2010–11 in Romanian football

The 2010–11 season in Romanian football was held between the summer of 2010 and the summer of 2011. The first division consisted of 18 teams, with CFR Cluj as the defending champions. The men's national team started the UEFA Euro 2012 qualifying campaign in Group D, along with France, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Albania and Luxembourg.

Domestic leagues

In Liga I, Oţelul Galaţi won the title for the first time in their history and qualified into the group stage of the 2011–12 UEFA Champions League. Runners-up came Timișoara, while the third placed were Vaslui. However, at the end of the season Timișoara were being relegated for accumulated debt and by this not allowed to play in the qualifying round of the Champions League, by the Romanian Football Federation. Top scorer of the league was Ianis Zicu of Timișoara with 18 goals.

Steaua Bucharest gained the Romanian Cup again after eleven years, in a final over archrivals Dinamo Bucharest played in Braşov.

In Liga II, Ceahlăul Piatra Neamţ and Petrolul Ploieşti won the two series, with Concordia Chiajna and Bihor Oradea as runners-up. Still, Bihor Oradea were not given a first division license for the following season and were ineligible for promotion.[1] The decision regarding the structure of next season's leagues was still in debate on June 20.[2]

The champions of the six Liga III series were Bacău, Callatis Mangalia, Chindia Târgovişte, Slatina, Luceafărul Oradea and Maramureş Universitar Baia Mare.

European competitions

CFR Cluj

The champions CFR Cluj were drawn directly into the group stage of the 2010–11 UEFA Champions League, thanks to a good coefficient of the Romanian association, where they were paired with Basel, Rome and Bayern München. Unluckily they would only achieve a victory over Basel in the first game and a draw with Rome in the last, finishing the group on last place.

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Bayern Munich 6501166+1015
Roma 63121011110
Basel 620481136
CFR Cluj 611461264
28 September 2010 Group stage Roma 21 CFR Cluj Stadio Olimpico, Rome
20:45 Mexès  69'
Borriello  71'
Report Rada  78' Attendance: 30,252
Referee: Jonas Eriksson (Sweden)
19 October 2010 Group stage Bayern Munich 32 CFR Cluj Allianz Arena, Munich
20:45 Cadú  32' (o.g.)
Panin  37' (o.g.)
Gómez  77'
Report Cadú  28'
Culio  86'
Attendance: 64,000
Referee: Martin Atkinson (England)
3 November 2010 Group stage CFR Cluj 04 Bayern Munich Stadionul Dr. Constantin Rădulescu, Cluj-Napoca
20:45 Report Gómez  12', 24', 71'
Müller  90'
Attendance: 14,097
Referee: Serge Gumienny (Belgium)
23 November 2010 Group stage Basel 10 CFR Cluj St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:45 Almerares  15' Report Attendance: 34,239
Referee: Laurent Duhamel (France)

Unirea Urziceni

Runners up of previous season and champions of 2009, Unirea Urziceni, were defeated in the third qualifying round of the Champions League by Zenit St. Petersburg by 0–1 on aggregate. Moving into the play-off round of the Europa League, they were paired with Hajduk Split. They would get eliminated from Europe after a 5–2 defeat on aggregate. Their home games were played at the Steaua Stadium in Bucharest, because Unirea's stadium did not meet the UEFA criteria. Manager at Unirea in 2010 was Israeli Ronny Levy. The team relegated at the end of the season after their owner withdrew financial support and they had to sell most of their players to pay debts.

Vaslui

Third placed team Vaslui were drawn against Lille in the Europa League play-off round and they were eliminated after losing 0–2 in the away leg.

19 August 2010 Play-off round Vaslui 00 Lille Stadionul Municipal, Vaslui
19:00 Report Attendance: 3,821
Referee: Bülent Yıldırım (Turkey)
26 August 2010 Play-off round Lille 20 Vaslui Stadium Nord Lille Métropole, Villeneuve-d'Ascq
20:45 Cabaye  69' (pen.)
Chedjou  80'
Report Attendance: 16,876
Referee: Tom Harald Hagen (Norway)

Steaua Bucharest

Steaua Bucharest was the most successful Romanian team in the European competitions this season. They were drawn against Grasshopper in the Europa League play-off round and managed to qualify for the second time in the group stage, after passing the Swiss team on penalty shoot-out. There, they were drawn with Liverpool, Napoli and Utrecht. They managed to gain six points in the group, finishing third. Among the notable matches there was 3–1 home victory against Utrecht, a 1–1 draw at home against Liverpool, but also a slipped away victory after a 3–3 draw at home with Napoli, Cavani scoring the equaliser goal in the 98th minute, followed by a similar scenario in the away game, with Cavani scoring for 1–0 in 93rd minute.

