Tag: OLympics

  • Athlete of the Week

    Athlete of the Week

    According to Agerpres News Agency, at the European Race
    Walking championships hosted by Podebrady in the Czech Republic, Romanian
    athlete Marius Iulian Cocioran managed a 12th position in the 50 km race
    and has thus booked plane tickets to Tokyo Olympics. The Romanian set a new
    national record of 3 hours 55 minutes and 29 seconds. For his performance in
    Podebrady, Radio Romania International has designated Cocioran Athlete of the
    week




    Pavel Remus Radoi was
    the second best Romanian athlete to attend the aforementioned race where he
    came in 27th in 4 hours, 13 minutes and 35 seconds setting a
    personal record. Ionut Vasilica Plesu has also registered a personal record in
    Podebrady after coming 30th in four hours, 26 minutes and 58
    seconds. Another Romanian representative, Narcis Mihaila didn’t manage to end
    the race.




    Romania came in 6th in the teams’ contest. In the
    women’s contest, Ana Veronica Rodean came in 13th setting a national
    record of 2 hours, 59 minutes and 27 seconds. In the 20 kilometer race walking
    Mihaela Acatrinei came in 39th while Maria Diana Lataretu abandoned
    the 10 kilometer race.




    Marius Cocioran was born in Reşiţa, central Romania on 10th
    July 1983. He has already participated in two editions of the Olympic Games. He
    came 36th in the 50 kilometer race walking in London in 2012 and
    abandoned the race four years later in Rio. He is the sixth Romanian athlete to
    have qualified for Tokyo after long jumpers Florentina Iuşco and Alina Rotaru, Claudia
    Bobocea in the 1.500-meter dash, Daniela Stanciu, in the high jump event and
    discus thrower Alin Firfirică. Romania now boasts 85 athletes qualified for the
    Olympic Games this year.


    (bill)

  • Sports roundup

    Sports roundup

    The delegation to represent Romania at the Olympic Games in
    Tokyo grew up to 84 athletes on Sunday. 18 athletes making up the Romanian
    men’s and women’s eights have secured their qualification during the
    pre-Olympic regatta in Lucerne, Switzerland.




    The two boats have come second in the races, getting the
    plane tickets for Tokyo. In the women’s competition Romania’s boat came second
    to China and before Germany while our male rowers came after New Zealand with
    Italy in the third position.


    In the single scull, Mihai Chiruţă has failed to qualify for
    Tokyo and so has the Romanian four. So, Romania will send to Tokyo 36 athletes
    and nine teams who will be competing in the men’s and women’s four oar races,
    women’s pair oar and double sculls, the men’s pair and the men’s and women’s
    eight races.




    Last weekend saw the matches of the eighth leg of the
    Romania’s first football league. On Friday in Clinceni, southern Romania, local
    side Academica secured a 4-3 win against FC Botosani. On Saturday, CFR Cluj
    clinched a 3-1 away win against Universitatea Craiova whereas the game pitching
    Sepsi against FCSB ended in a 2-all draw.




    Viitorul Constanta outperformed Chindia Targoviste 2-0 on
    Friday while Hermannstadt obtained 1-0 win against Poli Iasi. FC Voluntari
    defeated Astra Giurgiu 3-0 while UTA Arad secured a 1-0 win against Gaz Metan
    Medias. Dinamo Bucharest outperformed FC Arges 2-1 in Pitesti, southern
    Romania. Poli Iasi and Hermannstadt are on the last two places in the ranking
    and will demote to the second football league. Astra Giurgiu and FC Voluntari are to play tie
    matches to keep their position in the first league.


    (bill)

  • Sports roundup

    Sports roundup

    The delegation to represent Romania at the Olympic Games in
    Tokyo grew up to 84 athletes on Sunday. 18 athletes making up the Romanian
    men’s and women’s eights have secured their qualification during the
    pre-Olympic regatta in Lucerne, Switzerland.




    The two boats have come second in the races, getting the
    plane tickets for Tokyo. In the women’s competition Romania’s boat came second
    to China and before Germany while our male rowers came after New Zealand with
    Italy in the third position.


