Romania national football team

Romania
Nickname(s) Tricolorii (The Tricolours)
Association Federația Română de Fotbal (FRF)
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Christoph Daum
Captain Vlad Chiricheș
Most caps Dorinel Munteanu (134)
Top scorer Gheorghe Hagi
Adrian Mutu (35)
Home stadium Arena Națională (55,600)
FIFA code ROU
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current 42 Increase 4 (6 July 2017)
Highest 3 (September 1997)
Lowest 57 (February 2011, September 2012)
Elo ranking
Current 44 Increase 5 (10 July 2017)
Highest 5 [1] (June 1990)
Lowest 43 [2] (1949)
First international
 Yugoslavia 1–2 Romania 
(Belgrade, Yugoslavia; 8 June 1922)
Biggest win
 Romania 9–0 Finland 
(Bucharest, Romania; 14 October 1973)
Biggest defeat
 Hungary 9–0 Romania 
(Budapest, Hungary; 6 June 1948)
World Cup
Appearances 7 (first in 1930)
Best result Quarter-finals, 1994
European Championship
Appearances 5 (first in 1984)
Best result Quarter-finals, 2000

The Romania national football team (Romanian: Echipa națională de fotbal a României) is the national football team of Romania and is controlled by the Romanian Football Federation.

Romania is one of only four national teams from Europe, the other three being Yugoslavia, France, and Belgium, that took part in the first FIFA World Cup in 1930.

Since that performance, Romania have qualified for the 1934, 1938, 1970, 1990, 1994 and 1998 editions. The team's finest hour came at the 1994 World Cup where Romania, led by playmaker Gheorghe Hagi, reached the quarter-finals by defeating South American powerhouse Argentina before losing to Sweden on a penalty shootout.

At the European Championships, Romania's best performance was in 2000 when they advanced to the quarter-finals from a group with Germany, Portugal and England before falling to eventual runners-up Italy. They also reached the last eight in 1960 and 1972, and qualified for the 1984, 1996, 2008 and 2016 tournaments.

History

Early years

Romania East Germany 3–1 in 1952.

The Romanian Football Federation (Federația Română de Fotbal) was established in October 1909 in Bucharest. Romania played their first international match on 8 June 1922, a 2–1 win over Yugoslavia in Belgrade, being coached by Teofil Moraru.[3] Several temporary coaches were employed, before Moraru resumed control in August 1924, managing the side for nearly four years. Romania enjoyed some success during the 1930s; manager Costel Rădulescu took them to the first three FIFA World Cup tournaments, a feat matched only by Brazil, Belgium and France.

World Cups in the 1930s

Romania playing against Peru at the 1930 World Cup in Uruguay.

At the 1930 World Cup, Romania won their first match against Peru, 3–1, with goals from Adalbert Desu, Constantin Stanciu and Nicolae Kovács and Samuel Zauber as goalkeeper, before being thrashed 4–0 by hosts and eventual winners Uruguay.

Romania qualified for the next World Cup in 1934 after beating Yugoslavia 2–1 in a repeat of their first international. At the finals, Romania played only one game in a new knock-out format, losing 2–1 to Czechoslovakia in Trieste, Italy, with Ștefan Dobay scoring their only goal of the tournament.

Romania qualified by default for the 1938 World Cup after their qualifying playoff opponents Egypt withdrew. They suffered a shock defeat in the finals in France, losing to minnows Cuba, who, like Romania, had only qualified due to the withdrawal of their qualifying opponents, the United States. The first match at the Stade Chapou in Toulouse ended 3–3 after extra time, but Cuba won the replay four days later 2–1.

1970 World Cup

Participation in the World Cup was finally achieved once again in 1970 in Mexico, although qualification came on the back of a 3–0 thrashing by Portugal in Lisbon and two unconvincing draws against unfancied Greece. Angelo Niculescu's promising side were given the toughest of draws, in Group 3 with holders England, giants Brazil and Czechoslovakia.

A Geoff Hurst goal gave England a narrow victory in Romania's first match at the Estadio Jalisco in Guadalajara. Chances were improved with a 2–1 win over the Czechs. Despite going behind early to a Ladislav Petráš goal, Romania turned it around after half-time with Alexandru Neagu and Florea Dumitrache scoring to give them two vital points. Even then, only a win over the excellent Brazilians would take them into the quarter-finals.

There were rumours before the match that Brazil might prefer Romania to progress than world champions England; despite beating them 1–0 in their previous match in Guadalajara, the South American giants still viewed England as one of its biggest obstacles to tournament victory. But Brazil played some of the best football of the competition, with Pelé scoring twice and a Jairzinho goal in between. Romania battled bravely; Dumitrache pulled the score back to 2–1 before the break and a late Emerich Dembrowski goal made it 3–2, but they were out.

1972 to 1978

On 26 September 1973, under new coach Valentin Stanescu, Romania suffered a significant defeat to East Germany in Leipzig. The East Germans won 2–0 to effectively seal their first ever qualification for the World Cup, which would be held over the border in West Germany. With East Germany scoring a predictable 4–1 win in Albania, Romania were out, despite a huge 9–0 win over Finland in Bucharest.

Romania continued to suffer poor form in the UEFA European Championship. In their qualifying group for the 1976 European Football Championship, they were out-qualified by Spain despite an impressive 1–1 draw in the away match. Romania failed to win matches, drawing twice with Scotland and Spain and dropping points in Denmark with a dismal goalless draw.

