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Florin Răducioiu
Romanian footballer

Florin Răducioiu

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Romanian footballer
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Bucharest
Age
54 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Florin Valeriu Răducioiu (born 17 March 1970 in Bucharest) is a Romanian former football striker, who played for Dinamo Bucureşti, A.C. Milan, Brescia Calcio, West Ham United, RCD Espanyol, VfB Stuttgart and AS Monaco.
He played for Romania at the 1990 FIFA World Cup hosted by Italy, the 1994 FIFA World Cup in the United States, and England's UEFA Euro 1996.

Club career

Răducioiu was a product of Dinamo Bucureşti. Mircea Lucescu, former Dinamo coach, saw his skills and, as a feature of his philosophy towards football to promote young players, gave Răducioiu the chance to play at the highest level at the age of 17 years.

By the beginning of 1988–1989, Răducioiu was first-choice in Lucescu's team. He made an impressive debut in European football by reaching the quarterfinals of the 1988–89 Cup Winners' Cup (ousted by U.C. Sampdoria in the quarterfinals, on away goals) and finishing second in the league. By 1989–90, Răducioiu was one of Romania's finest players, and that year was to be the most significant of his early career. He won the Romanian championship and the cup (hat-trick in the final against Steaua), reaching the semifinals of the 1989–90 Cup Winners' Cup, where Dinamo was defeated by RSC Anderlecht.

After two seasons in Serie A, Răducioiu joined A.C. Milan in 1993–94, making only seven appearances and scoring two goals, but winning the UEFA Champions League. In 1994 he went to Spain to play for RCD Espanyol.

Having scored his country's only goal in Euro96 manager Harry Redknapp signed him for West Ham United in 1996. Most famously, he scored a goal against Manchester United after being criticized by Harry Redknapp for going shopping with his wife at Harvey Nichols on a previous match day; a claim Răducioiu denies. Despite showing promise, he never adapted to the pace and competitive nature of the English game, making no real impact at Upton Park. He scored three goals during his spell with the Hammers. In addition to his goal against Manchester United he scored against Stockport County in the League Cup and Sunderland in the league. After his short underachieving spell at the East London club, having fallen out with manager Redknapp, he was transferred back to Espanyol, having scored just two goals in the Premier League.

Răducioiu retired in 2004, after a short stint with modest French side US Créteil-Lusitanos. He had a short spell as a sports agent and as sporting director at Dinamo Bucharest.

He is one of the two professional football players (alongside Christian Poulsen) to have plied his trade in the top five European leagues (England, Spain, Germany, Italy and France).

International career

Răducioiu debuted for Romania in a friendly game against Israel on 25 April 1990, playing for 58 minutes before he was replaced. Răducioiu made his FIFA World Cup debut in 1990 against the Soviet Union at the Stadio San Nicola in Bari, aged 20. Appearing in three games for Romania, he finished the tournament without scoring, and Romania fell to the Republic of Ireland in the second round, in a penalty shootout. Răducioiu had to wait until the last game of 1990 to score his first goal. He scored for Romania in a 6–0 victory over San Marino on 5 December in a qualifying match for Euro 1992, only to double his account in the next game in San Marino, as the Romanians won 3–1.

The year 1993 would be significantly more successful for Răducioiu internationally, as he scored two goals against Czechoslovakia in Košice, even though Romania lost 5–2. Răducioiu's second goal came in the 55th minute, to tie the game at 2–2. However, Slovak player Peter Dubovsky scored a second half hat trick to beat Romania. His first goal came just four minutes after Răducioiu's second, and in the final eight minutes, Dubosky scored twice to win the game, even though the Czechoslovak had had two players sent off.

An even greater success for Răducioiu would come three months later when in Toftir, he managed to score all four of Romania's goals against the Faroe Islands, becoming the first Romanian player to score four goals for the national team in modern times, a record equaled only by Gheorghe Popescu in 1997 against Liechtenstein.

Răducioiu also scored a penalty kick against Belgium in the qualifiers for the 1994 World Cup. In the last group game of qualifying, he scored another goal against Wales finishing a nice team effort after a pass from Ilie Dumitrescu. This late goal, coming in the 83rd minute, sent Romania to the top of its group from the potential third place in the case that the game had ended 1–0, and subsequently to the 1994 World Cup.

