Victor Pițurcă

Victor Pițurcă (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈviktor piˈt͡surkə]; born 8 May 1956) is a Romanian professional football manager and former player.

Victor Pițurcă
Pițurcă with Romania in 2014
Personal information
Full name Victor Pițurcă
Date of birth (1956-05-08) 8 May 1956
Place of birth Orodel, Romania
Height 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
Position(s) Striker
Youth career
1970–1974 Universitatea Craiova
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1974–1975 Dinamo Slatina 10 (3)
1975–1977 Universitatea Craiova 8 (0)
1977–1978 Pandurii Târgu Jiu 13 (4)
1978–1979 Drobeta-Turnu Severin 15 (5)
1979–1983 Olt Scornicești 98 (28)
1983–1989 Steaua București 174 (137)
1989–1990 Lens 28 (4)
Total 346 (181)
International career
1985–1987 Romania 13 (6)
Managerial career
1992 Steaua București
1994–1995 Universitatea Craiova
1996–1998 Romania U21
1998–1999 Romania
2000–2003 Steaua București
2003–2004 FCSB
2004–2009 Romania
2010 FCSB
2010 FC U Craiova
2011–2014 Romania
2014–2015 Al-Ittihad
2015–2016 Al-Ittihad
2019–2020 Universitatea Craiova
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Club career

Pițurcă was born in Orodel, Dolj County. He joined Universitatea Craiova as a youth in 1970, aged 14, and four years later he was loaned to Dinamo Slatina, a club from Romania's Liga II, in order to gain more experience, before being called back to Craiova in 1975, making his debut for the team in November that year.

As he was not used much by Universitatea, Pițurcă left the club in 1977 to join Pandurii Târgu Jiu and then FC Drobeta Turnu-Severin, from where he was signed by FC Olt, thus returning to play in Liga I.

In 1983, he was requested by Steaua, helping the club to reach its highest peak in European football.

Pițurcă won with Steaua the European Cup in 1986, the European Super Cup in 1987, and was the semi-finalist in the same competition losing to Benfica in 1988. During the 1988–89 season the team reached the European Cup final again, but lost to Milan. As for domestic performances, Pițurcă won the championship with Steaua București five times and the Romanian Cup four times.

At the end of the 1987–88 season he was the top scorer of Liga I and won UEFA's Bronze Boot.

A very funny moment happened in 1989 during the European Cup semi-final played by Steaua against Galatasaray in İzmir when the Turkish side's goalkeeper relieved the ball hitting Pițurcă's back and from there the ball went straight into the goal. However, the goal was not validated because the referee did not see what happened.[1]

On 25 March 2008, he was awarded the Ordinul "Meritul Sportiv" medal — (The Order "The Merit for Sports Achievement") class II by the president of Romania, Traian Băsescu for his part in winning the 1986 European Cup Final.

International career

Despite being a prolific striker, Pițurcă only won 13 caps for Romania, scoring six times.

#DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
14 June 198623 August Stadium, Bucharest, Romania Norway1–03–1Friendly
24 June 198623 August Stadium, Bucharest, Romania Norway2–03–1Friendly
38 October 1986Ramat Gan Stadium, Israel Israel1–14–2Friendly
48 October 1986Ramat Gan Stadium, Israel Israel4–14–2Friendly
525 March 1987Stadionul Steaua, Bucharest, Romania Albania1–05–1UEFA Euro 1988 qualification
629 April 1987Stadionul Steaua, Bucharest, Romania Spain1–03–1UEFA Euro 1988 qualification

Coaching career

After playing for Racing Club de Lens during the 1989–90 season, Pițurcă called it a day and retired from professional football to take over as coach. His first appointment was with Steaua București in 1991, followed by another one with Universitatea Craiova in 1994, finishing second in the championship at the end of 1994–95 season.

In 1996, he was named coach of the Romania Under 21 side, leading the team to its best performances ever, including a qualification to the Under 21 European Championship in 1998, hosted by Romania.

In 1998, he was appointed as Romania's manager and qualified the team to the 2000 European Football Championship. However, despite finishing the qualification group undefetead, Pițurcă was sacked before even taking his squad to the Euro 2000. The reason was an argument he had had with Romania's best players, Gheorghe Hagi and Gheorghe Popescu, both managed by Ioan Becali. Becali was Pițurcă's worst enemy because Pițurcă did not want to promote the players he managed to the national team, but he was great friends with Romanian Football Federation president Mircea Sandu.

In December 1999 he took over as manager of Steaua București, winning the championship in 2001, but resigned in 2004 after an argument with the club's chairman, Gigi Becali, who wanted to sack a player whom Pițurcă wanted to keep on the team.

In December 2004 he was appointed manager of Romania for the second time. At first Romania did well under his coaching, defeating several important European teams both in friendlies (Germany, Spain) and official matches (Czech Republic in Group 1 of the 2006 FIFA World Cup Qualification and the Netherlands in Group G of the UEFA 2008 Qualifying Round).

After topping their qualifying group (and thus qualifying for their first international tournament in 8 years), Romania was drawn in Group C at UEFA Euro 2008, alongside the Netherlands, Italy and France. At the time of the draw, these countries' respective Elo rankings among European teams were 1st, 2nd, 4th and 8th, and as such the group has been dubbed the competition's "group of death". After drawing their first two games against the finalists of the previous World Cup (0–0 against France, 1–1 against Italy), Romania lost 0–2 to the Netherlands, finishing the group in third place and thus being eliminated from the competition.