Romania were again beat by Spain for a place in the 1978 World Cup in Argentina. Despite a 1–0 win in Bucharest, Romania lost a bizarre match at home to Yugoslavia 6–4 having led 3–2 at half time. Spain won 1–0 in Belgrade to seal passage to South America.

1984 European Championship

Romania's sole successful qualifying campaign was for the European Championships in 1984 in France. At the finals, Romania were drawn with regular rivals Spain, holders West Germany and dark horses Portugal. Under head coach Mircea Lucescu, an encouraging opening game in Saint-Étienne saw them draw with the Spanish. Francisco José Carrasco opened the scoring from the penalty spot but Romania equalized before half-time with a goal from Laszlo Bölöni.

Against the Germans in Lens, Marcel Coraș scored an equalizer in the first minute of the second half in response to Rudi Völler's opener, but Völler would score a winning goal. Their last match in Nantes was a must-win match, but Nené's late winner meant Portugal progressed with Spain, who netted a dramatic late winner against West Germany at the Parc des Princes in Paris.

Romania stuttered throughout the rest of the decade, but a stronger squad at the end of the decade saw them qualify for their fifth World Cup in 1990. A win over Denmark in their last match took Emerich Jenei's side to the finals for the first time in 20 years.

Golden Team era

1990 World Cup

Romania's squad was entirely domestic-based, despite an increasing trend for the major sides in Italy and Spain buying up the best foreign talent. Midfielder Ilie Dumitrescu, striker Florin Răducioiu and genius playmaker Gheorghe Hagi, were in the squad, but it was forward Gavril Balint who would prove the hero in the first round.

With world champions Argentina stunned by Cameroon in the tournament's opening match, Romania did their chances no harm with a convincing win over the Soviet Union at the San Nicola in Bari, with Marius Lăcătuș scoring in each half. The result was all the more impressive given the absence of Hagi. There was controversy, however, as Lăcătus' second was a penalty given for a handball by Vagiz Khidiatullin that television replays clearly showed to be some way outside the penalty area.

Romania were the next victims of Cameroon in Bari. Cult hero Roger Milla, 38 years of age, came on as a substitute for Emmanuel Maboang Kessack and scored twice before Gavril Balint pulled one back. Romania needed a point in their last match against improving Argentina at the San Paolo in Naples; Pedro Monzón gave Argentina the lead after an hour, but Balint quickly equalized and Romania held on to reach Round 2.

Against Jack Charlton's Republic of Ireland side in Genoa, Romania did not have the quality to break down a defensive opposition. Daniel Timofte was the only player to miss in the penalty shoot-out – his kick saved by Packie Bonner – and Romania were out.

1994 World Cup

Romania missed out on Euro 1992. Scotland qualified after Romania drew a must-win last match in Sofia against Bulgaria, with Nasko Sirakov's equalizer sealing their fate.

Romania was successful, however, in reaching another World Cup in the United States in 1994. Despite losing in Belgium and suffering a heavy 5–2 defeat in Czechoslovakia, Romania went into their last match at Cardiff Arms Park with Wales needing a win to pip them to a place in the finals. Goals from Gheorghe Hagi and Dean Saunders meant the game was finely balanced, before Wales were awarded a penalty. Paul Bodin of Swindon Town stepped up but hit the woodwork and Romania went on to win 2–1, Florin Răducioiu's late goal proving unnecessary as Czechoslovakia dropped a point in Belgium and were eliminated.

At the finals, Romania were one of the most entertaining teams in the early stages, with Gheorghe Hagi, Florin Răducioiu and Ilie Dumitrescu on form. Romania beat Colombia at the Pasadena Rose Bowl in Los Angeles 3–1. All but one of Romania's games took place in California, and they were awarded the advantage of playing most of their games in Los Angeles. Răducioiu opened the scoring before Hagi scored a spectacular second from wide on the left touchline. Adolfo Valencia shredded their nerves with a headed goal just before half-time, but Romania held on and Răducioiu sealed the win with a late third.

In Detroit's indoor Pontiac Silverdome, the temperature soared due to the greenhouse effect in the indoor arena. Switzerland, acclimatized after having already played the hosts there, outran Romania in the second half and turned a 1–1 half time score into a surprising 4–1 win. Romania responded by beating the hosts 1–0 in Pasadena with an early Dan Petrescu goal.

In the Round of 16 knockout stage they faced Argentina in Los Angeles who were shorn of Diego Maradona who was thrown out of the tournament for taking drugs. Răducioiu, suspended, was hardly missed, as coach Anghel Iordănescu pushed Dumitrescu forward to play as a striker and the player responded by scoring twice in the first 20 minutes, one a superbly subtle left foot flick from a right-wing Hagi cross slotted between the Argentine defenders. In between, Gabriel Batistuta scored a penalty, but after half-time Romania netted a superb third on the counterattack, with Hagi beating goalkeeper Luis Islas. Abel Balbo pulled one back, but Romania held on for a shock win.

