Tag: Mirel

  • The Year 2021 in Football

    The Year 2021 in Football

    The Romanian football has been affected by a severe
    crisis for many years now. This situation, which has been dragging on for so long,
    has made many to believe that this is actual normality, that the low level of
    performances, the lowest in the past fifty years, is the normal one.


    Football fans in Romania in 2021 hoped for a comeback
    of the national selection and the qualification of at least one football club
    in top spring competitions. None of these happened though.




    Even with headcoach Mirel Radoi at the helm, the
    national eleven was unable to qualify for the world cup. Most of the time, our
    footballers managed only lackluster shows in the preliminaries and the results
    they obtained were the same. Part of Group
    J, Romania started off on the right foot in March with a 3-2 win against North
    Macedonia in Bucharest. It was followed by a predictable 1-0 home defeat
    against Germany but our footballers came a cropper against Armenia in Yerevan
    3-2 in spite of getting the upper hand 2-1.




    In late March at the European Under-21 Championship
    co-hosted by Hungary and Slovenia, our side was stopped in its tracks in the
    group’s stage. However, the shows put up by our young footballers coached by
    Adrian Mutu weren’t bad at all; one-all with the Netherlands, nil-all against
    Germany plus a 2-1 win against Hungary proves that Romanian football still has potential.




    The year 2021 has its importance for the Romanian
    footballers because of their presence in the Olympic Games after an absence of
    6 decades. This performance became possible thanks to our squad’s 2019
    qualification for the semifinals of the European Under-21 Championship
    co-hosted by Italy and San Marino. In July in Japan, our footballers secured a
    1-0 win against Honduras. They got trounced by South Korea 4-0 and made it nil-all
    against New Zealand. Romania thus ended up on the third position in its group
    and left the competition.




    Romania’s national football side resumed its
    qualifying matches for World Cup 2022 with a 2-0 away win against Iceland in
    September and the same score against Liechtenstein at home. Their away game
    against North Macedonia was a goaless draw. After Armenia versus Liechtenstein
    had ended in one-all, Romania became favourite for a second place in the group
    that would secure a place in the play-offs and hopefully their qualification
    for the competition in Qatar.






    In October our side lost 1-2 to Germany and got a
    one-nil home win against Armenia. Sadly, in November our footballers drew their
    home match against Iceland nil-all and their 2-0 win against Liechtenstein
    didn’t count any more. So Romania ended up on the third position in its group
    topped by Germany and North Macedonia went into the playoff.




    At the level of domestic club competitions, CFR Cluj
    secured their seventh champion title, which added to those it obtained in 2008,
    2010, 2012, 2018, 2019 and 2020. Romania’s Cup went to Universitatea Craiova
    which secured a 3-2 win against Astra Giurgiu in Ploiești.




    All the Romanian club sides were eliminated from
    Europe’s top football competitions apart from CFR Cluj, which made it to the
    groups of Conference League. However, the shows put up by our footballers in
    this competition were below expectations and they ended up at the bottom of
    group D.




    (bill)

  • Sport Club

    Sport Club

    Romania’s youth selection secured a 3-0 away win against Malta in group
    8 of the preliminaries of the European Under-21 Football Championship. Last
    Friday, Romania’s youth side clinched another away win in the same competition,
    results which represent a successful debut of the team’s new coach Adrian Mutu.






    Together with Hagi, the new headcoach holds a record for the highest
    number of goals scored for Romania’s national football side, 35. Adrian Mutu
    played for famous international football clubs such as Internazionale Milan,
    Chelsea London, Parma, Juventus Turin and Fiorentina.






    Selector Adrian Mutu believes the wins against Finland and Malta were
    99% possible because of the excellent footballers of the Romanian side.






    Adrian Mutu:
    It
    is a wonderful feeling, the boys are feeling good, they feel appreciated. They
    are good boys with character and all, extraordinary footballers, real professionals.
    Of course I would like them to be part of Romania’s main selection but on the
    other hand I would like to keep them here at the youth team, because they are
    good and I want to rely on good footballers. We hope to get qualified even if
    it takes sacrifice, perseverance and discipline. This is what we must do and if
    we are doing all that I believe that football will reward us in the end.






    The coach believes that Dennis Man, the
    footballer who opened the scoring against Malta and who is currently playing
    for FCSB in the domestic championship, can take over his job with the national
    youth side. ‘This is what he has to do, score goals and work for the team. I
    changed his position in the lineup and I see he performs even better. Hopefully
    he will be scoring many goals for the national side,’ coach Mutu went on to
    say.






    In the other matches in Romania’s group,
    Denmark secured a 1-0 away win against Northern Ireland, while Ukraine obtained
    a 2-0 win against Finland also away. Denmark ranks first in the group with 19
    points out of 7 games followed by Romania with 16, Finland and Ukraine each
    with 7, Northern Ireland with 6 and Malta with 1.






    On October 9th Northern Ireland
    will be playing Finland, Ukraine will be up against Romania and Malta takes on
    Denmark. The nine winners of the preliminary groups and best five teams coming
    second will qualify for the final tournament, which also includes the
    selections of the host countries, Hungary and Slovenia. The games of the four
    groups will be held between March 24th and 31st 2021. The
    first two sides in each group will be vying for the title over May 31st
    and June 6th next year.






    We recall that under the guidance of Mirel
    Radoi, Romania’s Under 21 side, last year made it to the semifinals of the
    European championship and qualified for the Tokyo Olympics after an absence of
    56 years as the prestigious competition had to be postponed due to the
    coronavirus pandemic.





    (tr. bill)