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Liverpool 624083+510
Napoli 61418917
Steaua București 613291126
Utrecht 60515725
16 September 2010 Group stage Liverpool 41 Steaua București Anfield, Liverpool
21:05 Cole  1'
N'Gog  55' (pen.), 90+1'
Lucas  81'
Report Tănase  13' Attendance: 25,605
Referee: César Muñiz Fernández (Spain)
30 September 2010 Group stage Steaua București 33 Napoli Stadionul Steaua, Bucharest
19:00 Cribari  2' (o.g.)
Tănase  11'
Kapetanos  16'
Report Vitale  44'
Hamšík  73'
Cavani  90+8'
Attendance: 10,203
Referee: Marcin Borski (Poland)
21 October 2010 Group stage Utrecht 1–1 Steaua București Stadion Galgenwaard, Utrecht
19:00 Duplan  60' Report Schut  75' (o.g.) Attendance: 24,000
Referee: Said Ennjimi (France)
4 November 2010 Group stage Steaua București 31 Utrecht Stadionul Steaua, Bucharest
21:05 Gardoş  29'
Stancu  52', 53'
Report Mertens  33' Attendance: 16,210
Referee: Stanislav Sukhina (Russia)

Timișoara

Fifth placed team Timișoara were drawn in the third qualifying round of the Europa League against MyPa from Finland, which they surpassed 5–4 on aggregate, after a spectacular comeback from three goals down in the second leg. However, in the play-off round they were drawn against Manchester City and were defeated twice in a row, 0–1 and 0–2. At the end of the season, although finishing second, the team is relegated for unpaid debts, putting an end to their nine-year spell in the top division.

29 July 2010 Third qualifying round MYPA 12 Timișoara Saviniemi, Anjalankoski
18:00 Ricketts  50' Report Tameş  34'
Axente  74'
Referee: David Mckeon (Ireland)
5 August 2010 Third qualifying round Timișoara 33 MYPA Stadionul Dan Păltinişanu, Timișoara
19:30 Axente  53'
Zicu  80'
Čišovský  90+2'
Report Äijälä  18'
Ricketts  20', 25'
Attendance: 8,000
Referee: Artyom Kuchin (Kazakhstan)
19 August 2010 Play-off round Timișoara 01 Manchester City Stadionul Dan Păltinişanu, Timișoara
21:00 Report Balotelli  72' Attendance: 28,000
Referee: Florian Meyer (Germany)
26 August 2010 Play-off round Manchester City 20 Timișoara City of Manchester Stadium, Manchester
21:00 Wright-Phillips  43'
Boyata  59'
Report Attendance: 23,542
Referee: Manuel de Sousa (Portugal)

Dinamo Bucharest

Dinamo Bucharest benefited from the fact that 2010 Romanian Cup winners were placed first and third in the league, so that one more Europa League spot was awarded for the team on sixth place. They started in the second qualifying round with a tie against Moldovan side Olimpia Bălţi. After a 2–0 victory in the away game played in Chişinău, it followed a 5–1 win at home. Next team they were drawn against, in the third qualifying round, were the Croats from Hajduk Split. It was the tie prior to the encounter with Unirea Urziceni and Dinamo were eliminated by 3–4 on aggregate after they won 3–1 at home and lost 0–3 away.