    In the single scull, Mihai Chiruţă has failed to qualify for
    Tokyo and so has the Romanian four. So, Romania will send to Tokyo 36 athletes
    and nine teams who will be competing in the men’s and women’s four oar races,
    women’s pair oar and double sculls, the men’s pair and the men’s and women’s
    eight races.




    Last weekend saw the matches of the eighth leg of the
    Romania’s first football league. On Friday in Clinceni, southern Romania, local
    side Academica secured a 4-3 win against FC Botosani. On Saturday, CFR Cluj
    clinched a 3-1 away win against Universitatea Craiova whereas the game pitching
    Sepsi against FCSB ended in a 2-all draw.




    Viitorul Constanta outperformed Chindia Targoviste 2-0 on
    Friday while Hermannstadt obtained 1-0 win against Poli Iasi. FC Voluntari
    defeated Astra Giurgiu 3-0 while UTA Arad secured a 1-0 win against Gaz Metan
    Medias. Dinamo Bucharest outperformed FC Arges 2-1 in Pitesti, southern
    Romania. Poli Iasi and Hermannstadt are on the last two places in the ranking
    and will demote to the second football league. Astra Giurgiu and FC Voluntari are to play tie
    matches to keep their position in the first league.


    (bill)

  • April 21, 2021 UPDATE

    April 21, 2021 UPDATE

    VACCINE Romania is very close to
    reaching the targeted capacity of 100 thousand people vaccinated daily,
    Romanian president Klaus Iohannis said on Wednesday at the inauguration of a
    mobile vaccination centre near Bucharest. President Klaus Iohannis also said that
    he was quite satisfied with the COVID-19 vaccine rollout in Romania. Mobile
    vaccination centres are operational in Romania as of Wednesday. So far the
    vaccination capacity is over 80,000 doses per day, and a total of over 2.7
    million people have received at least one dose. In this context, the head of
    the SARS-CoV-2 vaccination
    Coordination Committee, Valeriu Gheorghiţă, announced that authorities are
    considering the option of giving vaccines in non-COVID hospitals for patients
    with chronic diseases. Meanwhile, on
    Wednesday, 3,006 new COVID-19 infections were reported, and the total number of cases since the
    start of the pandemic is now over 1 million. More than 26,600
    COVID-related deaths have also been reported so far, 175 of them in the last 24
    hours, and 1,436 patients are in intensive care.








    MINISTER Romania’s new Health Minister,
    Ioana Mihaila, was sworn in at the Cotroceni Palace on Wednesday. Attending the
    ceremony, Romanian president Klaus Iohannis said that Mihaila is taking over a
    very complicated ministry at a difficult time, during the ongoing pandemic and
    called on the government to provide support to the new minister. Ioana Mihaila
    has been designated by the USR-PLUS Alliance after the sacking of Vlad
    Voiculescu. Mihaila, an endocrinologist who has served as a state secretary
    with the Health Ministry since January, earlier said that she wanted to solve
    the medical crisis through concrete measures aimed at supporting hospitals and
    depoliticize the country’s healthcare system. The centre-to-right ruling coalition
    in Bucharest on Tuesday night reached an agreement which puts an end to the
    deadlock caused by the unexpected sacking of Minister Voiculescu. They amended
    the ruling protocol, so that the Constitutional prerogative of the Prime
    Minister to sack a minister can be exercised only after the preliminary
    notification of the political group that nominated the outgoing minister. The
    anti-Covid vaccination remains a key priority of the government and the
    coalition, the signatories of the aforementioned amendment have said.






    HANDBALL The national women’s handball side of Romania on Wednesday qualified
    for this year’s edition of the World Championship after a 35-20 win against
    North Macedonia in Skopje. On Saturday, the Romanians won the first match
    33-22. This year’s edition of the World Women’s Handball Championship is due
    over December 1st and 19th. Romania is the only side in the world to have participated
    in all the 24 editions of the aforementioned competition where our handballers
    obtained four medals: gold in 1962, silver in 1973 and 2005 and bronze in 2015.
    Romania ended the previous edition of the Championship on the 12th position.