After Euro 2008, Romania showed an increasingly poor form in both friendly games and the 2010 World Cup qualifying campaign, where they had a slow start. In their first two official games after Euro 2008, Romania lost 0–3 against Lithuania at home and four days later secured a difficult 1–0 victory against the Faeroe Islands. Although many of the players which helped Romania qualify for the Euro 2008 missed these two matches, this was not accepted as a reasonable excuse for the extremely poor results by the Romanian media and public opinion. The next official match, against France, was considered decisive for Romania's qualification chances. Despite managing only a 2–2 tie, the team's performance was generally deemed satisfactory, and Pițurcă was offered one last chance to remain coach of the national team: to win both of the next two games in the qualifying group, against Serbia and Austria, within a four-day timespan. Romania eventually lost both matches (3–2 on 28 March 2009 against Serbia at home, 2–1 on 1 April against Austria away).

Considering Romania's extremely poor performances in 2008 and 2009, the Romanian Football Federation released Victor Pițurcă from his job from the Romania national team on 9 April 2009. A few weeks later, Răzvan Lucescu was appointed as his successor.

In 2010, he had two short spells as manager at FCSB and Universitatea Craiova.

On 14 June 2011, he returned for a third spell in charge of the Romania national team.

On 16 October 2014, he left the Romania national team to sign a two-year deal with Al-Ittihad in Saudi Arabia.[2] In January 2015, he was heavily criticized for excluding Al-Ittihad's top stars Mohammed Noor and Hamad Al-Montashari due to disobeying training procedure. As of today, Noor has missed over 10 league matches, which was considered by Saudi journalists "way too far" for a punishment considering he is Al-Ittihad's longest tenured and most accomplished player. On 4 April 2015 before the decisive match between Al-Ittihad and Al-Nassr, Pițurcă was seen shaking hands with Noor. On 10 May 2015, after four months, Noor and Al-Montashari returned.

Finally at the end of the season, Piturca's contract with Al-Ittihad was dismissed after a disappointing season, as he couldn't succeed to keep the team on the top three teams of the Saudi Premier league table. In addition, he failed to pass the semi-final round in the Saudi King's Cup.

On 22 August 2019, he signed a contract with his youth club Universitatea Craiova for 3 years. He resigned in January 2020.[3]

Personal life

At Steaua București and FC U Craiova he coached his son, Alexandru who was a striker.[4][5][6] He is the cousin of Eugen Neagoe.[7][8]

He was nicknamed Satana ("Satan") by the press, something he called "remarkable".[9]

Honours

Player

Steaua București

Individual

Manager

Steaua București

Managerial statistics

As of 17 March 2020
Team Nat From To Record
GWDLWin %
Universitatea Craiova Romania 1994 1995 34 21 5 8 061.76
Romania Romania 1998 1999 16 9 6 1 056.25
Steaua București Romania 2000 2002 60 32 14 14 053.33
Steaua București Romania 2002 2004 52 31 15 6 059.62
Romania Romania 2004 2009 46 27 7 12 058.70
Steaua București Romania 2010 2010 2 2 0 0 100.00
Universitatea Craiova Romania 2010 2010 16 7 3 6 043.75
Romania Romania 2011 2014 36 18 10 8 050.00
Al-Ittihad Saudi Arabia 2014 2015 23 12 4 7 052.17
Al-Ittihad Saudi Arabia 2015 2016 26 14 5 7 053.85
Universitatea Craiova Romania 2019 2020 16 8 3 5 050.00
Total 311 173 69 69 055.63

References

  1. Pițurcă against Galatasaray 1989 on YouTube. Retrieved 17 January 2011.
  2. "Pițurcă and Romania part ways for third time". UEFA. 16 October 2014. Retrieved 13 April 2016.
  3. Victor Vrînceanu (4 January 2020). "Bombă! Victor Pițurcă a demisionat de la Universitatea Craiova". ProSport.
  4. "Alexandru Piţurcă: "Nu mă compar cu tata!"" [Alexandru Piţurcă: „I can't compare myself with my father!“] (in Romanian). prosport.ro. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  5. "Alexandru Piţurcă, program separat de pregătire: "Tata e dur cu mine"" [Alexandru Piţurcă, separate training schedule: "My father is ruff with me"] (in Romanian). Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  6. "SPECIAL Situaţie de gradul I în Liga 1. Ce a realizat Silviu Lung jr. prin câştigarea titlului cu Astra. De la fraţii Vâlcov, la fraţii Costea şi familia Piţurcă" [SPECIAL First grade situation in Liga 1. What Silviu Lung jr. accomplished by winning the title with Astra. From the brothers Vâlcov to the brothers Costea and the Piţurcă family] (in Romanian). prosport.ro. Retrieved 6 October 2017.
  7. "Vărul lui Piţurcă este antrenor la Sepsi" [Piţurcă's cousin is coach at Sepsi] (in Romanian). monitorulexpres.ro. 15 November 2017. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
  8. "Neagoe, înlocuit de vărul Piţurcă?" [Neagoe, replaced by his cousin Piţurcă?] (in Romanian). evz.ro. 13 December 2009. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
  9. "Piturca este mandru de porecla Satana! Vezi de unde vine" [Piturca is proud of his "Satan" nickname! See where it came from]. March 2010. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  10. Arotaritei, Sorin; Di Maggio, Roberto; Stokkermans, Karel (16 August 2016). "Golden Boot ("Soulier d'Or") Awards". RSSSF. Retrieved 24 September 2016.
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