Club Atletic Oradea
Asociația Club Sportiv CAO 1910 Oradea, commonly known as Club Atletic Oradea (Romanian pronunciation: [ˌklub aˈtletik oˈrade̯a]), CA Oradea, or simply as CAO, is an amateur Romanian football club based in Oradea, Bihor County.
Full name | Asociația Club Sportiv CAO 1910 Oradea[1] | ||
---|---|---|---|
Nickname(s) |
| ||
Short name | CA Oradea, CAO | ||
Founded | 25 May 1910 as Nagyváradi Atletikai Club 17 March 2017 as CAO 1910 Oradea | ||
Ground | Iuliu Bodola | ||
Capacity | 18,000 (11,155 seated) | ||
Owners | Oradea Municipality APTOR Oradea Renaștem Împreună | ||
Chairman | Florin Mal | ||
Manager | Florin Farcaș | ||
League | Liga III | ||
2019–20 | Liga IV, Bihor County, 1st (promoted) | ||
Website | Club website | ||
| |||
Active departments of CSM Oradea | ||
---|---|---|
Football | Basketball (Men's) |
Basketball (Women's) |
Water Polo | Handball (Men's) |
Judo |
Fencing | Athletics | Tennis |
The team was founded as Nagyváradi Atletikai Club in 1910, when the city was part of Hungary. Over its history, CAO has won one Romanian national title, one Hungarian national title, and one Romanian national cup. It was dissolved in 1963, but was re-established in 2017 and commenced play in the fifth division.
The home ground of "the White and Greens" is the Stadionul Iuliu Bodola, which has a seating capacity of 11,155.
History
Early years (1910–1940)
The game of football had arrived to Nagyvárad (Oradea) in 1902 with inhabitants returning from study or work, abroad or in Budapest. The sport was gaining in popularity, but there was not yet an organized club to represent the town in matches against other towns.
Established in 1910, when the city was part of Hungary, Nagyváradi Atletikai Club – in Romanian: Club Atletic Oradea – will soon become the symbol of the football from Oradea. Its initials, NAC, then CAO, will require respect. The colors of the club were white and green. The constituent assembly was held on 25 May 1910, in the Emke Café, the board of directors being Dr. Emil Jonas, chairman, Béla Mikló, executive president, Andor Szabo, secretary, and Dr. Kálmán Kovács, cashier, and the affiliation to the Hungarian Football Federation was sought. On 31 July NAC played its first game, against KVSC, and in January 1912 a home ground was secured in Rhedey Park (where the zoo now stands). The next month, a touring team from England came to town: Bishop Auckland, the Northern League champions that season, beat NAC 8–0.
Before World War I, the club activated only on local and a regional level, they joined the eastern division of the Southern Hungarian League and in 1913 NAC won 25 of their 31 matches. In 1914, as champions of the division, NAC was entitled to participate in the national finals tournament in Budapest, but this competition never took place due to the outbreak of war in June.
After the war, by the Treaty of Trianon Nagyvárad became part of Romania and officially became Oradea. The club and the city were still dominated by Hungarians. One of the most talented local players unearthed during this period was Elemér Berkessy (future FC Barcelona midfielder and Grimsby Town manager – in 1954 he became the first foreign manager in the English league).
The team joined the Romanian national championship in 1921–22, but NAC – now also known as Clubul Atletic Oradea – was beaten in the "fight" for Town of Oradea champion title by Stăruința Oradea and then by Înțelegerea Oradea for the first few seasons, thus did not qualify for the national finals until 1923–24. They beat Universitatea Cluj and Jahn Cernăuți, before defeat in the final by Chinezul Timișoara – who would win the first six Romanian titles after the Great Union.
In 1932–33, after another spell confined to the regional tournament, CAO appeared in an expanded national competition, organized as two parallel leagues of seven teams; they finished second in their division, while local rivals Crișana Oradea came third in the other one. Two years later, with the national league reorganized into one division, CAO finished as runners-up, sandwiched between the two dominant clubs of the period, Ripensia Timișoara and Venus București. In 1938–39 the club was relegated to a restructured Divizia B, where they remained until the next war brought a strange upturn in fortunes.