    FOOTBALL Romania’s football team will
    play in Group B of the Tokyo Olympics, alongside New Zealand, South Korea, and
    Honduras, according to the draw that took place in Zurich on Wednesday. The
    group matches are scheduled between July 22 and 28. The Olympics football
    tournament in Tokyo ends on August 7.






    CORRUPTION The Senate of Romania Wednesday greenlighted criminal proceedings
    against the former health minister Florian Bodog, at the request of the
    National Anti-Corruption Directorate. Anti-corruption prosecutors claim that
    while a minister, the Social Democratic Florian Bodog took steps to ensure that
    one of his personal advisers was paid for one year without showing up for work
    or actually fulfilling his obligations as an employee. Meanwhile the Liberal PM
    Florin Cîţu approved the resignation of Gelu Puiu (PNL) as a state secretary
    with the Environment Ministry, after an independent publication, ʹRecorderʹ,
    made public recordings pointing to a blackmailing campaign coordinated by Puiu
    and aimed at replacing county forestry managers with members of the Liberal Party
    that had no qualifications for the job.




    (bill)



  • April 21, 2021

    April 21, 2021

    COALITION Ioana Mihăilă, state secretary with the Health Ministry, has been nominated by USR-PLUS to be the new health minister, after the Liberal PM Florin Cîțu dismissed Vlad Voiculescu last week. Previously, the leaders of the right-of-centre ruling coalition in Romania had reached an agreement ending the tensions that followed the unexpected dismissal of Vlad Voiculescu. They signed an addendum to the governing protocol, stipulating among other things that the prime minister is to inform the relevant political party of his intention to exercise his constitutional power to dismiss a cabinet member. The COVID-19 vaccine rollout remains a priority for the government and the coalition, reads the document signed on Tuesday night.




    VACCINE President Klaus Iohannis said on Wednesday that he was quite satisfied with the COVID-19 vaccine rollout in Romania. ‘We are very close to our targeted capacity of 100,000 people vaccinated per day. I am very happy with how the campaign has unfolded so far, and the preparations for this stage have been completed in record time,’ the president said. Mobile vaccination centres are operational in Romania as of Wednesday. So far the vaccination capacity is over 80,000 doses per day, and a total of over 2.7 million people have received at least one dose. In this context, the head of the SARS-CoV-2 vaccination Coordination Committee, Valeriu Gheorghiţă, announced that authorities are considering the option of giving vaccines in non-COVID hospitals for patients with chronic diseases. Meanwhile, on Wednesday, 3,006 new COVID-19 infections were reported, and the total number of cases since the start of the pandemic is now over 1 million. More than 26,600 COVID-related deaths have also been reported so far, 175 of them in the last 24 hours, and 1,436 patients are in intensive care.




    CORRUPTION The Senate of Romania Wednesday greenlighted criminal proceedings against the former health minister Florian Bodog, at the request of the National Anti-Corruption Directorate. Anti-corruption prosecutors claim that while a minister, the Social Democratic Florian Bodog took steps to ensure that one of his personal advisers was paid for one year without showing up for work or actually fulfilling his obligations as an employee. Meanwhile the Liberal PM Florin Cîţu approved the resignation of Gelu Puiu (PNL) as a state secretary with the Environment Ministry, after an independent publication, ʹRecorderʹ, made public recordings pointing to a blackmailing campaign coordinated by Puiu and aimed at replacing county forestry managers with members of the Liberal Party that had no qualifications for the job.




    TRIAL Former Minneapolis police Derek Chauvin was found guilty on Tuesday on all 3 charges brought against him after African-American George Floyd was killed last year. According to AFP, the sentence may be out in 8 weeks. The defendant may be sentenced to 12.5 years behind bars, although the judge may decide to increase it if there is evidence of aggravating circumstances. Tuesdays ruling is seen as a landmark in the US racial history and as a criticism of the treatment given by the police to African Americans, the international media note. According to Radio Românias correspondent in Washington, after the ruling the US president Joe Biden addressed the nation, describing systemic racism as “a stain on the nation’s soul and mentioning that the killing of George Floyd entailed protests unseen in the country since the 1960s. Derek Chauvin, 45, was filmed kneeling on Floyd, 46, for over nine minutes during his arrest last May.




