FCSB II

Fotbal Club FCSB II (Romanian pronunciation: [fet͡ʃeseˌbe]), commonly known as FCSB II is a Romanian football club from Bucharest. The team was founded in 1982 as Steaua Mizil when Colonel Victor Stănculescu received an order from the Minister of Defense to establish a satellite team for Steaua Bucharest, dissolved in 1997 and refounded in 2004 and in 2016.[1] It is the reserve team of FCSB.

FCSB II
Full nameSC Fotbal Club FCSB 2 SA
Short nameFCSB
Founded1982 (1982)
2016 (2016) (refounded)
GroundARCOM
Capacity1,000
OwnerGeorge Becali
ChairmanValeriu Argăseală
ManagerCorneliu Ionescu
LeagueLiga IV
2022–23Liga III, Seria IV, 9th (relegated)
WebsiteClub website

History

1982–1997: Steaua Mizil

In 1982, when Colonel Victor Stănculescu received an order from the Minister of Defense to establish a satellite team for Steaua Bucharest. Tică Danilescu was chosen by Victor Stănculescu to be the creator and the man who will take care of the second team and the star academy. The conditions were extraordinary at Mizil. Rapid Mizil would merge with ICIM Ploiești, taking over from it players and the place in the third division, the 1982-83 edition, where it was active. At the end of the next edition of the championship, 1983-84, Steua Mizil promoted to Division B, after an extremely close match with Chimia Brazi. In the first edition, 1984-85, he participated under the name A.S. Mizil, which then changed and became the Steaua Mizil. This team had the same logo as the Steaua Bucharest club.

This club-satellite relationship meant that juniors from the teams of Steaua Bucharest arrived at Mizil year after year for the experience they could get from the tough competition of the Divizia B. At the end of the 1996-97 championship edition, the team was relegated to the third league and disbanding.

2004–present: FCSB II

The team was founded in 2004 under the name Steaua II București to train younger players. In 2009, it was promoted to Liga II and spent two seasons there, finishing 13th and 14th respectively, before being disbanded. It reappeared in 2016, and was admitted to Liga III to fill the places left unoccupied by the county champions who won the play-off matches and were unable to join the league. The team does not have the right to promotion.

Stadium

Baza Sportivă ARCOM, also known as Baza Sportivă FCSB is a sports complex in Bucharest, Romania. It is currently used only for football matches, is the home ground of FCSB II and FCSB Academy and also used by FCSB for trainings. The football complex was built by George Becali (owner of FCSB) on the place of the former ARCOM Concrete Plant, after his club was kicked out from Steaua Stadium and Ghencea Sports Complex due to the conflict with Ministry of National Defence and CSA Steaua București. The football complex has 4 grounds (3 with a grass pitch and 1 with an artificial turf) and holds 1,000 people.[2]

Honours

Leagues

Other performances

Players

Second team squad

As of 19 December 2022[3]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Romania ROU Mario Zanea
4 DF Romania ROU Alexandru Serafim
5 MF Romania ROU Mario Pruteanu
6 MF Romania ROU George Gogescu
15 MF Romania ROU Mihai Toma
17 MF Romania ROU Tudor Crăciun
18 DF Romania ROU Luca Ciobanu
19 FW Romania ROU Vlad Tudor
21 FW Romania ROU Andrei Trucă
23 MF Romania ROU Victor Stancovici
24 MF Romania ROU Darius Trifu
25 DF Romania ROU Sebastian Radu
26 DF Romania ROU Mario Geană
31 MF Romania ROU Luca Manolache
33 DF Romania ROU Răzvan Tamași
99 GK Romania ROU Adrian Mușat
GK Romania ROU Paul Ganea
GK Romania ROU David Poptean
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF Romania ROU Marian Botezatu
DF Romania ROU Andrei Culda
DF Romania ROU Adrian Horșia
DF Romania ROU Andrei Mitroi
DF Romania ROU David Petruț
DF Romania ROU Valentin Pitica
MF Romania ROU Alexandro Bechir
MF Romania ROU Aurelian Ciuciulete
MF Romania ROU Ștefan Coman
MF Romania ROU Valentin Mitrache
MF Romania ROU Andrei Onaci
MF Romania ROU Andrei Pandele
MF Romania ROU Robert Păuna
FW Romania ROU Matteo Buga
FW Romania ROU Antonio Burnaz
FW Romania ROU Ștefan Ion
FW Romania ROU Ștefan Moraru
FW Romania ROU Răzvan Radu
FW Romania ROU Dan Răchită

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Romania ROU Mario Popescu (to Unirea Constanța)
DF Romania ROU Alexandru Arnold (to Unirea Constanța)
DF Romania ROU Radu Cireșoiu (to Unirea Constanța)
DF Romania ROU Paul Coza (to Unirea Constanța)
DF Romania ROU Alexandru Dinu (to CSM Slatina)
DF Romania ROU Eduard Dobrai (to Oașul Negrești-Oaș)
DF Romania ROU Ionuț Sălăjan (to SCM Zalău)
DF Romania ROU Alexandru Șuteu (to Gloria Buzău)
DF Romania ROU Christian Tand (to Sighetu Marmației)
DF Romania ROU Dan Tălmaciu (to Unirea Constanța)
DF Romania ROU Călin Tudose (to Unirea Constanța)
DF Romania ROU Radu Zamfir (to Unirea Constanța)
MF Romania ROU Mario Lăcătuș (to Unirea Constanța)
MF Romania ROU Luca Mitrică (to Unirea Constanța)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Romania ROU Alexandru Neacșu (to Unirea Constanța)
MF Romania ROU Alexandru Nicola (to Alexandria)
MF Romania ROU Ciprian Timiș (to Unirea Constanța)
MF Romania ROU Rareș Trif (to Unirea Constanța)
FW Romania ROU Alexandru Enache (to Unirea Constanța)
FW Romania ROU Gabriel Fulga (to Unirea Dej)
FW Romania ROU Andrei Istrate (to Viitorul Târgu Jiu)
FW Romania ROU Vlad Șerbănescu (to Unirea Constanța)
FW Romania ROU Robert Tudor (to Unirea Constanța)
FW Romania ROU Cătălin Vaida (to Satu Mare)

Club officials

League history

Notes

    References

    1. "FCSB își reînființează echipa a doua! În ce ligă va evolua și cine va face parte din lot". Retrieved 25 July 2016.
    2. "Așa arată casa Stelei! Cât a investit Becali în noua bază a FCSB-ului din Berceni și ce facilități are" [This is what Steaua's house looks like! How much did Becali invest in the new FCSB base in Berceni and what facilities does it have] (in Romanian). gsp.ro. 9 November 2020.
    3. "Players". FCSB. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
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