In 1932, the management of the club decided that contact with football in other countries would help the development of the sport in Oradea. So they undertook a twelve-match tour in France and Switzerland, during which they beat Olympique Lillois, who would that season become inaugural French national champions, 5–2. The following year the tour was in France and its North African colonies, and Oradea was spreading its fame, and that of Romanian football, around the continent. During the interwar period CAO supplied eighteen Romanian internationals, however the majority were still ethnic Hungarians, Jews and Germans.
Players who starred in CAO's green and white stripes in this period included: Ferenc Rónay, the first ever goalscorer for the Romanian national football team (against Yugoslavia in 1922); Nicolae Kovács, a forward who was one of only five men to play at the first three World Cups; Iuliu Baratky, a Hungarian from Oradea who opted to stay in Romania throughout the World War II, becoming a legend at Rapid București and Iuliu Bodola, a prolific goalscorer throughout the 1930s and into the 1940s. Bodola was transferred to Venus București in the Romanian capital in 1937.
The Romanian-Hungarian champion (1940–1963)
The Second Vienna Award in August 1940 annexed northern Transylvania, including Oradea, to Hitler’s ally Hungary, while Romania was in the throes of its own right-wing military dictatorship. Many footballers of German or Hungarian origin who were at clubs in Bucharest, Timișoara, Arad or other parts of Romania, crossed the new border into this region and joined clubs in Oradea (Nagyvárad) or Cluj-Napoca (Kolozsvár); many of them signed for CAO – now, once again, known officially by its Hungarian name, NAC. After one season back in a Transylvanian league, NAC was promoted to the Hungarian top division. They finished second in 1942–43 and then in 1943–44 they became the first team from outside Budapest to win the Hungarian championship in its 43-year history, finishing a huge 13 points ahead of the second placed team Ferencváros.
The players who helped the club to this historic achievement included some major Hungarian and Romanian footballers of the age:
Gyula Lóránt was only 20 years old during NAC's title-winning season. He went on to play at Vasas, alongside László Kubala, who in 1949 fled the incoming Communist government and formed a team of Hungarian footballers who would play exhibition matches around Western Europe. Lóránt tried to escape and join Kubala, but was captured and interred, until the national team coach secured his release. Lóránt played for Hungary from 1949 until 1955, encompassing the greatest period of Hungarian success: he played in central defence for the Aranycsapat, the Mighty Magyars of the early 1950s. Besides winning the Romanian championship with UTA Arad and three more Hungarian titles with Honvéd, Lóránt went on to coach Bayern Munich in the late 1970s.
Iuliu Bodola or Gyula Bodola was an ethnic Hungarian born in what is now Brașov (then Brassó) in 1912. After a hugely successful seven-year spell as a prolific striker with CAO in the 1930s, and an equally fruitful three years at Venus București, he headed back to Oradea after the annexation of northern Transylvania by Hungary in 1940 and played for NAC for five years. After the war, he moved to Budapest and represented MTK Budapest. During his years in Romania he played 48 times for the Romanian national football team, while from 1940 to 1943 he was a regular for Hungarian national football team. Remarkably, he held the Romanian international goalscoring record for 66 years, from 1931 until 1997, when Gheorghe Hagi overtook his total of 30 goals. The municipal stadium in Oradea is now named after him.
József Pecsovszky known in Romania as Iosif Petschovschi or simply ‘Peci’, was another young member of the successful NAC team and was capped by Hungary at the age of 21. An attacking midfielder from Timișoara, of Hungarian extraction, Peci would later become a hero in Arad due to his starring role in UTA's three league titles in the 1940s, and then won two further championships with CCA București in the 1950s. His first game for Romania was against Hungary in Budapest in 1945, alongside Spielmann and Simatoc; he scored, but Hidegkuti and Puskás scored two each in a 7–2 win for the Magyars. Pecsovszky is one of the all-time greats of Romanian football.
Francisc Spielmann, known in Hungary as Ferenc Sárvári, top-scorer for NAC in their title-winning season, with 23 goals; he was also the Hungarian player of the year.
The coach of the side throughout NAC's Hungarian period was 1920s CAO hot-shot Ferenc Rónay.
Gusztáv Juhász, also spelled (in Romania) as Gustav Iuhași, had been a regular in midfield for the Romanian national football team since 1934, when he was also part of the CAO team that finished second in the Romanian championship. Together with Bodola and Rudolf Demetrovics, Juhász was part of the great Venus București team of the late 1930s.