    HANDBALL Romanias womens handball team plays tonight away from home, in Skopje, the return leg against North Macedonia in the playoffs for the 2021 World Championship. On Saturday in the first leg the Romanians beat their opponents 33-22. Romania has taken part in all the 24 editions of the womens World Championship so far, and has won 4 medals (gold in 1962, silver in 1973 and 2005, and bronze in 2015). In the latest season of the World Championship in 2019, in Japan, Romania came out 12th.




    FOOTBALL Romanias football team will play in Group B of the Tokyo Olympics, alongside New Zealand, South Korea, and Honduras, according to the draw that took place in Zurich on Wednesday. The group matches are scheduled between July 22 and 28. The Olympics football tournament in Tokyo ends on August 7. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Olympic Prospects 2020

    Olympic Prospects 2020

    Judo competitions became part of the Olympic programme at the Olympics in Tokyo in 1964. They were left outside at the following edition four years later in Mexico but were reintroduced in Munich in 1972. Romania has been represented in Olympic judo competitions since the Moscow edition in 1980 but had no representative in the 1988 edition hosted by South Korean capital Seoul.



    Athletes from Romania started to obtain medals at the Olympics in Los Angeles in 1984, when Mircea Fratica walked away with bronze from the 78-kilogram category and Mihai Cioc did the same in the open event.


    The best Olympic performances were clinched by Alina Dumitru, gold medalist in the 48-kilogram category in Beijing in 2008 and silver medalist in London 2012.



    For the upcoming edition in Tokyo, the Romanians have pinned their hopes on the double European champion Andreea Chitu, competing in the 52-kilogram category.


    Chitu was born on May 7th 1988 near Bucharest and signed up with the Romanian Army sports club Steaua Bucharest. She reaped silver medals in two world championships, in 2014 in Chelyabinsk, Russia and a year later in Astana, Kazakhstan. She stepped onto the podiums third step in Paris in 2011.



    She added five more medals, which she won in European championships: gold in Chelyabinsk in 2012 and in Baku, Azerbaijan, in 2014, and silver in Budapest, Hungary in 2013. She also walked away with bronze from Montpellier, France in 2014 and from Kazan, Russia, in 2016. Andreea Chitu qualified for the Olympic Games twice, in London in 2012 and in Rio in 2016 when she ranked 7th.


    (translated by bill)

  • Olympic Prospects 2020

    Olympic Prospects 2020

    One of the youngest members of Romanias Olympic team is cyclist Vlad Dascălu. He qualified for the Tokyo Olympics in 2019, when he won the World Championship, the World Cup and the European Championship in U23 cross-country mountain bike.



    Vlad Dascălu was born in the village of Buda, near Fălticeni, in Suceava County, in the north, on December 7, 1997. At the age of 9, he moved with his parents to Spain. It was there that he got his first bike, at 10 years of age. According to the home page of the Romanian Olympic and Sports Committee, Vlad was first introduced to a cycling circuit at the age of 14. At 16 he took part in his first cross-country race and he came out second, which is the moment that actually shaped his future sports career. Only a year later, at the European championship for juniors, he finished the 6th.



    When he was 18, he came to Romania and won the national mountain bike championship, the Cross-Country Olympic event, although he was only taking part as an amateur, without being a member of any team. He was immediately recruited by Dinamo BikeXpert Superbet, and a string of major performances followed. He travelled regularly from Spain to Romania to train with his team, he won World Cup points and started being noticed by top-class teams.



    In 2018 he signed a contract with Brujula Bike Racing Team in Spain, with which in July 2019, in Brno, the Czech Republic, he won the European Youth Championship in the U23 category. A month later, in Mont Sainte-Anne, Canada, he won the world title in the same category. He also had an excellent run at the World Cup, where he won 4 out of the 7 stages of the competition.



    These performances made him the cyclist of the year 2019 in Romania.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • Olympic Prospects 2020

    Olympic Prospects 2020

    One of the youngest members of Romanias Olympic team is cyclist Vlad Dascălu. He qualified for the Tokyo Olympics in 2019, when he won the World Championship, the World Cup and the European Championship in U23 cross-country mountain bike.



