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*Rapid is the first Romanian team to reach a European inter-club cup final. Rapid went undefeated up to the 1940 [[Mitropa Cup]] final (an early precursor of the [[UEFA Champions League|European Cup]]), which was never played because of the World War II.
*Rapid is the first Romanian team to reach a European inter-club cup final. Rapid went undefeated up to the 1940 [[Mitropa Cup]] final (an early precursor of the [[UEFA Champions League|European Cup]]), which was never played because of the World War II.


==External links==
MUIE RAPID!
*{{Ro icon}} [http://www.fcrapid.ro/default.aspx Official website of the FC Rapid]
*{{Ro icon}} [http://www.rapid.com.ro/ UnOfficial website of the FC Rapid]
*{{Ro icon}} [http://www.fzr.ro/ The official supporters' website]
*{{Ro icon}} [http://www.forzarapid.ro/forum The club's largest online supporter community]
*{{Ro icon}} [http://www.rapidfans.ro/ Rapid fans website]
*{{Ro icon}} [http://www.forzarapid.ro/istorie.php The club's history, from a fan's point of view]
*{{Ro icon}} [http://www.rapidfans.ro/audio/Imn_oficial.mp3 The club's anthem] lyrics: [[Adrian Păunescu]], music: [[Victor Socaciu]]
* [http://www.liga1.ro/teaminfo.php/2/ Rapid - Liga 1]
*{{Ro icon}} [http://www.labtof.ro/diviziaa/echipa/Rapid_Bucuresti/2/ Rapid all time results in LIga 1]

{{fb start}}
{{Ro Divizia A}}
{{Football in Romania}}
{{UEFA Cup 2007-08}}
{{fb end}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Rapid Bucureşti}}
[[Category:Football (soccer) clubs established in 1923]]
[[Category:Romanian football clubs]]
[[Category:Sport in Bucharest]]
[[Category:Rapid Bucureşti]]
[[Category:Liga I clubs]]

[[de:Rapid Bukarest]]
[[fr:FC Rapid Bucarest]]
[[ko:FC 라피드 부쿠레슈티]]
[[it:Rapid Bucarest]]
[[lv:Bukarestes "Rapid"]]
[[lt:FC Rapid Bucureşti]]
[[nl:Rapid Boekarest]]
[[pl:Rapid Bukareszt]]
[[pt:Rapid Bucureşti]]
[[ro:Rapid Bucureşti]]
[[fi:Rapid Bukarest]]
[[tr:Rapid Bükreş]]

Revision as of 02:18, 20 April 2008

FC Rapid Bucureşti
File:Rapid Bucharest.png
Full nameF.C. Rapid Bucureşti
Nickname(s)Giulesteni, Feroviari founded = 25 June,1923
GroundGiuleşti Stadium, Bucharest
Capacity19,100 (temporary: 10,000)
ChairmanRomania Constantin Zotta
ManagerRomania Marian Rada
LeagueLiga I
2006-07Liga I, 4th

Fotbal Club Rapid Bucureşti is a Romanian football club . It was founded in 1923 by a group of workers of the Griviţa workshops under the name of "Cultural and Sporting Association CFR" (in Romanian: Asociaţia culturală şi sportivă C.F.R.). Rapid won the national championship war edition, of 1942, and then in 1967, 1999 and 2003 and the Romanian Cup on thirteen occasions. In 2006, Rapid became an incorporated company, its largest share-holder being George Copos, a wealthy Romanian businessman.

Club history

1923 - 1945

In June 1923, Teofil Copaci, Grigore Grigoriu, Aurel Kahane, Geza Ginzer and other Romanian railroad workers agreed the fusion of two amateur clubs, "CFR" (ex-"Rampa Militari") and "Excelsior". The team consisted mainly of railway workers in their spare time. After a few years, the team started competing in the first league in 1931.

During the pre-war years, Rapid was one of Romania's top teams, regularly winning the cup but never the championship although they came close. Once Rapid lost the championship because of fair play. One of Rapid's players touched the ball with his hand in the penalty area during a decisive match against Venus Bucharest. Rapid needed a win to finish first in the league. In the first place the referee did not see the incident but when hearing the audience protest the referee asked the player if he touched the ball with his hand, the player admitting. Venus converted the penalty and managed to draw 1-1 and to finish first in the league.

The railway workers were not the selection pool anymore, but a strong supporting audience. Some players were also selected in the national team. During those years, but also during the war, the competitions' formats changed for various reorganizations and some of the performances Rapid achieved were never considered as official successes, a good example being the championship of 1942. The strangest of all might be the qualification in the final of the Mitropa Cup (precursor of the UEFA Champions League, also won by Inter Milan) at a moment when the competition was taking its last breath.

1945 - 1970

The beginning of the communist regime brought a new series of teams and regulations, and Rapid, although luckier than other clubs (which were dismantled on the ground of bourgeoisie), went into a dark era. Repeated relegations mark an era that politically is described as Stalinization.rapid was one of the main suporters of comunism in Romania, beeing previously sponsored by the Comunist Party and supporing the party during the 1946 ellections. During the destalinisation and under Valentin Stănescu management, Rapid finally solved the issue of valuable transfers. It was the moment when the entire national team consisted of players and ex-players of Rapid. Rapid finally won the first championship officially recognized in 1967 ( making millions of supporters all over the nation happy) and also two titles in the lower-level inter-club Balkans Cup. Still, their occasional defeats against lower-level teams (such as the defeat against third division CIL Gherla), which are considered by the fans as a sign of the traditional bad luck, continued to plague their records.