Nicolae Simatoc, a reserve, was the only ethnic Romanian in the NAC squad; he was kept out of the starting line-up by the all-Timișorean midfield of Petschovschi, Demetrovits and Juhász. Simatoc eventually would go on to spend one season alongside Kubala at FC Barcelona, as well as two years at Inter Milan.
The 1944–45 Hungarian season was abandoned after four games due to the movement of the front, and NAC never played in the Hungarian league again: Northern Transylvania was occupied by Soviet and Romanian troops in 1944 and later reverted to Romania at the end of the war. NAC/CAO changed its name to Libertatea Oradea in 1948, and then to ICO Oradea the following year after the Soviet takeover of Romania. Petschovschi, Bodola and Ronnay left for Ferar Cluj – the third-placed team in Hungary in 1943–44 - while five of the championship-winning team would form the core of a new dominant power in Romania, ITA Arad.
By 1948–49, only three players remained from the great NAC team of 1943–44. And yet ICO Oradea became Romanian champions. Gheorghe Váczi, an ethnic Hungarian who was capped by Romania, contributed 21 goals in 26 matches. They also had names such as Vécsey, Spielmann, Vasile Ion, Bodo, Zilahi, Serfözö or Mircea David and the coach in that year was Nicolae Kovács, former CAO player and brother of the Ștefan Kovács who would coach Ajax to great success in the early 1970s.
As Progresul Oradea and a Divizia B team, it reached the 1955 Cupa României final which was lost with 6–3 în front of CCA București.[2][3] The following year as a Divizia A team, the club won the 1956 Cupa României final with 2–0 against Divizia B team Energia Câmpia Turzii.[4] After a brief period as CS Oradea, the name was changed to Crișana Oradea – extremely confusingly, because this had been the name of a completely different club in the town before the war. After yo-yoing between the top two divisions for a few years (Rónay returned as coach in 1962–63), in 1963 the club was dissolved. That same year another club from Oradea won promotion to the top division, Crișul Oradea, a club which was mostly known as FC Bihor Oradea. The city of Oradea blazed brightly in the region's football firmament, with some of Hungary and Romania's greatest players of the age – one cup, and a league title in two countries – but it is now very much in the shadows: FC Bihor was dissolved on 12 January 2016 after a stormy history and in the spring of 2017 this dissolution subsequently realizing a strange reversed situation of the early 1960s.[5][6][7]
Refounding (2017–present)
On 22 December 2016 CAO 1910 Association was founded, then on 17 March 2017 the association changed its status as a sports association named: Asociația Clubul Sportiv CAO 1910, thus marking the refoundation of the white and green team.[8]
The refounding of the club was followed by a marketing promotion period in which, among other things, the official website of the club and the Facebook official page were launched.[9][10]
Then on 28 July 2017 a partnership was signed between CAO and CSM Oradea, the team that took over the FC Bihor Oradea youth academy after its dissolution, but which didn't have a senior squad, so through this partnership CSM Oradea ensured a continuity for the youth players at senior level and CAO assured a youth academy. In the same period the team was enrolled in Liga V.[11][12]
At the end of the season CAO had an impressive ranking line, 24 wins, one draw and only one defeat, 146 goals scored and 21 conceded, 73 points, with 15 more than their main promotion rival, Dinamo Oradea.[13] After the promotion, "the white and greens" continued their strategy to promote young players, being ranked 2nd in the Liga IV, Bihor series, at the end of the 2018–19 season, 13 points away from the champions, CSC Sânmartin, a team with many players of certain quality and experience, as Salif Nogo, Alexandru Sorian or Florin Pop, among others.
