AFC Rocar București

(Redirected from Rocar București)

Rocar București was a Romanian professional football club based in Bucharest, founded in 1953 and dissolved in 2009. The club had a meteoric appearance in the forefront of Romanian football. Promoted in 1999, the club from Drumul Găzarului Street in the Berceni Neighborhood, has made way back two years later. Also, Rocar reached the Cupa României final in the 2000–01 season.[1]

Rocar ANEFS București
Full nameAsociația Fotbal Club Rocar București
Nickname(s)Bercenarii
(The People from Berceni)
Short nameRocar
Founded1953
Dissolved2009
GroundANEFS
Capacity6,000

History

edit

The club was founded in 1953 under the name of Uzina de Autobuze București, being under the tutelage of the Romanian bus manufacturer with the same name, and competed in the Bucharest Municipal Championship.[2][3]

Autobuzul was promoted to Divizia C at the end of the 1967–68 season, finishing 1st in Series I of the Bucharest Municipal Championship. However, Autobuzul lost the Municipal Championship final to Voința București.[4][5]

In the first season in the third division, Bercenarii finished in 4th place, and in the following season, Autobuzul won Series IV of Divizia C but missed promotion to the second division, finishing 4th in the play-off group held in Brașov. The squad included the following players: Ocea, Pandele, Opriș, Diaconu, Baicu, Ivan, Gerea, Rențea, Tănase, Andrei, Cărbuneanu, Radu, Postelnicu, Popescu, Jipa, Bobin, Vîrban, Constantin Tiniche, Dincă, Petculescu and Pipoi.[3]

After another two seasons in Divizia C, finishing 12th in the 1970–71 season and 3rd in the 1971–72 season, Autobuzul managed to promote to Divizia B. This promotion was achieved at the end of the 1972–73 season, when the team finished in 2nd place. The club’s leadership included engineer Vasile Cornac as association president and C. Băcanu as head of the football division. Coach Emil Samureanu was responsible for this achievement, assembling a squad of players who contributed to the team's success. The team included players such as Matache, Pandele, Diaconu, Gostin, Popescu, Bobin, Radu, Cosma, Maruneac, C. Tiniche, Chiriță, Cațaros, Stănescu, Ivan, Bică, Melencovici, Nicolau, Ion Cățoi, Rențea, Dăncescu, Ghiță, Riocsan, Petculescu, and Ciferidis.[3]

Autobuzul returned to second division at the end of the 1988–89 season, finishing 1st in the Series V of Divizia C. The squad coached by Gheorghe Pareșcura was composed from following players: Ene, C. Cristescu, Marius Curelea, Roșu, Ursu, Dumitru, Dițu, Virgil Cârstea, Salami, C. Nicolae, Iliescu, Silviu Cristescu, Mihai Dărăban, Iordache, Pantelimon, Butoi, M. Ploaie, R. Voinea and Tănase.[6]

Chronology of names

edit
Name[2] Period
Uzina de Autobuze București 1953–1968
Autobuzul București 1968–1993
Rocar București 1993–2002
Rocar ANEFS București 2005–2009
  • Note: 3 years of inactivity between 2002 and 2005, and the team was refounded as Rocar ANEFS București in the Liga IV.

Stadium

edit

Rocar played its home matches on the ANEFS Stadium, Bucharest, which has a capacity of 6,000 people, previously known as Rocar Stadium.

Honours

edit

Liga II

Liga III

Bucharest Municipal Championship

Cupa României

Notable former players

edit

Former managers

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Rocar, retrogradată, dar finalistă a Cupei" [Rocar, relegated, but Cup finalist] (in Romanian). cupatimisoreana.gsp.ro. Archived from the original on 23 June 2018. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Evoluția denumirilor echipelor de-a lungul anilor" [Evolution of team names over the years] (in Romanian). romaniansoccer.ro. Archived from the original on 9 October 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  3. ^ a b c Mihai Ionescu & George Tudoran, Fotbal de la A la Z – Editura Sport-Turism 1984.
  4. ^ "S-a încheiat campionatul bucureștean de fotbal" [The Bucharest football championship has ended] (in Romanian). Informația Bucureștiului. 2 July 1968. p. 3. Archived from the original on 8 June 2023. Retrieved 1 October 2024 – via adt.arcanum.com.
  5. ^ "Voința—campioană a municipiului București la fotbal" [Voința—champion of the city of Bucharest at football] (in Romanian). Informația Bucureștiului. 7 July 1968. p. 3. Archived from the original on 1 October 2023. Retrieved 1 October 2024 – via adt.arcanum.com.
  6. ^ "Vă prezentăm noile promovate în Divizia B" [We present the new promoted in Divizia B] (PDF) (in Romanian). Sportul. 17 August 1989. p. 3. Archived (PDF) from the original on 29 September 2024. Retrieved 29 September 2024 – via bibliotecadeva.eu.