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CSM Jiul Petroșani

Jiul Petroșani
Full nameClubul Sportiv Municipal Jiul Petroșani
Nickname(s)
  • Minerii (The Miners)
  • Jiuliștii (The People from Jiu Valley)
  • Petroșenenii (The People from Petroșani)
  • Alb-Negrii (The White and Blacks)
Short nameJiul
Founded3 August 1919; 105 years ago (1919-08-03)
as CAM Petroșani
GroundPetre Libardi
Capacity15,500
OwnerPetroșani Municipality
ChairmanRadu Polifronie
ManagerGabriel Radu
LeagueLiga III
2023–24Liga III, Seria VII, 8th
Websitehttps://csmjiulpetrosani.ro/

Clubul Sportiv Municipal Jiul Petroșani, commonly known as Jiul Petroșani, simply as Jiul, is a professional football club based in Petroșani, Hunedoara County, founded in 1919 under the name of CAM Petroșani. Jiul Petroșani is one of the oldest active clubs in Romania. Founded before teams such as Steaua București, Dinamo București or Rapid București, Jiul, at its best, was ranked 2nd (1924–25) in the top-flight. For most of its existence, Jiul has been a constant presence in the first two tiers of the Romanian football league system, making it a traditional club[clarification needed] in the country. In 1990, the closure of the Jiu Valley mines, the main engine of the local economy, led to the decay of Jiul, annually putting the team in danger of bankruptcy.

History

1919–1937: Foundation and early years

Chart showing the progress of Jiul's league finishes from 1934 to the present

Football was introduced to Jiu Valley in the early 20th century and was initially played in Petroșani at the present-day location of the Dâlja mine. Despite distrust and hostility from local coal miners, whose trade drove the local economy, a club was officially organized by Ion Winklehner, general manager of the Petroșani Society mines, under the name Clubul Atletic al Minelor Petroșani (Petroșani Mines Athletic Club) (CAMP). Early coaches included Iosif Keiling, Carol Krausz, Wilhelm Spitzer, and János Kovezdi.

In 1922, CAMP entered the District of Arad championship, where they played against teams from the Hunedoara Region. The club's owners brought in players from outside of Petroșani to make them a competitive team — these players included Iosif Klein, L. Kiminich, Adalbert Dankó, and Z. Veszprémy. In its first season, CAMP ranked third after AAC Arad and CS Vulcan. In the 1924-25 edition, they won the championship, now under the name Uniunea Cluburilor Sportive ale Societății Petroșani (Sports Club Association of Petroșani Society) (UCASP), adopted after merging with CS Vulcan in 1924. UCASP participated in the final stage of the 1924–25 Divizia A season after eliminating Universitatea Cluj and Jahn Cernăuți, but lost the final (1–5) against Chinezul Timișoara. Gheorghe Péterffy, Elemér Berkessy, and Ștefan Messner joined the team.

After the merger with CS Vulcan was reversed in 1926, UCASP merged with Jiul Lupeni and adopted its name. New standout players included Ioan Kiss and Aurel Guga. They participated in the national final of the 1927-28 season but lost (2–3) on 29 July 1928 against Colțea Brașov. This merger was also reversed and in 1929, Petroșani's team took on the name Jiul, inspired by the Jiu River, which passes through the city.[1][2]

Name Period
CAM Petroșani 1919–1924
UCAS Petroșani 1924–1926
Jiul Lupeni 1926–1929
Jiul Petroșani 1929–1950
Partizanul Petroșani 1950
Flacăra Petroșani 1951–1952
Minerul Petroșani 1953–1958
Jiul Petroșani 1958–1962
Jiul Petrila 1962–1966
Jiul Petroșani 1966–present

Due to the popularity of Divizia A, which began in 1932–33, a second league, Divizia B, was established. The 1934–35 season began with five series based on geographic criteria. Jiul Petroșani was ranked 1st in the second series of Divizia B's first season. Rules at the time stated that a promotion tournament would be held between the winners of the five series. Jiul Petroșani won the tournament and went on to play a promotion/relegation playoff game against the bottom-ranked team, AMEFA Arad, in Divizia A, finishing 0–2 at Arad and 0–0 at home. Jiul Petroșani's top players at this point included Gusti Emerich, Géza Medve, Remus Radu, Szulle, Gheorghe Péterffy, and Gheorghe Vâjdea.