Crest and colours
Crest
Club Atletic Oradea's first emblem, used between 1910 and 1919, was an almost replica of River Plate crest, the differences consist of a green sash instead of a red one, and also the initials NAC (Nagyváradi Atletikai Club) wrote on diagonal, in opposition with the sash.[14] For the next 20 years (1920–1940), the club used the first logo that introduced the green stripes, positioned on a white background, inside of a brown circle. On the logo were the two initials, CAO (Club Atletic Oradea) and NAC, as a symbol of the Romanian-Hungarian culture and friendship that existed around the club.[14]
In 1930, at the 20th anniversary of the club, the administrative staff decided to make a special logo. They modified the current logo, changing the places between the white background and green lines. At the time, the club was in the Hungarian championship, so on the top of the crest appeared only NAC, as an abbreviation, wrote with gold colour. On the sides appeared the laurels and on the bottom of the logo, on two different ribbons were marked the year of foundation (1910) and the current year (1930).[14]
The last form of the logo with Hungarian influences was during the 1940s, with the same white and green stripes, now having some gold lines between them. On the top of the logo was written Nagyváradi AC, on the bottom, the year of foundation 1910 and in the middle was placed a local coat of arms.[14]
After 1945, the club was moved back in Romania, but this time under the communist regime installed by the Soviets, fact that led to the removal of any Hungarian names. The club's name, as well as the crest, were frequently changed, not less than five times in the next 20 years. Some of them were lost in time, but for example, between 1951 and 1958, when the club was known under the name of Progresul Oradea used a triangular logo, with a bleu, blue and white water tower in the middle. On the top of the crest appeared the name of the club, in red colour.[14]
In 2017, after the refoundation, the club moved back to the name of Club Atletic Oradea and the original white and green colours. The new logo uses a rounded shape, with a green background and a gold outline. Above the logo are two golden stars representing the two national titles won by the club in Hungary (1944) and Romania (1949), inside the shape appears with white letters the name of the club and the year of foundation, as well as a stylized golden shape of the Oradea's Fortress.[8]
Colours and Kits
The original colours of the club are white and green, this combination was used almost regularly with the exception of some periods, in which colours such as bleu, blue or white were printed on the kits.
The classic home kit of Club Atletic Oradea consists of a white body with green stripes, white shorts and green or white socks. After the refoundation, the club used in the first season a printed form of the original kits used by the club, as a symbolic connecting bridge of the current side with the glorious history of the squad from the banks of the Crișul Repede river. Starting with the 2019–20 season, CAO also adopted a red and blue kit, current colors of Oradea and Bihor County, city and region which it represents.
Selection of CAO kits through history | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Grounds
Club Atletic Oradea plays its home matches on Iuliu Bodola Stadium in Oradea, with a capacity of 11,155 seats, the biggest from Bihor County and named after Iuliu Bodola, CAO's great player of the 1930s and 1940s. The stadium was opened officially in 1924 and was renovated several times, in 2007 the benches were replaced by plastic seats, reducing the capacity from 18,000 to 11,155. The original capacity had already been reduced in 2003, when after a match between FC Bihor Oradea and Oțelul Galați, the resistance structure of the second grandstand was affected, due to the too numerous public, the respective grandstand being closed. In 2004, 2007 and 2015 the stadium was renovated. The club also uses Motorul Stadium for some of the friendly or youth teams matches.
In the first 14 years of their existence (1910–1924), "the white and greens" used to play the home matches on the historical stadium of the city, Tineretului Stadium, known at that time as Rhédey Garden, with a capacity of 5,000 people. The stadium was replaced as the first ground with the opening of the new stadium in 1924.
On 1 September 2020, the city of Oradea announced plans for a new stadium.[15]
Support
Rivalries
CAO's bitter rivals are Ripensia Timișoara, but also has rivalries with teams such as: UTA Arad or Politehnica Timișoara. In the past, CAO also had important rivals at the local level, matches against teams such as Stăruința Oradea or Crișana Oradea being recognized for their intensity.[16]
Youth program
CAO has formed its academy following the partnership signed with CSM Oradea, the club which took over the youth academy of Bihor Oradea after its dissolution in 2016.[17] Since July 2020, CAO–CSM Academy is coordinated by Stelian Farcău and Florin Farcaș (also the manager of CA Oradea's senior squad).[18] The coaches of the Academy are: Claudiu Mutu, Sorin Todea, Horea Rădulescu, Sorin Pop and Lucian Ciocan.
Honours
RomaniaLeagues
Cups
|
HungaryLeagues
|
Players
First team squad
- As of 1 November 2020[19]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
|
Out on loan
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
|
Second team squad (CAO Primavera)
- As of 6 October 2020[20]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
|
Club officials
Board of directors
|
Current technical staff
|
Shirt sponsors and manufacturers
Period | Kit manufacturer | Period | Shirt partner |
---|---|---|---|
1910–1963 | Unknown | 1910–1963 | None |
2017– | Westiment | 2017–2018 | None |
2018– | Herald, Irnord, MarClean |
Chronology of names
Name | Period |
---|---|
Nagyváradi Atletikai Club (NAC) | 1910–1918 |
Club Atletic Oradea (CAO) | 1918–1940 |
Nagyváradi Atletikai Club (NAC) | 1940–1945 |
Libertatea Oradea | 1945–1948 |
Întreprinderea Comunală Oradea (ICO) | 1948–1951 |
Progresul Oradea | 1951–1958 |
CS Oradea | 1958–1961 |
Crișana Oradea | 1961–1963 |
Club Atletic Oradea (CAO) | 2017–present |
League history
|
|
|
|
Notable former players
The footballers enlisted below have had international cap(s) for their respective countries at junior and/or senior level.