Romania would suffer penalty heartbreak again, in the quarter-final against Sweden in San Francisco. With just 13 minutes to play, a tight match opened up as Sweden's Thomas Brolin scored from a clever free-kick move, the ball passed outside the Romanian wall by Håkan Mild for Brolin to smash in. Iordănescu threw caution to the wind and the returning Răducioiu found a late equalizer, again from a free-kick move but this time down to a deflection and a failure of the Swedes to clear. In extra time Răducioiu scored again after a mistake by Patrik Andersson, but Sweden then scored their own late equalizer as giant striker Kennet Andersson climbed above goalkeeper Florin Prunea to head home a long ball. Prunea had come in after two matches to replace Bogdan Stelea, whose confidence was shattered by the 4–1 loss to the Swiss. In the shoot-out, Dan Petrescu and Miodrag Belodedici had their kicks saved by Thomas Ravelli and Sweden went through.

Euro 1996

At Euro 1996, held in England, Romania arrived as a highly thought-of and popular team but had a nightmare. Iordănescu's side were based in the north east, with their first two games at St James' Park in Newcastle. Against France, they lost to a Christophe Dugarry header reminiscent of Kennet Andersson's two years earlier, beating the goalkeeper to a lofted through ball. An early goal from Bulgaria striker Hristo Stoichkov at St James' Park put Romania on the back foot in Euro 1996, but Dorinel Munteanu appeared to have kept Romania in the match – and in the tournament – with a thunderbolt that hit the bar, bounced over the line, and back out. Referee Peter Mikkelsen merely waved play on, however, and Romania went on to lose the game 1–0 a defeat which sent them out of the tournament. English manager Harry Redknapp was in the crowd that day, and later said that it convinced him there and then that goal-line technology was needed in football. Romania finally scored in their last game, Florin Răducioiu equalizing an early goal by Spain's Javier Manjarín. Spain had to win to qualify with France at the expense of Bulgaria and did so when Guillermo Amor stooped to head a late winner. Romania exited in total shame, with no points and tons of regrets of what could have been.

1998 World Cup

Despite a dreadful Euro 1996, Romania impressed in qualifying, finishing ten points clear of the Republic of Ireland and were seeded for the final tournament of the 1998 World Cup thanks to their strong showing in 1994. Despite being drawn in a group with England, progression to the next round was expected in light of a declining Colombia and minnows Tunisia.

Adrian Ilie scored the only goal with a fine chip in their first match against Colombia at Lyon's Stade Gerland. In Toulouse, they met an England side starting with prodigal striker Michael Owen on the bench, with Teddy Sheringham preferred alongside Alan Shearer. A mistake by Tony Adams was punished by Viorel Moldovan, who played for Coventry City, before Owen came on to claim an equalizer. But Romania won with a wonderful late goal from Dan Petrescu, also playing in England with Chelsea, fighting off his club teammate Graeme le Saux and nutmegging goalkeeper David Seaman.

The next match was against Tunisia. Romania decided to bleach their hair before the match. Despite England–Colombia being the more decisive game, the Stade de France in Paris was an 80,000-strong sell out and the crowd were nearly rewarded with a shock as Skander Souayah scored an early penalty to give the north Africans the lead. Romania needed a point to win the group and, crucially, avoid Argentina in the round of 16, and got it when Moldovan volleyed a late equalizer. It did them little good, however, as in the round of 16 match at Bordeaux against Croatia, Davor Šuker scored a twice-taken penalty to eliminate Romania.

Euro 2000

Romania had a strong qualifying campaign, winning a tough Group 7 with Portugal, Slovakia, Hungary, Azerbaijan and Liechtenstein. The Romanians impressed, never losing and winning seven times, including a big upset in Porto after defeating Portugal thanks to a late goal scored by Dorinel Munteanu. In Bucharest, the score finished 1–1.

At Euro 2000, held in Belgium and the Netherlands, Romania was facing a very difficult group against 1996 champions Germany, semi-finalists England and Portugal. The chances for the Romanians to qualify through quarter-finals were seen as slim.

Romania, however, started brightly against the Germans in Liège, with Viorel Moldovan scoring from close range. A long-range Mehmet Scholl equalizer meant they had to be content with a point and their position looked shaky after Costinha headed a last minute winner for Portugal in their second match.

Emerich Jenei, back as coach, threw caution to the wind in the last match in Charleroi against England, a match which Romania had to win. Defender Cristian Chivu's cross went in off the post in the 22nd minute but, despite Romania dominating, England led at half-time through an Alan Shearer penalty and a late Michael Owen goal after he rounded goalkeeper Bogdan Stelea to score a tap-in, both in the last five minutes of the half. Romania attacked after the break and were quickly rewarded; Dorinel Munteanu punishing a poor punch from Nigel Martyn, a late replacement for injured goalkeeper David Seaman, to equalize three minutes after the restart. England cracked under the pressure. Unable to retain possession or pose an attacking threat, they fell deep and late on Phil Neville, playing out of position at left-back, conceded a penalty scored by Ioan Ganea in the 89th minute.

Romania's relief was tempered by tough opposition in the last eight, and Italy, who would end up seconds from being crowned European champions in an agonizing final, comfortably saw them off 2–0 in Brussels. Francesco Totti and Filippo Inzaghi scoring towards the end of the first half. In the 35th minute, Gheorghe Hagi, in his final international tournament, hit the woodwork with goalkeeper Francesco Toldo stranded off his line and, after the break, was sent off for diving. Romania's tournament was over and Emerich Jenei left his job as coach again.

