SSC Farul Constanța

Farul Constanța
Full name Suporter Spirit Club Farul Constanța
Nickname(s) Marinarii (The Sailors)
Rechinii (The Sharks)
Founded 1949 (1949)
as Locomotiva PCA Constanța
2016 (2016)
as SSC Farul Constanța
Ground Farul
Ground Capacity 15,520
Owner Farul Supporters Association
Chairman Marcel Lică
Manager Ion Barbu
League Liga IV
2015–16 Liga II, Seria I, 5th
Website Club home page

SSC Farul Constanța (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈfarul konˈstant͡sa]) is a professional football club from Constanța, Romania that was established in 1949. The club is currently inactive after being excluded from Liga III in August 2016.[1]

In Romanian farul means "the lighthouse". Farul Constanța are also a well-known rugby union team, which hosted the first Heineken Cup rugby match.

In the summer of 2016, FC Farul was declared bankruptcy and excluded from Liga III, after the club withdrew from Liga II earlier in that summer. In an attempt to save the team, Farul supporters refounded the club as SSC Farul and enrolled it in Liga IV.[2] [3]

History

In 1949, the two football clubs of Constanţa, Dezrobirea Constanța and PCA Constanța (Porturi Comunicaţii Ape), were merged to create a new team, Locomotiva PCA Constanţa, that played in the Divizia B (the 2nd League). After the 1954 edition, the team promoted for the first time to the 1st League (Divizia A), and in 1958, the team's name was changed from Locomotiva to Farul Constanţa.

Notably, the 2004–05 Divizia A season brought for Farul some outstanding performances that enabled it to finish the season on the 5th place and reach to its first ever Romanian Cup final match, which they lost 0–1 to FC Dinamo București.

Its best achievements are reaching the fourth place in Liga I and the final of the Balkans Cup, and also winning Liga II five times along the history.

Best positions in Liga I

Chronology of names

Name [4] Period Notes
Locomotiva PCA Constanța 1949–1953 Merged between Dezrobirea Constanța and PCA Constanța (Porturi Comunicaţii Ape).
Locomotiva Constanța 1953–1958
Farul Constanța 1958–1972
FC Constanța 1972–1988
Farul Constanța 1988–present

Milestones

European Record

Competition S P W D L GF GA GD
UEFA Intertoto Cup 2116321514+ 1
Total 2 11 6 3 2 15 14 + 1

UEFA Intertoto Cup

Season Round Country Club Home Away Aggregate
1995 Group stage (8) Serbia and Montenegro Serbia and Montenegro Bečej 2–1 1st place
Poland Poland Pogoń Szczecin 2–1
France France Cannes 0–0
Belarus Belarus Dnepr 2–0
Round of 16 Netherlands Netherlands Heerenveen 0–4 0–4
2006 First round Republic of Macedonia Republic of Macedonia FK Pobeda 2–0 2–2 4–2
Second round Bulgaria Bulgaria PFC Lokomotiv Plovdiv 2–1 1–1 3–2
Third round France France AJ Auxerre 1–0 1–4 2–4

Current squad

As of 6 September 2016

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

No. Position Player
Romania GK Vladimir Neagu
Romania GK Rareș Tătar
Romania DF Ion Barbu
Romania DF Constantin Bumbac
Romania DF Cornel Ciobanu
Romania DF George Elisei
Romania DF Ionuț Iacob
Romania DF Bogdan Meleandră
Romania DF Florin Pătraşcu (Captain)
Romania DF Daniel Popa
No. Position Player
Romania DF Iulian Răvoiu
Romania MF Enghin Amet
Romania MF Cezar Beșleagă
Romania MF Ionuț Florea
Romania MF Edis Mândră
Romania MF Ionuț Măgureanu
Romania MF Daniel Ochia
Romania MF Vasile Șicu
Romania FW Alexandru Grigoraș
Romania FW Alin Mazilu

Club officials

Board of directors

Role Name
Owner Romania Farul Supporters Association
Honorary President Romania Ion Răuță
Executive President Romania Marcel Lică
Image Director Romania Sorin Tufan
Marketing Director Romania Radu Lefca
Sporting Director Romania Costel Uda

Current technical staff

Role Name
Technical Director Romania Viorel Farcaș
Manager Romania Ion Barbu
Assistant Manager Romania Gheorghe Mina

Honours

Domestic

Leagues

Liga II

Winners (5): 1954, 1957–58, 1961–62, 1980–81, 1987–88
Runners-up (2): 1979–80, 2000–01

Cups

Romanian Cup

Runners-up (1): 2004–05

European

UEFA Intertoto Cup

Runners-up (1): 2006

Balkans Cup

Runners-up (1): 1964–66

References

External links

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