At the 1994 FIFA World Cup, Răducioiu scored two goals against Colombia during the qualifying round. In the quarterfinal against Sweden, he first equalized Sweden's 0–1 lead in the 88th minute of regular time, taking the game to extra time, where he put Romania ahead 2–1 in the first period. Shortly thereafter, Sweden's Stefan Schwarz was sent off after his second yellow card, but despite this Kennet Andersson equalized the game in the 115th minute, leading to a shootout. Răducioiu scored Romania's first penalty attempt after Sweden had missed its first, but Romania was eliminated after missing two attempts out of six. Still, Răducioiu's four tournament goals helped Romania to its most successful World Cup campaign ever.

At the Euro 1996, as Romania lost all three group stage matches, Răducioiu netted the nation's only goal, in a 1–2 loss against Spain.

International goals

Scores and results list Romania's goal tally first. "Score" column indicates the score after the player's goal.
#DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
15 December 1990Stadionul Naţional, Bucharest, Romania San Marino3–06–0UEFA Euro 1992 Qualifying
227 March 1991Stadio Olimpico, Serravalle, San Marino San Marino2–13–1UEFA Euro 1992 Qualifying
329 November 1992Neo GSZ Stadium, Larnaca, Cyprus Cyprus2–04–1FIFA World Cup 1994 Qualifying
42 June 1993Všešportový areál, Košice, Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia1–12–5FIFA World Cup 1994 Qualifying
52 June 1993Všešportový areál, Košice, Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia2–22–5FIFA World Cup 1994 Qualifying
68 September 1993Svangaskarð, Toftir, Faroe Islands Faroe Islands1–04–0FIFA World Cup 1994 Qualifying
78 September 1993Svangaskarð, Toftir, Faroe Islands Faroe Islands2–04–0FIFA World Cup 1994 Qualifying
88 September 1993Svangaskarð, Toftir, Faroe Islands Faroe Islands3–04–0FIFA World Cup 1994 Qualifying
98 September 1993Svangaskarð, Toftir, Faroe Islands Faroe Islands4–04–0FIFA World Cup 1994 Qualifying
1013 October 1993Stadionul Ghencea, Bucharest, Romania Belgium1–02–1FIFA World Cup 1994 Qualifying
1117 November 1993Cardiff Arms Park, Cardiff, Wales Wales2–12–1FIFA World Cup 1994 Qualifying
1218 June 1994Rose Bowl, Pasadena, United States Colombia1–03–1World Cup 1994 Group A
1318 June 1994Rose Bowl, Pasadena, United States Colombia3–13–1World Cup 1994 Group A
1410 July 1994Stanford Stadium, Stanford, United States Sweden1–12–2World Cup 1994 Quarter-finals
1510 July 1994Stanford Stadium, Stanford, United States Sweden2–12–2World Cup 1994 Quarter-finals
167 September 1994Stadionul Ghencea, Bucharest, Romania Azerbaijan3–03–0UEFA Euro 1996 Qualifying
1729 March 1995Stadionul Ghencea, Bucharest, Romania Poland1–12–1UEFA Euro 1996 Qualifying
1826 April 1995Hüseyin Avni Aker Stadium, Trabzon, Turkey Azerbaijan1–04–1UEFA Euro 1996 Qualifying
1926 April 1995Hüseyin Avni Aker Stadium, Trabzon, Turkey Azerbaijan3–14–1UEFA Euro 1996 Qualifying
2026 April 1995Hüseyin Avni Aker Stadium, Trabzon, Turkey Azerbaijan4–14–1UEFA Euro 1996 Qualifying
2118 June 1996Elland Road, Leeds, England Spain1–11–2UEFA Euro 1996 Group B

Honours

Club

Dinamo Bucureşti
  • Romanian League: 1989–90
  • Romanian Cup: 1985–86, 1989–90
AC Milan
  • Serie A: 1993–94
  • Supercoppa Italiana: 1993
  • UEFA Champions League: 1993–94
  • Intercontinental Cup: Runner-up 1993
VfB Stuttgart
  • UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: Runner-up 1997–98

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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