2000s – Near Misses

Romania failed to qualify for the next three major tournaments. They drew Slovenia, who had been surprise qualifiers for Euro 2000 in a playoff for a place in the 2002 World Cup in South Korea and Japan. A narrow 2–1 deficit – having led through a Marius Niculae goal – after the first leg in Ljubljana was not irretrievable. With fans' hero Gheorghe Hagi now coaching the side, they were confident of getting the win they needed in Bucharest against the Balkan upstarts, but Slovenia took the lead before the hour through Mladen Rudonja. Right wing-back Cosmin Contra quickly equalized but Romania could not find the goal they needed to force extra time and Slovenia, with maverick manager Srečko Katanec, were in a major tournament again.

Euro 2004

Romania were confident of qualifying for the tournament, drawn in Group 2 with seeds Denmark, Norway, Bosnia and Herzegovina and minnows Luxembourg, with Anghel Iordanescu back as coach. Despite a good start – a 3–0 win away to Bosnia in Sarajevo – Romania stuttered. Steffen Iversen's late goal gave Norway a surprise win in Bucharest and they were stunned at home by the Danes, 5–2, with Thomas Gravesen scoring a spectacular goal from around 50 yards out, despite leading twice. They recovered slightly, completing a double over the Bosnians and earning a point in Oslo, but conceded a cutting injury time equalizer in Denmark to draw 2–2. It was decisive, as they now required Norway to fail to win at home to Luxembourg to stand any realistic chance of qualifying. Eventually, the Danes got a point in Bosnia to scrape through a tight group, with Norway going to a play-off with Spain.

2006 World Cup

Romania were put in a massive group for the qualifying tournament for the 2006 World Cup in Germany. The Netherlands and the Czech Republic were favourites to qualify, then ranked first and second in Europe respectively. Early wins over Finland and Macedonia were unconvincing, and they were some way behind the two leaders by the time they earned a good 2–0 home win over the Czechs. Despite a record of eight wins, three losses and one draw, they finished third behind the Dutch and the Czechs and missed out on another major tournament.

Euro 2008

Romania were drawn in a group with group favourites the Netherlands and tough opponents Bulgaria for Euro 2008 qualifying. Romania, however, had a good qualifying campaign, losing only away against Bulgaria and beating the Netherlands 1–0 at home with a goal scored by Dorin Goian from a suspicious off-side position not seen by referee Kyros Vassaras. On 17 October 2007, Romania became the fourth team to qualify for Euro 2008, the nation's first international tournament since Euro 2000. Coincidentally, Victor Pițurcă also led Romania to qualification for Euro 2000, only to sit back and let Emerich Jenei coach the team in the final tournament; this time, however, he stayed in the role, the first time he coached a national team in the final stages of a tournament.

Romania was drawn in the so-called "Group of Death" alongside the Netherlands, world champions Italy and France, runners-up in the 2006 World Cup. Romania started with a 0–0 draw against a lackluster France while Italy were soundly beaten by the Netherlands, 3–0. In their next match, against Italy, Adrian Mutu opened the scoring early in the second half. Their lead was a very short one, however, as Italy's Christian Panucci scored a minute later off of a corner kick. Nearing the end of the match, Daniel Niculae earned a penalty for his team, but goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon saved the subsequent Mutu penalty, leaving Romania with two points and needing a win against the Netherlands, which eliminated France 4–1 that same evening. The Netherlands beat Romania 2–0 in the final game of the group, which meant that Italy joined the Netherlands in the quarter-finals and Romania finished third, ahead of France.

2010 World Cup

Romanian fans at Arena Națională

Romania were drawn into the UEFA qualifying round for the 2010 World Cup alongside France, Serbia, Austria, Lithuania and the Faroe Islands. Although Romania were seeded in the second pot, suggesting that they were a strong challenge for the first place in the group, they eventually finished fifth, above only the Faroe Islands. Their campaign was a disaster that began with a 3–0 home loss to Lithuania and included a 5–0 trashing in Belgrade by Serbia. Furthermore, various problems were caused during the poor campaign, such as the retirement from international football of Cosmin Contra, Mirel Rădoi and Adrian Mutu (the latter would later be recalled after a year's absence). Also, coach Victor Pițurcă resigned and was replaced by Răzvan Lucescu.

Recent years

Euro 2012

In Euro 2012 qualifying, Romania was drawn into Group D along with France, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Belarus, Albania and Luxembourg. Although the team initially seemed prepared to continue their awful form from their disastrous World Cup campaign, beginning with a 1–1 draw with Pot 5 members Albania and following up with a goalless draw with Belarus and a pair of losses to France and Bosnia and Herzegovina, the team was able to rebound somewhat and register their first two victories. The first was an expected win against Luxembourg but the second was an important win in the rematch against Bosnia and Herzegovina. Romania's last good result came when they battled group favorite France to a goalless draw before ending the campaign the way it began – two disappointing draws with Albania and Belarus. They finished qualification in a distant third place and only one point ahead of Belarus.

2014 World Cup

Romania was drawn into the 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifying round with the Netherlands, Turkey, Hungary, Estonia and Andorra. Romania, Turkey and Hungary were expected to battle it out for second place behind the Netherlands. They made an impressive start with a 2–0 away win in Estonia followed by a 4–0 win at home against modest Andorra and another away win in Turkey (1–0). After that, Romania was defeated by Netherlands, both at home and away, and managed to secure only a draw in Hungary, in between. Romania started the last part of the campaign with a victory at home, against Hungary, but was defeated by Turkey. The last two match days were decisive, with Romania securing its place in the play-off with two wins, against Andorra and Estonia, while qualification rivals Turkey and Hungary were both defeated by the winner of the group, the Netherlands. Romania were drawn to play Greece for a place in the World Cup finals, but a 3–1 loss in Greece and a 1–1 home draw ended its run.

