Valeriu Bordeanu

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Valeriu Bordeanu
Personnel
Surname Valeriu Ionuț Bordeanu
birthday 2nd February 1977
place of birth BotoșaniRomania
size 180 cm
position Left full-back
Juniors
Years station
Mercanex Botoșani
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1995-1996 Ceahlăul Piatra Neamț 9 (0)
1996 Bucovina suceava 13 (0)
1997-1999 Politehnica Iași 45 (0)
1999-2003 Steaua Bucharest 40 (1)
2001 →  FCM Bacău  (loan) 8 (0)
2002 →  FCM Bacău  (loan) 13 (0)
2003 →  FCM Bacău  (loan) 12 (1)
2003-2004 Rapid Bucharest 21 (1)
2004 FK Kuban Krasnodar 2 (0)
2005 Universitatea Craiova 7 (0)
2005-2006 Politehnica Iași 45 (0)
2007-2010 Unirea Urziceni 96 (1)
2010-2011 Dinamo Bucharest 17 (0)
2011-2013 FC Botoșani 40 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2013 FC Botoșani
2014 FC Botoșani (assistant coach)
2014-2015 al-Arabi (assistant coach)
2015-2016 Jiangsu Suning (assistant coach)
2016 FK Kuban Krasnodar (assistant coach)
2017– CFR Cluj (Assistant Trainer)
1 Only league games are given.

Valeriu Ionuț Bordeanu (born February 2, 1977 in Botoșani ) is a former Romanian football player and current coach . The full-back played a total of 270 games in the Romanian League 1 and the Russian Premier League . In 2009 he won the Romanian championship with Unirea Urziceni . Since June 2017 he has been an assistant trainer at CFR Cluj .

Career

player

After his youth in his hometown Botoșani , Bordeanu came in the autumn of 1995 in the squad of the first team of Ceahlăul Piatra Neamț , which at the time played in the highest Romanian football league, the Divizia A (now League 1 ). He came there for his first assignment on December 13, 1995. After he was only used irregularly, he left the club at the end of the season and moved to Divizia B to Bucovina Suceava . Already in the winter break of 1996/97 he joined the league competitor Politehnica Iași .

Although the intended promotion had been missed, the clubs of Divizia A noticed him. In the summer of 1999, the Romanian top club Steaua Bucharest signed him . After Bordeanu was a regular player in his first season , he was rarely used after that. He was loaned several times to league rivals FCM Bacau to collect match practice. In the summer of 2003 he finally left Steaua and moved to local rivals Rapid Bucharest . A year later he went to Russia and joined Kuban Krasnodar . Bordeanu was hardly used at Kuban and left the club at the end of the season .

Bordeanu returned to Romania, where he played for Universitatea Craiova . After relegation at the end of the 2004/05 season , he moved to his former club Politehnica Iași , which now played in Divizia A. After relegation had previously been achieved, he moved to Unirea Urziceni in the winter break of 2006/07 . This change proved to be a stroke of luck for Bordeanu, as he came with the club to the championship in 2009 and thus to his first title.

In early September 2010, Bordeanu moved to league rivals Dinamo Bucharest . There he reached the Romanian cup final and was able to qualify for the Europa League . In the summer of 2011 he left the club again and returned to FC Botoșani in his hometown. With his new club, he rose to League 1 after the 2012/13 season . He then ended his active career.

Trainer

In early December 2013, Bordeanu was interim coach of his former club FC Botoșani in Liga 1, in January 2014 he became assistant to the new head coach Leontin Grozavu . Since July 2014 he has been working in the same position at al-Arabi from Qatar. After his boss Dan Petrescu moved to ASA Târgu Mureș in December 2014 , he stayed in Qatar under his successor Daniel Carreño . When Petrescu became Jiangsu Suning's head coach in the summer of 2015 , he became his assistant again. The team also worked together at FK Kuban Krasnodar from July to October 2016 . In June 2017, he joined CFR Cluj with Petrescu .

successes

  • Romanian champion: 2009

Web links