|
|
|
Notable former managers
|
|
Management
|
|
|
References
- "Profil FRF-AJF" [FRF-AJF Profile] (in Romanian). Asociația Județeană de Fotbal Bihor. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
- "Performanţă istorică! Hermannstadt e prima echipă din Liga 2 calificată în finala Cupei României, după 36 de ani" [Historical performance! Hermannstadt is the first team in Liga 2 to qualify for the Romanian Cup final, after 36 years] (in Romanian). Digisport.ro. 10 May 2018. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- "80 de ani de suprize. O istorie a echipelor din ligile inferioare care au jucat finala Cupei României" [80 years of surprises. A history of the teams from the lower leagues that played the Romanian Cup final] (in Romanian). Theplaymaker.ro. 13 May 2018. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- "Romanian Cup - Season 1956". RomanianSoccer. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- "Istoria clubului" [Club history] (in Romanian). caoradea.ro. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- "CA Oradea" [CA Oradea] (in Romanian). romaniaballs.wordpress.com. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- "Povestea singurei echipe care a câștigat titlul în Ungaria și România și a unei prietenii româno-maghiare vechi de șase decenii" [The story of the only team that won the title in Hungary and Romania and a six decades old Romanian-Hungarian friendship] (in Romanian). prosport.ro. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- "Statutul clubului" [Club status] (in Romanian). caoradea.ro. Archived from the original on 8 September 2017. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- "S-a reînființat singura echipă care a câștigat titlul atât în Ungaria, cât și în România! Ce planuri are, cine o conduce + Sponsor inedit" [The only team that has won the title in Hungary and Romania has been re-established! What plans does it have, who leads it + Unusual sponsor] (in Romanian). gsp.ro. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- "Se refunda en Rumanía un club histórico que ganó las ligas húngara y rumana" [A historical club that won the Hungarian and Romanian leagues is refounded in Romania] (in Spanish). marca.com. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- "Oradea are echipă de fotbal! CSM și CAO 1910 și-au făcut formație de seniori și au înscris-o în Liga a V-a" [Oradea has a football team! CSM and the CAO 1910 formed a senior squad and entered it in the League 5] (in Romanian). ebihoreanul.ro. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- "Pentru că brandul FC Bihor e prea scump, primăria Oradea reînvie legendara CAO, singura echipă care a câștigat titlul în Ungaria și România. Primul obiectiv: promovarea" [Because FC Bihor brand is too expensive, Oradea Municipality revives the legendary CAO, the only team that won the title in Hungary and Romania. First objective: promotion] (in Romanian). liga2.prosport.ro. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- "Liga 5. Etapa 13 (ultima a turului): Progresul Sâniob acumulează primul punct! CAO: 13 din 13" [Liga 5. Stage 13 (last round): Progresul Sâniob accumulates its first point! CAO: 13 out of 13] (in Romanian). bihorpenet.ro. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- "Nagyvárad, Nagyváradi AC" [Oradea, CA Oradea] (in Hungarian). magyarfutball.hu. Retrieved 5 August 2019.
- Stadion cu peste 16.000 de locuri în Oradea
- "Echipe din România interbelică – CAO. Oradea, campioana româno-maghiară" [Teams in interwar Romania – CAO Oradea, the Romanian-Hungarian champion] (in Romanian). ripensia-sport-magazin.ro. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- "CSM Oradea a preluat grupele de copii ale FC Bihor și vrea să cumpere brandul clubului" [CSM Oradea took over FC Bihor's youth academy and wants to buy the club's brand] (in Romanian). ebihoreanul.ro. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- "Stelian Farcău, la Academia CSM Oradea" [Stelian Farcău, at the CSM Oradea Academy] (in Romanian). bihon.ro. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
- "Prima echipă" [First squad] (in Romanian). caoradea.ro. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
- "Echipa secundă" [Second squad] (in Romanian). caoradea.ro. Retrieved 17 October 2019.