Euro 2016

France-Romania 2–1.
France-Romania 2–1 (line-ups).

For the qualifying stage of the Euro 2016 Romania was drawn into Group F along with Greece, Hungary, Finland, Northern Ireland and the Faroe Islands. Romania began its first successful qualification campaign since 2008 with a win over group favourites Greece before following up with a 1–1 draw with Pot 2 member Hungary and a 2–0 win over Finland. Despite the initial success, Romania decided to part with coach Victor Pițurcă by mutual consent. Anghel Iordănescu came out of retirement to return to coach Romania for a third time.

Under Iordănescu, Romania was able to follow up with comfortable 2–0 win over surprise force Northern Ireland and, despite a disappointing 1–0 win over the Faroe Islands and a 0–0 draw in the return game against Northern Ireland, Romania remained on top of Group F, one point above Northern Ireland and three points above third-placed Hungary. After a goalless draw in the match against Hungary in Budapest, however, the team fell back on the second place, one point behind Northern Ireland and three above Hungary, still placed third.

Following a 1–1 draw clinched in overtime at home against Finland, Romania secured their spot at the final tournament in the last game after a confident 3–0 win in the Faroe Islands. Romania finished the qualification group second, one point behind group winners Northern Ireland, completing their first successful qualification campaign in eight years undefeated after five wins and five draws. Romania advanced to Euro 2016 and were drawn in the same group as tournament hosts France, Switzerland and Albania. Romania was defeated by France thanks to a 89th-minute strike by Dimitri Payet to cancel out Bogdan Stancu's equalizer as Romania dropped last in Group A. In its second group match, against Switzerland, another Stancu penalty helped Romania claim its first point of the tournament after a 1–1 draw. In its last group stage match, Romania lost 0–1 against Albania to finish last in Group A, with only one point and two goals scored, both from penalties.

2018 World Cup

For the qualification round, Romania was drawn in Group E, being in Pot 1 for the first time after a long time. Romania's two strongest opponents appear to be Denmark and Poland; its other opponents are Montenegro, Armenia and Kazakhstan. The qualifying campaign started with a 1–1 home draw against Montenegro followed by a thrashing away victory against Armenia, 0–5. In the next match, Romania recorded another draw (0–0), against Kazakhstan. The last match played in 2016 was a 0–3 defeat against Poland, with Robert Lewandowski scoring a double. As of the end of 2016, Romania is in the fourth place in Group E with five points.

Stadium

The Romania national team plays its home games at Arena Națională, the biggest stadium in the country, built in 2011 and with a capacity of 55,600 seats.

The National Stadium is a Category 4 venue and, as such, it hosted the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League final.

Some friendly matches or minor FIFA World Cup and UEFA European Football Championship qualification matches are played at other venues.

Former national stadium which held 60,120 seats was completely demolished at the end of 2007. The last football match played was a 6–1 win against Albania on 21 November 2007.

A Panorama view of the National Stadium

Honours

Kit history

WC 1930–1934 Home[4][4]
WC 1938 Home[5]
WC 1970 Home
WC 1970 Away
Euro 1984 Home
Euro 1984 Away
WC 1990 Home
WC 1990 Away
WC 1994 Home
WC 1994 Away
1996 Home
WC 1998 Home
WC 1998 Away
2000 Home
2006 Home
2008 Home
2008 Away
2010 Home
2010 Away
2012 Home
2012 Away
2014 Home
2014 Away
2015 Home
2015 Away

Kit suppliers

Kit provider Period
France Le Coq Sportif 1977–1983
Germany Adidas 1984–2015
Spain Joma 2015–2018

Romania's kit are currently supplied by Spanish company Joma, which replaced Adidas, which itself replaced Le Coq Sportif in 1984.

Media coverage

Romania's qualifying matches and friendlies are currently televised on TVR 1. Digi Sport also broadcasts the games from the European Championship qualifying stage, but only recorded pictures.

Between 2008 and 2014, Antena 1 had the rights to broadcast Romania's home games, friendlies and officials.

Competitive record

World Cup record

     Champions       Runners-up       Third Place       Fourth Place  

FIFA World Cup record FIFA World Cup Qualification record
Year Round Position Pld W D * L GF GA Position Pld W D * L GF GA
Uruguay 1930Group Stage8th210135Qualified as invitees
Italy 1934Round 112th1001122210123
France 19389th201145Egypt withdrew[6]
Brazil 1950Did not enter
Switzerland 1954Did Not Qualify2420255
Sweden 19582421164
Chile 1962Withdrew
England 19663630397
Mexico 1970Group Stage11th3102451632176
West Germany 1974Did Not Qualify26411174
Argentina 19782420278
Spain 19823824255
Mexico 198638332127
Italy 1990Round of 1612th412(1*)14316411105
United States 1994Quarter-finals6th531*11091107122912
France 1998Round of 1611th421143110910374
South Korea Japan 2002Did Not QualifyPlayoffs105231210
Germany 20063128132010
South Africa 20105103341218
Brazil 2014Playoffs126242116
Russia 2018Qualification In Progress4513164
Qatar 2022TBD--------------
TotalGroup-Stage7/22218583032Total123652533217128
* *Denotes draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks. Darker color indicates win, normal color indicates loss.