5 August 2010 Third qualifying round Hajduk Split 30 Dinamo București Gradski Stadion, Split
20:30 Vukušić  12'
Brkljača  23'
Tomasov  38'
Report Attendance: 25,000
Referee: Carlos Xistra (Portugal)

Men's national team

On June 4, 2011, Răzvan Lucescu resigned from the helm of the national team, following a two-year term, to take charge at Rapid Bucharest.[3] Victor Piţurcă, the manager before Lucescu, was hired again as the head coach, with a contract valid until November 30, 2015. The aim will be qualification to Euro 2016.[4]

Friendly matches

11 August 2010 Turkey  20  Romania Istanbul, Turkey
21:15 UTC+3 Emre  82' (pen)
Turan  86'
Report Stadium: Şükrü Saracoğlu Stadium
Attendance: 15,000
Referee: Milorad Mazić (Serbia)
17 November 2010 Romania  11  Italy Klagenfurt, Austria
21:30 UTC+1 Marica  34' Report Marica  82' (o.g.) Stadium: Hypo-Arena
Attendance: 5,436
Referee: Thomas Einwaller (Austria)
8 February 2011 Ukraine  22  Romania Paralimni, Cyprus
20:30 UTC Rakitskiy  24'
Milevskyi  31'
Report Alexa  33'  44' Stadium: Paralimni Stadium
Attendance: 1,000
Referee: Stefan Johannesson (Sweden)
9 February 2011 Cyprus  11  Romania Paralimni, Cyprus
20:30 UTC Konstantinou  84' Report Torje  54' Stadium: Paralimni Stadium
Attendance: 2,500
Referee: Viktor Shvetov (Ukraine)
7 June 2011 Brazil  10  Romania São Paulo, Brazil
21:55 UTC-2 Fred  22' Report Stadium: Estádio do Pacaembu
Attendance: 30,050
Referee: Sergio Pezzotta (Argentina)
11 June 2011 Paraguay  20  Romania Asunción, Paraguay
18:00 UTC-4 Valdez  2'
Santa Cruz  28'
Report Stadium: Estadio Defensores del Chaco
Attendance: 10,000
Referee: Evandro Rogerio Román (Brazil)

  Win   Draw   Loss

Euro 2012 Qualifying

The Romania men's national team were drawn into UEFA Euro 2012 qualifying Group D. Group D fixtures were negotiated between the participants at a meeting in Luxembourg on 19 February 2010.[5]

3 September 2010 Romania  11  Albania Piatra Neamţ, Romania
21:00 UTC+3 Stancu  80' Report Muzaka  87' Stadium: Ceahlăul Stadium
Attendance: 13,000
Referee: Robert Schörgenhofer (Austria)
7 September 2010 Belarus  00  Romania Minsk, Belarus
20:30 UTC+3 Report Stadium: Dynama Stadium
Attendance: 20,000
Referee: Pavel Kralovec (Czech Republic)
9 October 2010 France  20  Romania Saint-Denis, France
21:00 UTC+2 Rémy  83'
Gourcuff  90+3'
Report Stadium: Stade de France
Attendance: 79,299
Referee: Pedro Proença (Portugal)
26 March 2011 Bosnia and Herzegovina  21  Romania Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina
19:15 UTC+1 Ibišević  63'
Džeko  83'
Report Marica  29' Attendance: 12,000
Referee: Fernando Teixeira Vitienes (Spain)
3 June 2011 Romania  30  Bosnia and Herzegovina Bucharest, Romania
21:00 UTC+3 Mutu  37'
Marica  41', 55'
Report Attendance: 8,000
Referee: Jonas Eriksson (Sweden)

The home teams are in the left column; the away teams are in the right column.   Win   Draw   Loss

References

  1. "Conclusion of the licensing process of the 10 Liga II clubs" (in Romanian). FRF. 2009-06-29. Archived from the original on 2011-06-25. Retrieved 2011-06-20.
  2. "Decisions of the Executive Committee" (in Romanian). FRF. 2011-06-02. Archived from the original on 25 June 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-20.
  3. "Răzvan Lucescu resigned from the national team" (in Romanian). Antena 3. 2011-06-04. Retrieved 2011-06-20.
  4. "Decisions of the Executive Committee of the Romanian Football Federation of June 20, 2011" (in Romanian). FRF. 20 June 2011. Archived from the original on 25 June 2011. Retrieved 20 June 2011.
  5. "Group D fixtures of the Euro 2012 qualifiers" (in Romanian). FRF. 2010-02-19. Archived from the original on 26 June 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-20.
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