The 1936–37 season came with the introduction of Divizia C, the third tier, meaning that four teams from the two series in Divizia B were promoted. These teams were Phoenix Baia Mare, Vulturii Textila Lugoj, Olimpia Satu Mare, and Jiul Petroșani. Coach Rudolf Jeny led the team, including players Kiss, Bredan, Zastulka, and Gheorghe Vâjdea, into the club's first season in Divizia A.

1937–1966: Years of consolidation

Jiul Petroșani (1965–1966)

Until the end of World War II, Jiul Petroșani oscillated between Divizia A (1937–38) and Divizia B (1938–41). Top players remained static: Gheorghe Vâjdea, Gusti Emmerich, and Géza Medve, along with Ernest Skovrán, who also played for Romania B. The club won the 2nd series of the second league at the end of the 1940-41 season but the championship was interrupted by the war and was put on hold until 1946. Jiul Petroșani advanced back to Divizia A. In the 1948-49 season, Jiul Petroșani achieved its best performance yet: they placed 3rd in the league after ICO Oradea and CFR București, despite having completed the prior season in 10th place. The success was due in part to acquiring Ion Panait, Costică Marinescu, and Tudor Paraschiva. Tiberiu Bone was also part of this squad.

Between 1950 and 1956, Divizia A played by the Soviet model in a spring-autumn system. The club continued ranking in the middle of league for several years under coaches Ion "Jean" Lăpușneanu and Andrei Sepci and with players Aurel Crâsnic, Tudor Paraschiva, Ștefan Coidum, Iuliu Farkaș I, and Ion Panait. At the end of the 1959–60 season, however, they were relegated back to Divizia B after 13 years in Divizia A. The squad only spent one season there before being promoted again under Coach Bazil Marian after defeating CSM Baia Mare in the series championship. After returning to Divizia A for the 1961-62 season, they were sent back down for the 1962–66 seasons. The squad focused on strengthening itself during that period and acquired players such as Florea Martinovici, Cornel Pavlovici, Emil Dumitriu, Petre Libardi, and Andrei Stocker. Coach Eugen Mladin took them back to the top league for the 1966-67 season.

1966–1985: Golden Team

Jiul Petroșani (1973–1974), team that won the 1974 Romanian Cup

Jiul Petroșani spent eight years in Divizia A, jumping between positions: 8th in 1966-67 and 1967-68; 6th in 1968-69; 7th in 1969-70; 13th in 1970-71; 12th in 1971-72; 10th in 1972-73; and 15th in 1973-1974. Under Coach Traian Ivănescu, however, the squad — including players Ion Nițu, Gogu Tonca, Andrei Stocker, Alexandru Nagy, Petre Libardi, Árpád Szűcs, Gheorghe Mulțescu, Adalbert Rozsnyai, and Mihai Stoichiță — defeated Politehnica Timișoara 4–2 in the 1973–74 Romanian Cup final and brought home the trophy for the first time.[3] They were eligible for the European Cup for the first time but lost 2–3 in the first round on aggregate against Dundee United.[4] Jiul Petroșani remained in the first league and jumped up to 5th place in the 1976-77 season under Coach Gheorghe Ene and with players including Iosif Cavai, Dragu Bădin, Grigore Ciupitu, Augustin Deleanu, Traian Stoica, Ionel Augustin, Gheorghe Mulțescu, and Florea Dumitrache

After losing their original stadium after a fire in 1975, the team's new stadium opened in Lunca Jiului park in 1982. At the end of the 1984-85 season, however, Jiul Petroșani was relegated back to the second league after 19 seasons. Three of the team's coaches were sacked and 24 players used, many of them suspected of match fixing.

1985–2002: Ups and downs

Jiul Petroșani (1995–1996), team that obtained the 1996 historical promotion

Jiul Petroșani continued to oscillate between leagues over the next 15 years. While Coach Gheorghe Mulțescu, a former Jiul player, got the team promoted back to Divizia A following the 1985-86 season, they fell again in 1987. They remained in Divizia B for two years until 1988-1989, when they were promoted. The two subsequent years in the first league were the height of players like Ioan Varga, Marian Bâcu, Horațiu Lasconi, Aristică Cioabă, Ion Sburlea, and Damian Militaru. At the end of the 1990-91 season, however, not only were they relegated, but they also spent several seasons in the middle of Divizia B, with 13th place in 1993-94 and 7th place in 1994-95. The team managed to turn itself around following the intervention of Miron Cozma, leader of the Miners Union League of the Jiu Valley.[5]