European Championship

UEFA European Football Championship record UEFA European Football Championship Qualification record
Year Round Position Pld W D * L GF GA Position Pld W D * L GF GA
France 1960Did Not QualifyQuarterfinals410337
Spain 1964Preliminary round210137
Italy 1968First round63031814
Belgium 1972Quarterfinals9432157
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1976First round6150116
Italy 19803622298
France 1984Group Stage7th3012241852193
West Germany 1988Did Not Qualify26411133
Sweden 199238422137
England 1996Group Stage15th300314110631189
Belgium Netherlands 2000Quarter-finals7th411246110730253
Portugal 2004Did Not Qualify38422219
Austria Switzerland 2008Group Stage12th302113112921267
Poland Ukraine 2012Did Not Qualify310352139
France 2016Group Stage19th301224210550112
Europe 2020TBDTBD000000TBD000000
Total5/151615101021Total115593521208101
* Denotes draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.

Summer Olympics

Football at the Summer Olympics was first played officially in 1908. The Olympiads between 1896 and 1980 was only open for amateur players. The 1984 and 1988 tournaments were open to players with no appearances in the FIFA World Cup. After the 1988 Olympics, the football event was changed into a tournament for U23 or U21 teams with a maximum of three older players. See national under-21 football team for competition record from 1992 until present day.

Year Round GP W D* L GS GA
1900 to 1920Did not enter ------
France 1924Round 2100106
1928 to 1948Did not qualify ------
Finland 1952Preliminary round100112
1956 to 1960Did not qualify ------
Japan 1964Quarterfinals421154
1968 to 1976Did not qualify ------
1980 to 1988Did not enter ------
Total 3/246213612

Schedule

UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification Northern Ireland Romania Hungary Finland Faroe Islands Greece
1  Northern Ireland 10 6 3 1 16 8 +8 21 Qualify for final tournament 0–0 1–1 2–1 2–0 3–1
2  Romania 10 5 5 0 11 2 +9 20 2–0 1–1 1–1 1–0 0–0
3  Hungary 10 4 4 2 11 9 +2 16 Advance to play-offs 1–2 0–0 1–0 2–1 0–0
4  Finland 10 3 3 4 9 10 1 12 1–1 0–2 0–1 1–0 1–1
5  Faroe Islands 10 2 0 8 6 17 11 6 1–3 0–3 0–1 1–3 2–1
6  Greece 10 1 3 6 7 14 7 6 0–2 0–1 4–3 0–1 0–1
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Qualification tiebreakers

FIFA World Cup 2018 qualifying

{{2018 FIFA World Cup qualification – UEFA Group E table |show_matches=yes}}

Results and fixtures

  Win   Draw   Loss

2016

2017

Coaching staff

Position Name
Head Coach Germany Christoph Daum
Assistant Coach Belgium Rudi Verkempinck
Assistant Coach Romania Ionuț Badea
Fitness Coach Greece Christos Papadopoulos
Goalkeeping Coach Germany Richard Golz
Team Doctor Romania Laurențiu Oproiu

Players

Current squad

The following players were called up for the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification and friendly matches against Poland and Chile on 10 June and 13 June 2017 respectively.[7]
Caps and goals as of 13 June 2017 after the match against Chile.

0#0 Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
30 1GK Ciprian Tătărușanu (1986-02-09) 9 February 1986 44 0 France Nantes
1 1GK Costel Pantilimon (1987-02-01) 1 February 1987 25 0 England Watford
12 1GK Silviu Lung Jr. (1989-06-04) 4 June 1989 3 0 Turkey Kayserispor
16 1GK Florin Niță (1987-07-03) 3 July 1987 0 0 Romania Steaua București

6 2DF Vlad Chiricheș (1989-11-14) 14 November 1989 47 0 Italy Napoli
22 2DF Cristian Săpunaru (1984-04-05) 5 April 1984 22 0 Turkey Kayserispor
4 2DF Florin Gardoș (1988-10-29) 29 October 1988 13 0 England Southampton
14 2DF Iasmin Latovlevici (1986-05-11) 11 May 1986 12 0 Turkey Karabükspor
2 2DF Romario Benzar (1992-03-26) 26 March 1992 7 0 Romania Steaua București
3 2DF Alin Toșca (1992-03-14) 14 March 1992 7 0 Spain Betis
15 2DF Bogdan Țîru (1994-03-15) 15 March 1994 2 0 Romania Viitorul Constanța
21 2DF Cristian Ganea (1992-05-24) 24 May 1992 1 0 Romania Viitorul Constanța

19 3MF Bogdan Stancu (1986-09-30) 30 September 1986 50 14 Turkey Bursaspor
8 3MF Mihai Pintilii (1984-11-09) 9 November 1984 36 1 Romania Steaua București
7 3MF Alexandru Chipciu (1989-05-18) 18 May 1989 28 4 Belgium Anderlecht
23 3MF Nicolae Stanciu (1993-05-07) 7 May 1993 14 6 Belgium Anderlecht
18 3MF Răzvan Marin (1996-05-23) 23 May 1996 7 1 Belgium Standard Liège
17 3MF Eric Bicfalvi (1988-02-05) 5 February 1988 4 0 Russia Ural Yekaterinburg
20 3MF Sergiu Hanca (1992-04-04) 4 April 1992 2 0 Romania Dinamo București
13 3MF Alexandru Băluță (1993-09-13) 13 September 1993 1 1 Romania CSU Craiova

