Fotbal Club Politehnica Timișoara, popularly referred as Poli Timișoara, was a Romanian football club which was established in 1921[1] and dissolved in the summer of 2012. The team had won two Romanian Cups and was twice a runner-up in Liga I.
| Full name | Fotbal Club Politehnica Timișoara | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nickname(s) | The Banat Boys, The Violets | ||
| Short name | Poli Timișoara | ||
| Founded | December 4, 1921 | ||
| Dissolved | September 3, 2012 | ||
| Ground | Dan Păltinişanu (capacity: 32,972) |
||
|
|||
Fotbal Club Politehnica Timișoara, popularly referred as Poli Timișoara, was a Romanian football club which was established in 1921[1] and dissolved in the summer of 2012. The team had won two Romanian Cups and was twice a runner-up in Liga I.
Named after and initially run by the Polytechnic University of Timişoara, the club was founded in 1921 by Traian Lalescu. After two decades spent in the regional leagues, Poli promoted in the first division in 1948. They have since spent 49 seasons at the top level, finishing as runner-ups twice and featuring in six Romanian Cup finals. In the 2010-11 season, they have finished on the second spot, but were relegated because of unpaid debts and incapacity to obtain a license for the next season.
Poli has developed rivalries with UTA Arad and Dinamo Bucureşti. The enmity with UTA stems from the natural competition between the cities of Timișoara and Arad, which are located close to each other and are the main towns in the region. Both Timișoara and Arad claim to be the first place where football was played in Romania. Poli also has a friendly fan-relationship with Rapid Bucureşti and Borussia Mönchengladbach.[2]
Contents |
The club was founded in 1921 by Polytechnic University of Timişoara under the name Societatea Sportiva Politehnica.[1] Until the second World War, Poli was outclassed by two others teams from the city, Ripensia and Chinezul, both multiple winners of the Romanian championship.[3]
The club promoted for the first time in Divizia A in 1948,[4] and played under the name CSU Timișoara in the first season.[5]
In the following seasons (from 1950[6]), the club appear with the name Știința Timișoara. The club relegates for the first time in 1951,[7] but promotes after only one year[8] and played in the top league until the season 1958–59.[9] The team promoted back after only one year.[10] The following relegation came in 1963–64 season,[11] again for only a year.[12]
During the Știința years, Timișoara won the first trophy, the 1957–58 Romanian Cup, with a 1–0 victory against Progresul Bucureşti.[13]
From 1966–67 season, the team use the name Politehnica Timișoara,[14] but the team goes to the second division in the same season.[14] Politehnica doesn't came back to the first division until 1973.[15]
Politehnica played for the first time in Europe in 1978–79 UEFA Cup, after finishing third in the 1977–78 season. The team defeated MTK Budapest (2–0 and 1–2), but lost in the second round against Honved Budapest (2–0 and 0–4).[16]
The second trophy won by Politehnica Timișoara was the 1979–80 Romanian Cup. The final was disputed against Steaua Bucureşti and the final score was 2–1, after extra time.[13] Politehnica played in UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, defeating Celtic Glasgow (1–0 and 1–2) and being defeated by West Ham United (1–0 and 0–4) in the quarterfinals.[17] They played again in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1981–82 season because the team lost the 1980–81 Romanian Cup to that year champions, Universitatea Craiova (0–6). Politehnica skipped the first round, and lost to Leipzig with 2–0 and 0–5.[17]
Politehnica Timișoara stayed in the Divizia A for ten years, until 1983.[18] The next period was spent between Divizia A and Divizia B, with promotions in 1984,[19] 1987,[20] 1989[21] and relegations in 1986 [22] and 1988.[23]
After the 1989 Revolution, Politehnica played in 1990–91 UEFA Cup, beating Atlético Madrid (2–0 and 0–1), but lost in the second round to Sporting Lisbon (2–0 and 0–7).[24] In 1992–93 UEFA Cup, Politehnica scored a draw against Real Madrid (1–1 in Timișoara), but was defeated in the next match (0–4).[24]
The team was relegated to Divizia B in 1993–94[25] and promoted back in 1995.[26] After the 1996–97 relegation,[27] the team didn't came back in the first division on competitions ground. Instead, it relegated once again, this time to the Liga III, at the end of the 2001–02 season.
