the Divizia A (today League 1 ). In the following season he was used regularly and was able to establish himself as a regular player in the course of the 1985/86 season . With Uni Craiova he always played with in the front of the league, but could not intervene in the battle for the championship, which was dominated in the second half of the 1980s by Steaua and Dinamo Bucharest . In the 1990/91 season he finally achieved the greatest success of his career by winning the championship and the cup .

In the summer of 1992 Badea Craiova left and moved abroad to Lausanne Sport in the Swiss National League A . In Lausanne he became a regular player straight away and was able to qualify with the club three times in a row for the final round of the Swiss championship, but without being able to intervene in the fight for the European Cup places. In 1995 he returned to his home country after three years and played again for his former club Uni Craiova.

In the winter break of 1995/96 Badea received an offer from the South Korean K-League and moved to Suwon Bluewings in the Far East. In his first season he won the second half of the season with his club and was able to qualify for the championship final, but lost to Ulsan Hyundai FC . In the South Korean Cup , too , he only managed to finish second after losing to Pohang Atom in the final . In the following season, the club could not build on the successes.

At the beginning of 1998 Badea left South Korea and moved to the Japanese J. League to Bellmare Hiratsuka , but moved to league rivals Kashiwa Reysol after a year before joining Avispa Fukuoka a year later . As on the previous stations, he was unable to assert himself permanently in Japan and did not play for the championship with his clubs. After relegation with Avispa Fukuoka at the end of the 2001 season, he returned to Romania and initially joined FC Extensiv Craiova in Divizia B , but returned to his home club Uni Craiova in the summer of 2002 after only half a year. There he ended his career in 2004 after he had to help out as a player- coach during the first half of the season.

National team

Badea played nine games for the Romanian national soccer team and scored two goals. He had his first appearance on August 29, 1990 in the friendly against the Soviet Union , when the new national coach Gheorghe Constantin replaced him in the 85th minute for Ilie Dumitrescu . In the following European Championship qualification , he was used only sporadically by both Constantin and his successor Mircea Rădulescu and mostly played in friendly games. He played his last international match on October 14, 1992 against Belgium .

Career as a coach

Already at the end of his active career Badea was briefly active in the 2003/04 season as player- coach of Universitatea Craiova . From February 25, 2004 he was first in office as club president, but also briefly took over the coaching rudder from Mircea Rednic in the following season . However, he remained hapless, so that the club separated from him in view of the approaching relegation. Then Badea was sports director of CS Universitatea Craiova , the club whose football department had split up in 1991 as FC Universitatea Craiova .

Achievements / titles

society

Universitatea Craiova
Suwon Bluewings
Kashiwa Reysol

Individual evidence

  1. Gazeta de Sud of February 26, 2004 , accessed April 2, 2011 (Romanian)
  2. Gazeta de Sud of April 17, 2008 , accessed on February 27, 2011 (Romanian)

literature

  • Ilie Dobre: Pavel Badea - “Samuraiul” de pe Jii . Editura Paralela 45, Piteşti 2002, ISBN 973-593-751-4 , p. 225 .

Web links

  • Pavel Badea in the database of National-Football-Teams.com (English)
  • Pavel Badea in the Romanian Soccer database (Romanian)
  • Pavel Badea in the database of weltfussball.de