10 4FW Gheorghe Grozav (1990-09-29) 29 September 1990 20 3 Turkey Karabükspor
9 4FW Florin Andone (1993-04-11) 11 April 1993 15 1 Spain Deportivo La Coruña
11 4FW Andrei Ivan (1997-01-04) 4 January 1997 5 0 Russia Krasnodar
5 4FW Dorin Rotariu (1995-07-29) 29 July 1995 4 0 Belgium Club Brugge

Recent call-ups

The following players have been called up for the team within the last 12 months.

Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
GK Valentin Cojocaru (1995-10-01) 1 October 1995 0 0 Unattached v.  Russia, 15 November 2016
GK Cristian Bălgrădean (1988-03-21) 21 March 1988 1 0 Romania Concordia Chiajna v.  Montenegro, 4 September 2016

DF Dragoș Grigore INJ (1986-09-07) 7 September 1986 28 0 Qatar Al-Sailiya v.  Poland, 10 June 2017
DF Cosmin Moți INJ (1984-12-03) 3 December 1984 10 0 Bulgaria Ludogorets Razgrad v.  Poland, 10 June 2017
DF Steliano Filip (1993-05-15) 15 May 1993 7 0 Romania Dinamo București v.  Russia, 15 November 2016
DF Gabriel Enache (1990-08-18) 18 August 1990 5 0 Romania Steaua București v.  Russia, 15 November 2016
DF Valerică Găman (1989-02-25) 25 February 1989 13 1 Turkey Karabükspor v.  Kazakhstan, 11 October 2016
DF Alexandru Mățel INJ (1989-10-17) 17 October 1989 17 0 Croatia Dinamo Zagreb v.  Montenegro, 4 September 2016
DF Bogdan Vătăjelu (1993-04-24) 24 April 1993 0 0 Czech Republic Sparta Prague v.  Montenegro, 4 September 2016 PRE

MF Andrei Prepeliță (1985-12-08) 8 December 1985 14 0 Russia Rostov v.  Denmark, 26 March 2017
MF Constantin Budescu (1989-02-19) 19 February 1989 4 2 Romania Steaua București v.  Denmark, 26 March 2017
MF Dragoș Nedelcu (1997-02-16) 16 February 1997 1 0 Romania Steaua București v.  Russia, 15 November 2016
MF Alexandru Maxim (1990-07-08) 8 July 1990 27 2 Germany Mainz 05 v.  Poland, 11 November 2016
MF Ovidiu Hoban (1982-12-27) 27 December 1982 27 1 Romania CFR Cluj v.  Poland, 11 November 2016
MF Gabriel Torje (1989-11-22) 22 November 1989 54 11 Turkey Karabükspor v.  Montenegro, 4 September 2016
MF Vlad Achim (1989-04-07) 7 April 1989 0 0 Romania Steaua București v.  Montenegro, 4 September 2016 PRE

FW Denis Alibec INJ (1991-01-05) 5 January 1991 7 1 Romania Steaua București v.  Poland, 10 June 2017
FW Adrian Popa (1988-07-24) 24 July 1988 21 3 England Reading v.  Denmark, 26 March 2017
FW Claudiu Keșerü (1986-12-02) 2 December 1986 18 5 Bulgaria Ludogorets Razgrad v.  Denmark, 26 March 2017
Notes
  • INJ = Player withdrew from the squad due to an injury
  • RET = Player who retired from national team

Most capped players

As of 15 June 2016, the ten players with the most caps for Romania are:[8][9]

# Player Career Caps Goals Ref
1 Dorinel Munteanu 1991–2007 134 16 [10]
2 Gheorghe Hagi 1983–2000 124 35 [11]
3 Gheorghe Popescu 1988–2003 115 16 [12]
4 Răzvan Raț 2002–2016 113 2 [13]
5 László Bölöni 1975–1988 102 23 [14]
6 Dan Petrescu 1989–2000 95 12 [15]
7 Bogdan Stelea 1988–2005 91 0 [16]
8 Michael Klein 1981–1991 90 5 [17]
9 Bogdan Lobonț 1998–2014 85 0 [18]
10 Marius Lăcătuș 1984–1998 83 13 [19]
Mircea Rednic 1981–1991 83 2 [20]

Top goalscorers

As of 14 November 2014, the ten players with the most goals for Romania are:

# Player Career Goals Caps Average Ref
1 Adrian Mutu 2000–2013 35 77 0.45 [21]
Gheorghe Hagi 1983–2000 35 124 0.28 [11]
3 Iuliu Bodola 1931–1939 31 48 0.64 [22]
4 Viorel Moldovan 1993–2005 25 70 0.35 [23]
Ciprian Marica 2003–2014 25 72 0.34 [24]
6 László Bölöni 1975–1988 23 102 0.22 [14]
7 Dudu Georgescu 1973–1984 21 40 0.52 [25]
Florin Răducioiu 1990–1996 21 40 0.52 [26]
Anghel Iordănescu 1971–1981 21 57 0.36 [27]
Rodion Cămătaru 1978–1990 21 73 0.28 [28]