    Vlad Dascălu was born in the village of Buda, near Fălticeni, in Suceava County, in the north, on December 7, 1997. At the age of 9, he moved with his parents to Spain. It was there that he got his first bike, at 10 years of age. According to the home page of the Romanian Olympic and Sports Committee, Vlad was first introduced to a cycling circuit at the age of 14. At 16 he took part in his first cross-country race and he came out second, which is the moment that actually shaped his future sports career. Only a year later, at the European championship for juniors, he finished the 6th.



    When he was 18, he came to Romania and won the national mountain bike championship, the Cross-Country Olympic event, although he was only taking part as an amateur, without being a member of any team. He was immediately recruited by Dinamo BikeXpert Superbet, and a string of major performances followed. He travelled regularly from Spain to Romania to train with his team, he won World Cup points and started being noticed by top-class teams.



    In 2018 he signed a contract with Brujula Bike Racing Team in Spain, with which in July 2019, in Brno, the Czech Republic, he won the European Youth Championship in the U23 category. A month later, in Mont Sainte-Anne, Canada, he won the world title in the same category. He also had an excellent run at the World Cup, where he won 4 out of the 7 stages of the competition.



    These performances made him the cyclist of the year 2019 in Romania.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • Sports roundup

    Sports roundup

    The
    International Olympic Committee last week approved a new series of qualifying
    systems for all sports disciplines ahead of the Tokyo Olympics, delayed until 2021. According to the Spanish EFE news agency, important adjustments are stipulated for athletics, cycling,
    weightlifting, basketball and judo. The Olympic football tournament will enable
    footballers under 24 to take part in the Olympics, We recall the previous age
    limit for participants was 23. Qualifiers for the Tokyo Olympics will be
    completed by June 29, 2021, while July the 5th is the athletes’
    registration deadline. Olympic competitions will kick-start on July 23rd.
    The Romanian Youth and Sports Ministers Ionut Stroe this past Saturday posted,
    on a social network, a message stating that in Romania, stadiums remained closed
    to the public. Stroe went on to say he was adamant about advocating his stance
    because of the growing number of COVID-19 cases. Sport does need its
    spectators, but stadiums will remain closed to the public as long as the virus still
    poses a major threat to the people’s safety. We cannot possibly go easy on
    public healthcare, the message also reads, posted by minister Stroe on his
    personal Facebook account.

    This
    past weekend saw matched being played, counting towards the domestic football
    championship. 8th round matches were played as part of Group 1. On Friday,
    Astra Giurgiu trounced Gaz Metan Medias 4-nil, away from home. This past
    Saturday’s scheduled fixture, pitting FCSB against CFR Cluj, was postponed
    since the latter team’s 25-year old midfielder Alexandru Paun tested positive
    for coronavirus. On Sunday, Universitatea Craiova grabbed a 2-1 win against FC
    Botosani, 2-1. Craiova are at the top of the table, being four points clear
    from CFR Cluj.


    In
    Group 2, matches were played, counting towards the championship’s 10th
    round. On Friday, in Clinceni, the local
    side Academica defeated FC Voluntari, 2-1. On Sunday, FC Hermannstadt from
    Sibiu held Sepsi Sfantu Gheorghe to a blank draw. This past Sunday’s game
    pitting Chindia Targoviste against Dinamo Bucharest, both bottom-of-the-table
    squads, was postponed since several footballers tested positive for COVID-19.

    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)

  • Sports roundup

    Sports roundup

    The
    International Olympic Committee last week approved a new series of qualifying
    systems for all sports disciplines ahead of the Tokyo Olympics, delayed until 2021. According to the Spanish EFE news agency, important adjustments are stipulated for athletics, cycling,
    weightlifting, basketball and judo. The Olympic football tournament will enable
    footballers under 24 to take part in the Olympics, We recall the previous age
    limit for participants was 23. Qualifiers for the Tokyo Olympics will be
    completed by June 29, 2021, while July the 5th is the athletes’
    registration deadline. Olympic competitions will kick-start on July 23rd.
    The Romanian Youth and Sports Ministers Ionut Stroe this past Saturday posted,
    on a social network, a message stating that in Romania, stadiums remained closed
    to the public. Stroe went on to say he was adamant about advocating his stance
    because of the growing number of COVID-19 cases. Sport does need its
    spectators, but stadiums will remain closed to the public as long as the virus still
    poses a major threat to the people’s safety. We cannot possibly go easy on
    public healthcare, the message also reads, posted by minister Stroe on his
    personal Facebook account.