Under Coach Ion "Liță" Dumitru and with standout players Leontin Toader, Aristică Cioabă, Marin Tudorache, and Fănel Țîră, Jiul Petroșani returned to the first league for the 1995-96 season.[6] Ion Bivolaru, Cristian Pușcaș, Romulus Bealcu, Tudorel Zamfirescu and Tiberiu Csik joined the club over the next two years. Jiul was relegated at the end of 1997-98 with its most crushing defeat in club history: they finished the season with 10 points and only three victories out of 34 matches. Club ownership changed hands over the next several seasons and the team struggled; even after hiring experienced coach Ioan Sdrobis, Jiul Petroșani was further relegated to Divizia C for the first time in its history at the end of the 2001–02 season.[7]

2002–2007: The last shine of the miners

Jiul Petroșani squad before a match against Politehnica Iași at the last season of the club in the first league

Despite its disastrous 2001-02 season, Jiul Petroșani only spent one year in Divizia C, winning the sixth series with 8 points over CS Certej. In 2003-04, Jiul Petroșani continued to push forward with determination and finished 2nd, just one point behind CFR Cluj. They finished the subsequent season in the third series tied with Gaz Metan Mediaș and were promoted back to Divizia A due to their better goal average. Coach Gheorghe Borugă's team advanced with players like Dumitru Hotoboc, Cătălin Mulțescu, Cornel Irina, Iosif Kalai, Mihai Pintilii, Szabolcs Perenyi, Vasile Ciocoi, Mircea Voicu, Damian Militaru, Gabriel Apetri, Adrian Drida, Adrian Dulcea, and Marian Pâcleșan.

The next two seasons saw a number of administrative changes and issues within the team and the club went through two different coaches: Ionuț Chirilă followed by Aurel Șunda. Despite acquiring Alin Paleacu, Florentin Dumitru, Alin Ilin, and Laurențiu Diniță, Jiul Petroșani finished 18th at the very bottom of the league with 20 points and the longest winless run (12 games) of the season. They returned to the second league, now called Liga II.

2007–present: Financial problems and the decline

The decline of the mining industry in the Jiu Valley, the relegation, and internal drama saw the team struggle for several years, especially financially. Player Mihai Lungan accused Alin Simota, owner of Jiul Petroșani, of sending his bodyguards to beat him up after Lungan attempted to terminate his contract.[8] The club returned to the middle of the second league, placing 6th in 2007–08, 10th in 2008–09, and 16th in 2009–10 after being excluded from the championship.[9] The exclusion put even more financial strain on the already stretched-thin budget and Jiul Petroșani dropped down to Liga IV for the 2010-11 season. They finished at the top of the league, five points above Minerul Uricani in 2nd, but lost 0–1 in the promotion match against Flacăra Făget from Timis County.[10][11] Despite this, Jiul was able to join Liga III due to a shortage of teams and finished 5th.

Alin Simota left the team during the 2012-13 winter break, designating its ownership to the Petroșani Municipality. The city, however, refused to take over and Jiul was forced to withdraw from Liga III and re-join Liga IV. In 2014, the club was moved to the government-owned Municipal Sports Club and funding became even scarcer. As such, they have continued to struggle, placing 8th in 2013–14, 9th in 2014–15, 13th in 2015–16, 9th in 2016–17, 12th in 2017–18 and 9th in 2018–19. Despite the changes during the COVID-19 pandemic and finishing 12th in the 2019-20 season, Jiul Petroșani was promoted and finished 8th in the seventh round of Liga III's 2020-21 season. They managed to stay within the third league during the 2021-22 season but have qualified for the play-out round in 2022-23.

Grounds

Stadium

Destruction of the first stadium

Fire at Stadionul Jiul (25 May 1975)

The first Stadionul Jiul was built in 1922 and was used until it caught fire on 25 May 1975 .

The Jiul Petroșani sports club has had two stadiums over time, and the current one would never have been built (perhaps just improved the old one) if not for an incident. This happened on May 25, 1975, at the single-stand stadium that had lasted almost since its foundation, more precisely since 1922 . On that day, a match was scheduled with FC Politehnica Iași, which was announced to be extremely tense due to the critical situation in which the miners were relegated from Division A. The match was led by the Bucharest referee Gh. Limona, who gave the start and the dispute proceeded normally until the 14th minute when the 53-year-old tribune caught fire, and the management was forced to start the construction of a stadium again. On the site of the old stadium are now the "Petroșani" Hotel and the "Carol Schreter" Central Park.