Youngest debutants

As of 7 June 2014, the five youngest debutants for Romania are:

# Player Age Match Year Ref
1 Cristian Manea 16 years, 9 months and 22 days Romania Albania 1–0 2014 [29]
2 Grațian Sepi 17 years, 3 months and 15 days Romania Turkey 4–2 1928 [29]
3 Ilie Balaci 17 years, 6 months and 10 days France – Romania 1–0 1974 [29]
4 Nicolae Kovács 17 years, 8 months and 17 days Bulgaria – Romania 2–3 1929 [29]
5 Gheorghe Popescu I 17 years, 10 months and 14 days Romania Belgium 2–1 1937 [30]

Managers

Romania national team head to head

Last match updated was against  Chile on 13 June 2017.
Against Played Won Drawn Lost % Won
 Albania17113364.71%
 Algeria512220%
 Andorra4400100%
 Argentina612316.67%
 Armenia431075%
 Australia1100100%
 Austria1035230%
 Azerbaijan4400100%
 Belarus422050%
 Belgium1252541.67%
 Bolivia1100100%
 Bosnia and Herzegovina430175%
 Brazil30030%
 Bulgaria296101320.69%
 Cameroon10010%
 Chile2200100%
 China PR2200100%
 Colombia321066.67%
 DR Congo20200%
 Ivory Coast10010%
 Croatia40130%
 Cuba20110%
 Cyprus1393169.23%
 Czechoslovakia32781721.88%
 Czech Republic210150%
 Denmark1043340%
 Ecuador10010%
 Egypt632150%
 England1136227.27%
 Estonia430175%
 Faroe Islands6600100%
 Finland1073070%
 France1635818.75%
 Georgia752066.67%
 Germany1323815.38%
 East Germany1653831.25%
 Greece341810652.94%
 Honduras1100100%
 Hungary26781123.08%
 Iceland2200100%
 Iran20200%
 Iraq20200%
 Republic of Ireland512220%
 Israel20105550%
 Italy17251011.76%
 Japan431075%
 Kazakhstan10100%
 Latvia541080%
 Liechtenstein4400100%
 Lithuania11100190.91%
 Luxembourg6600100%
 Macedonia540180%
 Mexico210150%
 Moldova3300100%
 Montenegro211050%
 Morocco320166.67%
 Nigeria2200100%
 Netherlands131397.69%
 Northern Ireland621333.33%
 Norway1145236.36%
 Paraguay210150%
 Peru522140%
 Poland351415640%
 Portugal1142536.36%
 Russia210150%
 San Marino3300100%
 Serbia410325%
 Scotland622233.33%
 Slovakia1155145.45%
 Slovenia833237.5%
 South Korea1100100%
 Soviet Union932433.33%
 Spain1656531.25%
 Sweden823325%
  Switzerland1354438.46%
 Trinidad and Tobago1100100%
 Tunisia10100%
 Turkey25137552%
 Turkmenistan1100100%
 Ukraine631250%
 United Arab Emirates10010%
 United States421150%
 Uruguay512220%
 Wales531160%
 Yugoslavia371551740.54%
Total66729617020144.38%

See also

References

  1. Word Football Elo Ratings
  2. Word Football Elo Ratings: Romania
  3. "Yugoslavia 1 Romania 2". eu-football. 8 June 1922. Retrieved 1 November 2010.
  4. 1 2 Archived February 1, 2014, at the Wayback Machine.
  5. "FIFA World Cup 1938 – Historical Football Kits". Historicalkits.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-10-11.
  6. Egypt were to play Romania in December 1937 in the qualification round, however Egypt refused to play Romania during the Ramadan month, and as a result, Egypt were withdrawn from the competition by FIFA, so Romania qualified automatically.
  7. "Lotul României pentru meciurile cu Polonia și Chile". Federația Română de Fotbal. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
  8. "Selectii la nationala Romaniei – Peste 100". Statistici Fotbal.
  9. "Selectii la nationala Romaniei – 50–99 selectii". Statistici Fotbal.
  10. "Dorinel Munteanu". FRF.
  11. 1 2 "Gheorghe Hagi". FRF.
  12. "Gheorghe Popescu". FRF.
  13. "Răzvan Raț". FRF.
  14. 1 2 "László Bölöni". FRF.
  15. "Dan Petrescu". FRF.
  16. "Bogdan Stelea". FRF.
  17. "Michael Klein". FRF.
  18. "Bogdan Lobonț". FRF.
  19. "Marius Lăcătuș". FRF.
  20. "Mircea Rednic". FRF.
  21. "Adrian Mutu". FRF.
  22. "Iuliu Bodola". FRF.
  23. "Viorel Moldovan". FRF.
  24. "Ciprian Marica". FRF.
  25. "Dudu Georgescu". FRF.
  26. "Florin Răducioiu". FRF.
  27. "Anghel Iordănescu". FRF.
  28. "Rodion Cămătaru". FRF.
  29. 1 2 3 4 "An 86 year old record was beaten, Criatian Manea became the youngest tricolour in history". gsp.ro.
  30. "An emotionant dialog with the youngest debutant at the national team in the last 4 decades:"I want number 10!"". gsp.ro.
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