    This
    past weekend saw matched being played, counting towards the domestic football
    championship. 8th round matches were played as part of Group 1. On Friday,
    Astra Giurgiu trounced Gaz Metan Medias 4-nil, away from home. This past
    Saturday’s scheduled fixture, pitting FCSB against CFR Cluj, was postponed
    since the latter team’s 25-year old midfielder Alexandru Paun tested positive
    for coronavirus. On Sunday, Universitatea Craiova grabbed a 2-1 win against FC
    Botosani, 2-1. Craiova are at the top of the table, being four points clear
    from CFR Cluj.


    In
    Group 2, matches were played, counting towards the championship’s 10th
    round. On Friday, in Clinceni, the local
    side Academica defeated FC Voluntari, 2-1. On Sunday, FC Hermannstadt from
    Sibiu held Sepsi Sfantu Gheorghe to a blank draw. This past Sunday’s game
    pitting Chindia Targoviste against Dinamo Bucharest, both bottom-of-the-table
    squads, was postponed since several footballers tested positive for COVID-19.

    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)

  • Road to the Olympics

    Road to the Olympics

    Romania has a successful history in table tennis, especially in the women’s
    competitions. Angelica Rozeanu, for example, dominated world competitions in
    the 1950s. In the 1960s and 70s, Maria Alexandru won several gold medals at
    world and European championships. Table tennis became an Olympic sport in 1988
    in Seul. Romania began to participate in the Olympic Games in 1992, in
    Barcelona. The best Olympic Games result came from Adrian Crişan, who reached
    the quarterfinals at the London Olympics in 2012.




    Cristinel Romanescu, the president of the Romanian Table Tennis
    Federation, tells us who has qualified so far for the upcoming Tokyo Olympics:




    Romania’s women’s team secured qualification in January, in Portugal. This
    means two players are also qualified for the singles competition, namely Elizabeta Samara and Bernadette Szőcs. Romania’s mixed doubles pair Ovidiu
    Ionescu and Bernadette Szőcs have
    also boked their ticket. The men’s team qualification is still undecided. All
    qualifying events have been postponed, most likely for next year, but we don’t
    yet have a clear date from the International Federation.




    At the moment, the latest classification published
    by the International Table Tennis Federation places Bernadette Szőcs in the 24th
    position and Elizabeta Samara in the 31st position, while in the men’s
    ranking, Ovidiu Ionescu is in 59th place.

  • RRI Sports Club

    RRI Sports Club


    Romanian athletes preparing for the
    Olympic Games have resumed centralised training, which takes place in special
    conditions and in compliance with the measures imposed by the authorities to prevent
    infection with the novel coronavirus. After being tested, the athletes were
    placed in training facilities with very strict rules. Most of them are at a sports
    facility in Izvorani, 40 km away from Bucharest. Gymnast Marian Drăgulescu,
    many-time European and world champion, who is also training here, shared his
    experience of training in isolation in an interview to Radio Romania:






    I’ve been missing gymnastics, the training
    hall and all the equipment. It’s very difficult and now that some restrictions
    have been lifted, after two months of isolating at home, we’ve come here to the
    sports camp in Izvorani and we’re quarantined here, we’re not allowed to leave
    the camp. There are many restrictions, for example we have to have our meals in
    our rooms. After the self-isolation, this is the last thing I needed. But it’ll
    pass. I’ve maintained my fitness and muscle mass and psychologically I’m in
    good shape, too, I’m motivated, I want to exercise every day. I’m sometimes
    frustrated with all these restrictions, because I thought that coming here I would
    be free to walk around the camp, but that’s not allowed, either.