In 2002, AEK Bucharest were promoted to Liga I, Romanian football's top division, for the first time,[28] whereupon Anton Doboş, the team's owner, moved it to Timișoara. It was renamed Politehnica AEK Timișoara, and received the full support of local authorities and Politehnica fans. The team was on the verge of relegation after only one year.[29] Poli was able to maintain the Liga I spot after winning a play-off against Gloria Buzău.[30]
From 2004–05 season, the team changed the name again in FCU Politehnica Timișoara.[31] From 2008, following a Court of Arbitration for Sport decision, the team changed the name in FC Timișoara. The colors and the records before 2002 were lost in favor of Politehnica Timișoara former owner, Claudio Zambon.[32]
At the end of 2007–08 Liga I, FC Timișoara qualified for UEFA Cup.[33] It was the first time in sixteen years that a team from Timișoara had achieved European qualification. The team was eliminated by Partizan Belgrade in the first round by an aggregate score of 1–3.[34]
In 2008–09, Timișoara finished the season in 2nd place, qualifying the 3rd preliminary round of the 2009–10 UEFA Champions League.[35] The team defeated the reigning UEFA Cup champions Shakhtar Donetsk, but they were eliminated from the competition during the Playoff Round by an aggregate score of 0–2 by German club VfB Stuttgart. In the 2009–10 UEFA Europa League Group A, FC Timișoara finished on the last place, after Anderlecht, Ajax and Dinamo Zagreb.[34]
After the 2009–10 Liga I, fifth placed team FC Timișoara were drawn in the third qualifying round of the Europa League against MyPa from Finland, which they surpassed 5–4 on aggregate, after a spectacular comeback from three goals down in the second leg. However, in the play-off round they were drawn against Manchester City and were defeated twice in a row, 0–1 and 0–2.[34]
In November 2010, a Romanian Court of Appeal returned the name, the colors and the record to FC Timișoara.[36] Due to rules that forbid changes of team names during a season, the team used the name FC Timișoara until the end of 2010-11 season.
Although FC Timișoara finished on the second place in the 2010–11 Liga I, the team was relegated to Liga II after the license necessary to play in the first division was denied by Romanian Football Federation.[37] They played in the 2011–12 Liga II under the name Politehnica Timișoara, and gained promotion back to 2012–13 Liga I but were suspended and relegated back to Liga II were they played until they were dissolved in September 2012. ACS Recaş was moved to Timişoara and was renamed ACS Poli Timişoara but the fans decided to support the amateur team of the Politehnica University, ASU Politehnica Timişoara.
The roots of the Poli ultras movement can be found in 1995 when groups like Urban Guerilla or Gruppo Autonomo Viola appear in the South End. Poli's most important rivalry is with UTA Arad. The match between them, Derby-ul Vestului (The West Derby), has been the leading Romanian football encounter in the last 65 years, as Poli and UTA are the two most successful football teams from west the country.
Other rivalries are shared with Dinamo Bucureşti and Steaua Bucureşti, and a minor one with Universitatea Craiova.
There is a Fraternity relationship between supporters from Rapid Bucureşti and Germans from Borussia Mönchengladbach.
| Competition | S | P | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UEFA Champions League / European Cup | 1 | 4 | 0 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 4 | – 2 |
| UEFA Cup Winners' Cup / European Cup Winners' Cup | 2 | 6 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 5 | 11 | – 6 |
| UEFA Europa League / UEFA Cup | 6 | 22 | 6 | 4 | 12 | 20 | 38 | – 18 |
| Total | 9 | 32 | 9 | 7 | 16 | 27 | 53 | – 26 |
| # | Name | Career | Matches | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Dan Păltinişanu | 1970–1985 | 271 | 24 |
| 2. | Sorin Vlaicu | 1987–2001 | 244 | 25 |
| 3. | Emerich Dembrovschi | 1966–1981 | 208 | 51 |
| 4. | Valentin Velcea | 1990–2006 | 180 | 12 |
| 5. | Iosif Rotariu | 1980–2000 | 173 | 33 |
| 6. | Dan Alexa | 2001–2011 | 138 | 5 |
| 7. | Mircea Oprea | 2000–2007 | 132 | 28 |
| 8. | Gheorghe Bucur | 2005–2010 | 124 | 52 |
(have played at least 30 matches for the club or scored a minimum of 15 goals)
|
||||||||||||||