Ted Dumitru

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Ted Dumitru
Personal information
Full nameTheodore Dumitru
Date of birth (1939-09-02) 2 September 1939
Place of birthBucharest, Romania
Teams managed
YearsTeam
1964–1966Universitatea Craiova
1967–1968Romania U-23
1969–1970Altay Izmir
1970–1971Beşiktaş
1971–1972Mersin İdmanyurdu
1974–1975Rochester Lancers
1977–1980Tractor Sazi
1980–1982Zambia
1983–1984Swaziland
1985–1988Kaizer Chiefs
1988–1995Mamelodi Sundowns (Youth Development)
1995–1997SAFA (Youth Development)
1997–1999Mamelodi Sundowns
1999–2000Orlando Pirates
2000Manning Rangers
2000–2001Namibia
2001–2002Mamelodi Sundowns
2003–2005Kaizer Chiefs
2005–2006South Africa
2007AmaZulu (Technical Director)
2008–2011Mamelodi Sundowns (Technical Director)

Theodore "Ted" Dumitru (born Dumitru Teodorescu on 2 September 1939 in Bucharest, Romania) is a retired football manager who last worked with Mamelodi Sundowns in the South African Premier Soccer League. He was the former coach of the South Africa national football team.[1] Dumitru is one of a few coaches to have guided the 'big three' in South Africa Kaizer Chiefs, Sundowns and Orlando Pirates.[2]

Playing and coaching career

Dumitru started playing football at Sportul Studenţesc in the late 1950s, he had a short run because injuries had ended his career prematurely; as a result, he started to coach Stiinta Craiova known as Universitatea Craiova today, in the 1964–65 season, the first for the Students in Divizia A. He was only 25 years old, thus establishing a record in the Liga I as the youngest coach ever. After saving in extremis the team from relegation in the first season as a coach, in the second he finished in the eighth place. He left Craiova in 1966 and was for a while the coach of Romania U-23 Olympic team. In 1969 he went to Turkey where he managed Altay Izmir, Beşiktaş and then Mersin.

In 1973, Dumitru was called back by the Securitate in Romania but he refused. He arrived in Germany where he requested political asylum. In Romania, he was sentenced in absentia to 20 years in prison. In 1974 he began coaching again, but this time across the ocean, in the United States, with Rochester Lancers in the NASL.[3] He continued to train them, when it was moved to San Diego where it became the San Diego United. From that moment he was known as Ted Dumitru.

In 1980, Dumitru arrived in Africa, and was appointed as head coach of Zambia, and leads the team in the preliminaries of the African Cup of Nations together with Dick Chama, qualifying them in the final tournament in 1982, but he did not participate, due to his U.S. passport and was replaced by Yugoslav coach Ante Bulešic. Being that the tournament was hosted by Libya, a country where Americans are not welcomed. During his stint in Zambia, Zambia's President Kenneth Kaunda once said of him: "He is more than a coach; he is a son of Africa. He is a humanist who puts sports well-being ahead of his profession."

He left Zambia and signed a contract with the African Football Confederation, in which he was sent to Swaziland, then in Namibia to help develop football in those countries.

In 1985, Dumitru arrived in South Africa signing with Kaizer Chiefs, with whom he won many national trophies. Then he moved to Mamelodi Sundowns, the other big club in South Africa, winning two more titles in 1998 and 1999. In South Africa he also coached the club of Orlando Pirates and Manning Rangers. Dumitru was appointed manager of the Namibian national team in November 2000 replacing Lucky Richter. He joined again Mamelodi Sundowns leading the South African side to a African Champions League Final in 2001 in his second spell with the club.[4] He then returned to Kaiser Chiefs with whom he won two titles in a row in 2004 and 2005, and made a big step towards the national team of Bafana-Bafana in November 2005 but unfortunately was not performing well, being dismissed in February 2006, after the final tournament in African Cup of Nations.

He published a book about football, 'Maximal Training' which was published in Germany.

In South Africa, Dumitru is nicknamed Master Ted, The Professor or Mr Magic.[5]

The style of the game is a form of expression” Ted Dumitru is regarded as by far the most successful coach in the South African domestic scene.

Honours

Club

Kaizer Chiefs
Mamelodi Sundowns
Orlando Pirates

References

  1. "Former South Africa Coach Ted Dumitru - Pitso Mosimane Was The Only One Worthy Of Bafana". Goal.com. Retrieved 2010-12-21. 
  2. "Namibia name new coach". BBC Sport. 2000-11-04. Retrieved 2008-10-21. 
  3. "NASL all time coaches registry". National Soccerhall. 2006-06-10. Retrieved 2007-04-12. 
  4. Stokkermans, Karel. "African Club Competitions 2001". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 
  5. "Dumitru faces tough challenge". BBC Sport. 2005-11-25. Retrieved 2008-11-18. 
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