    Athletes from other sports are also training
    for the Olympic Games in Izvorani, says gymnast Marian Drăgulescu:




    There are athletes from the gymnastics,
    judo, wrestling, swimming and rowing teams. I was expecting to see more
    athletes here, in fact all of us who qualified for the Olympic Games. The idea
    was for us to get to know each other and exchange experiences. There should
    have been 130 of us here, as well as athletes who still have a chance to
    qualify for the Olympics. (CM)



  • RRI Sports Club

    RRI Sports Club


    Romanian athletes preparing for the
    Olympic Games have resumed centralised training, which takes place in special
    conditions and in compliance with the measures imposed by the authorities to prevent
    infection with the novel coronavirus. After being tested, the athletes were
    placed in training facilities with very strict rules. Most of them are at a sports
    facility in Izvorani, 40 km away from Bucharest. Gymnast Marian Drăgulescu,
    many-time European and world champion, who is also training here, shared his
    experience of training in isolation in an interview to Radio Romania:






    I’ve been missing gymnastics, the training
    hall and all the equipment. It’s very difficult and now that some restrictions
    have been lifted, after two months of isolating at home, we’ve come here to the
    sports camp in Izvorani and we’re quarantined here, we’re not allowed to leave
    the camp. There are many restrictions, for example we have to have our meals in
    our rooms. After the self-isolation, this is the last thing I needed. But it’ll
    pass. I’ve maintained my fitness and muscle mass and psychologically I’m in
    good shape, too, I’m motivated, I want to exercise every day. I’m sometimes
    frustrated with all these restrictions, because I thought that coming here I would
    be free to walk around the camp, but that’s not allowed, either.




    Athletes from other sports are also training
    for the Olympic Games in Izvorani, says gymnast Marian Drăgulescu:




    There are athletes from the gymnastics,
    judo, wrestling, swimming and rowing teams. I was expecting to see more
    athletes here, in fact all of us who qualified for the Olympic Games. The idea
    was for us to get to know each other and exchange experiences. There should
    have been 130 of us here, as well as athletes who still have a chance to
    qualify for the Olympics. (CM)



  • Olympic Prospects

    Olympic Prospects


    The only Romanian side qualified for
    the Olympics in Tokyo so far is the men’s football team. Good
    chances though also stands the Romanian women’s handball side, one
    of the world’s best. The pre-Olympics tournament has been scheduled
    for March next year. It was initially supposed to take place in
    Podgorica, Montenegro over March 20th
    and 22nd
    2020, but the coronavirus pandemic has prompted the authorities to
    change the timetable.




    If nothing changes until next spring,
    Romania’s opponents will be Montenegro, Norway and Thailand. The
    Asian side is not seen as a redoubtable opponent, so three teams will
    be actually vying for qualification and two will get plane tickets
    for Tokyo. Norway and Montenegro are favourites, as they ranked 4th
    and 5th
    in the World Championships hosted by Japan, last year.




    Romania came 12th
    in the aforementioned competition.
    Furthermore, Montenegro has a trump card against the Romanians, in
    the person of assistant coach Adrian Vasile, the head technician of
    Romanian side CSM Bucharest, one of Romania’s top-notch sides. The three handball squads are supposed
    to meet in winter at the European Championships in Norway and
    Denmark. Through a European Handball Federation decision, Romania
    plays straight into the final tournament.






    The games that remained to be played
    in the preliminaries, had to be canceled. Four legs had been left out
    from the initial qualification campaign. Romania, which was in a
    group with Poland, Ukraine and the Faeroe Islands had two wins out of
    two games played. Lots for the final tournament are to be cast in
    Vienna on June 18th.


    Bogdan Burcea, headcoach of Romania’s
    national squad, said, quote ‘the European Championship could be an
    exceptional means of training, both for the girls and for us. During
    the tournament we can have positive experiences, which can help us in
    the pre-Olympics tournament next spring, when we qualify Romania for
    the Olympic Games in Tokyo’ end of quote. Agerpres news agency has
    taken the quotation from the Romanian Handball Federation’s
    Facebook page.

    (translated by bill)


  • The Week in Review,  23 – 29 March

    The Week in Review, 23 – 29 March

    The
    coronavirus pandemic continues to make victims in Romania. A third military
    ordinance has been issued




    The number of those
    infected by the new coronavirus and the death toll is on the rise in Romania.
    Just like in other countries the most affected seemed to be people over 65
    years old, with lower immunity and related health issues. On Wednesday, the
    authorities imposed harsher restrictions, which are comprised in the third
    military ordinance issued since the state of emergency was declared last week.
    Under the document a curfew was imposed between 6 and 22 hours, which had
    initially been valid only at night. Exceptions are applied to people who travel
    to their workplaces, to shopping or get medical assistance.