Current stadium

The new stadium became unique in Romania in 1981, and was the only one with two stands + the official one completely covered until the inauguration of the arenas in Cluj, Ploiesti and Bucharest. It was improved to new standards after the recent promotion to the Romanian Superliga in 2005, when the entire surface was covered with plastic seats, a training ground was illuminated and the press stand benefited from sockets and internet access. The construction still had an electronic scoreboard installed (quite old), an athletics track placed around the field, and four training fields belonging to the sports complex. Originally, the stadium had a capacity of 30,000 seats, but this was reduced to 15,500 seats as a result of the renovation in 2005, during which the old benches were replaced with seats. The stadium was renamed Stadionul Petre Libardi, in the honor of Petre Libardi, former captain of Jiul, on the club's 100-year anniversary in 2019.[12]

Honours

Domestic

Leagues

Cups

European

Balkans Cup

European record

Season Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1974–75 European Cup Winners' Cup First round Scotland Dundee United 2–0 0–3 2–3

Players

First team squad

As of 10 September 2024

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules, some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Romania ROU Leonard Mureșan
2 DF Romania ROU Mario Geană
3 DF Romania ROU Andru Lovas
4 DF Romania ROU David Petruț
5 MF Romania ROU Alexandru Giurică
6 MF Romania ROU Remus Sandu (Captain)
7 MF Romania ROU Vlad Toma
8 MF Romania ROU Cătălin Sajin
9 FW Romania ROU Vlăduț Buțurcă (Vice-Captain)
10 FW Romania ROU Aurel June
11 MF Romania ROU Andrei Gogescu
12 GK Romania ROU Jan Turiță
No. Pos. Nation Player
13 MF Romania ROU Albert Stoenică
14 MF Romania ROU Ciprian Iftimie
15 MF Romania ROU Emanuel Jinga
16 DF Romania ROU Ștefan Moraru
17 MF Romania ROU Răzvan Covaci
20 FW Romania ROU Andrei Istrate
22 DF Romania ROU Alexandru Pătlăgică
23 MF Romania ROU Răzvan Rotea
25 MF Romania ROU Ianis Istrate
26 DF Romania ROU Dacian Dunca
33 DF Romania ROU Mathias Hondorocu
36 DF Romania ROU Cristian Pruteanu

Out of loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules, some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
No. Pos. Nation Player

Club officials

League history

Notable former players

The footballers enlisted below have had international cap(s) for their respective countries at junior and/or senior level and/or more than 100 caps for CSM Jiul Petroșani.

Notable former managers

References

  1. ^ "Istoric "JIUL" PETROȘANI si INSIGNELE SALE" (in Romanian). valeajiului.blogspot.ro. 30 January 2013. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  2. ^ "Jiul Petroșani, echipa-fanion a Văii Jiului și cel mai important club minier din istoria fotbalului românesc" (in Romanian). Sport Magazin Ripensia. 23 June 2016. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  3. ^ "Jiul Petroșani în Cupa României 1974" (in Romanian). Gazeta de deimineata. 27 May 2012. Archived from the original on 4 September 2012.
  4. ^ "Clubul Sportiv Jiul Petroșani" (in Romanian). Enciclopedia României. 19 August 2015. Retrieved 6 October 2015.
  5. ^ "Ion Iliescu, Petre Roman si Miron Cozma au fost trimisi in judecata in Dosarul Mineriadei. Ce acuzatii li se aduc" (in Romanian). Știrile Pro TV. 13 June 2017. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  6. ^ "Episodul 21. Ediția 1995–96. Promovarea lui Cozma" (in Romanian). Gazeta de dimineata. 17 July 2012. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  7. ^ "Episodul 27. Ediția 2001–2002 "Obiectiv" îndeplinit: retrogradarea în Divizia "C"!" (in Romanian). Gazeta de dimineata. 30 July 2012. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  8. ^ "Lungan, snopit în bătaie de oamenii lui Simota". Arena Vâlceană. 14 August 2007. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  9. ^ "OFICIAL! Jiul Petroșani a fost exclusă din Liga 2" (in Romanian). Liga 2. 24 March 2010. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  10. ^ Juglea, Loredana (6 June 2011). "Jiul, campioană județeană" (in Romanian). Liga 2. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  11. ^ Biholari, Cornel (16 June 2011). "Flacăra a evaporat Jiul!" (in Romanian). Liga 2. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  12. ^ "Stadionul Jiul va purta numele "Petre Libardi"" [Jiul Stadium will be called "Petre Libardi"] (in Romanian). Avantulliber.ro. 21 June 2019. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
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