    Also exempted from
    the rule are people offering assistance to children, the elderly or to the
    disabled. Short trips around the households or the blocks are also allowed.
    Another exception applies to blood donors and volunteers involved in various
    charity activities. Farmers involved in various agricultural activities are
    also exempted from the rules. The elderly are allowed to travel outside their
    homes between 11 and 13 hours strictly for shopping, medical assistance,
    physical activities or to walk their pets. People are requested to produce a
    work ID, a proof of employment issued by the employer or a self-issued
    affidavit previously filled in by the owner.

    All the people entering Romania
    are either placed on home isolation or quarantined. Starting March 25th,
    all flights to France or Germany as well as domestic flights are suspended for
    14 days. Dental surgery centers have suspended their activity with the
    exception of emergency situations. Shops, with the exception of food chains,
    pharmacies and dry cleaners have been closed down. Religious services are being
    held without parishioners and are broadcast online. Participation in baptisms,
    wedding and burial ceremonies is limited to 8 people. The country’s president
    Klaus Iohannis has called on citizens, especially on pensioners, to strictly
    comply with the rules issued by the authorities in order to gain precious time
    that can be used by the medical personnel to treat the patients. The Romanian
    official has given assurances the authorities are doing everything in their
    power to overcome the crisis.






    The Romania Government and the Central
    Bank have adopted a new economic and financial package of measures to overcome
    the crisis




    Against
    the backdrop of the COVID-19 crisis, a growing number has been reported, of employment contracts that have been suspended. The Government has ruled that
    the employees whose employment contract has been temporarily suspended should
    receive 75% of their wages from the unemployment insurance fund, for the entire
    duration of the emergency period. Official figures have revealed that in late
    February, Romania’s number of active employees stood at 5.6 million.

    The
    Government has also announced additional aid programmes would also be
    implemented. Therefore, an ordinance has been passed whereby natural persons
    but also the legal entities who have pending bank installments can postpone
    them until December 31st 2020, if their incomes have been directly
    or indirectly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. At this time of crisis, the
    Central Bank has in turn come up with a package of measures aimed at helping
    markets function properly. In an emergency monetary policy meeting, the Central
    Bank has decided the key interest rate should stand at 2%, down from 2.5%.

    The
    package of measures the Central Bank has passed also includes the provision of
    liquidities to credit institutions through reversible operations with state
    bonds with a view to securing the fluent functioning of the money market.
    Another decision targets the purchase of the state bonds in the national
    currency, the Leu, on the secondary market in order to boost the structural
    liquidity of the banking system. The decision will provide its contribution to
    the proper financing of the real economy and the public sector.






    The Romanian Healthcare Minister
    Victor Costache has submitted his resignation


    A
    new Healthcare Minister has been appointed in Romania. Former State Secretary
    Nelu Tataru this past Thursday was sworn in. Tataru was appointed since his
    predecessor, Victor Costache has resigned. Just like in other European countries,
    the COVID-19 pandemic has caused many problems in Romania. For the time being,
    at least, there is shortage of protection gear in Romanian hospitals, while the
    existing ones are not efficient. The frontline medical staff has said they put
    their lives in danger every day. A telling case, to that end, is that of the
    Suceava County Hospital (in the North-east). Also, of the 100 medical staff who
    got infected countrywide, more than 80 are from Suceava, physicians, trained
    nurses and orderlies. The medical unit has been closed down for disinfection,
    the manager has been sacked and a criminal investigation has been opened. The
    list of contaminated medical units also includes hospitals in Bucharest,
    Galati, in the east, or Deva, in the west.






    The Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo
    have been postponed


    The
    2020 edition of the world’s greatest sporting event, the Summer Olympic Games, to
    be held in Japan, has been postponed for next year, because of the COVID-19
    pandemic. The decision is a historic one, as never before, in times of peace,
    have the Olympic Games been cancelled or postponed.