1970 - 1990

In the 1970s and 1980s, Rapid reached the quarter-finals of the Cup Winners Cup before getting worse and worse, becoming confined in the second league for 6 years in a row. Even with Stănescu as coach they couldn't do better than returning to the lower ranks of the first league. The club was slowly starved, with less and less money in a championship where the leading teams were competing at a European level (in 1986, one was winning Champions Cup, although claiming non-professional status for their players). They narrowly avoided relegation in 1987 in the last match of the season.

1990 to the present

In 1990 the fall of communism brought only partial solutions, until 1992 when Traian Băsescu, then-Minister of Transportation, appointed a new manager (Marcel Puşcaş) and a new coach (Mircea Rădulescu), both experienced, which had previously worked for the national team. In the UEFA Cup, Rapid was defeated by Internazionale (1-3 and 0-2). It was the moment when George Copos started managing the Rapid business, finding strong corporate sponsorships and winning political capital.

In the following years, the most important official honors were won ( two league championships a few FA cups and the most important European achievements ) especially due to a careful appointment of coaches. The most famous coach that managed Rapid is Mircea Lucescu, the man who transformed the club into a force in the Romanian championship again. Also. his son Razvan Lucescu was the manager with the greatest performance in a European Cup with RAPID, in UEFA Cup. However, the coach that won the most trophies for the club is Mircea Rednic. Nowadays, Rapid is managed by Mircea Rednic. After a few years during which their experience in European cups was limited, Rapid is starting to perform better, and, for the third time in the post-war history, in 2005-2006, due to UEFA Cup rules relaxation, the team has reached the spring, upper-level, phases of the European competitions, up to the quarter-finals. Rapid was stopped by Steaua Bucharest after a 1-1 draw at home and a 0-0 draw away.

Previous names

  • Asociaţia culturală şi sportivă Căile Ferate Române (Romanian Railways cultural and sportive association) Bucureşti (1923-1937),
  • F.C. Rapid Bucureşti (1937-1945),
  • C.F.R. Bucureşti (1945-1950),
  • Locomotiva Bucureşti (1950-1958),
  • Rapid Bucureşti (1958-2004),
  • F.C. Rapid Bucureşti (2004-2006).
  • S.C. Rapid S.A. Bucuresti (2006-present)

Supporters

Rapid supporters make an important part of the club's image. They are commonly referred as Legione Granata (The Crimson Legion), although this is a generalization, stemming from the groups assisting at home games in the North Terrace of the stadium. Those groups presence is signaled by banners bearing their names: Ultras Unione, B'921, Official Hooligans, Inferno, Maniacs, Grant Ultras and so on. Traveling with the team for away matches being a custom since the first years of the club, local derbies being no exception.

Immediately after the fall of the communist regime, on 14 February 1990, the Rapid Supporters League (Liga suporterilor rapidisti, LSR) was legally established. A unique organization in Romania is the Rapid Aristocratic Club. The club's members are well-known artists, their purpose being spreading and defending Rapid's history and tradition.

Rapid's supporters are creating some of the most impressive shows in Romanian sport singing most of the time during matches and sometimes before the matches start[citation needed]. The most impressive moment in the Giulesti Stadium is when Rapid's anthem is being played at the beginning of each match and every supporter is standing on their feet, waving a flag in the colors of the club or displaying a white and crimson scarf and singing along.

Rivalries

Rapid's greatest rivalries are with Steaua & Dinamo from Bucharest. Matches between the three Bucharest rivals often end up with clashes between the rival supporters after or before the match in which the police force is caught in the middle. Other rivalries are with Petrolul from Ploiesti. Rapid supporters consider Poli Timisoara supporters as their allies.

Stadium

North stand

The history of Giulesti Stadium begins in the year 1934. On the 31 of March CFR begins the construction of a field on the Giulesti Road. The field would have a width of 65 m and a length of 105 m.

At first the mayor of Bucharest did not want to authorize the construction of the stadium because it did not fit in the systematization of the capital. Eventually the authorization was given and in April 1936 it was estimated that the stadium would be ready in September. The construction did begin in that year but it lasted more than two. The chief architect was Gheorghe Dumitrescu.

The stadium was inaugurated on 10 June 1939. At the time, it was the most modern stadium in Romania, a smaller replica of Arsenal's Highbury Stadium with a capacity of 12160 seats. Among the guests at the opening ceremony King Carol II of Romania, Prince Mihai of Romania and Prince Paul of Greece.

The construction of the north stand was ended in the mid 90's, the capacity being increased to 19100 seats. The ground was changed in 2003, being considered the best in Romania at the time [1]. The floodlight was installed in the summer of 2000. The stadium got the name of "Valentin Stănescu" in 2001, in respect to the manager who won the second champion title for Rapid, but it is still commonly known as "The Giuleşti Stadium", by the name of the neighborhood it is located in. Landmarks near the stadium: Podul Grant, Giuleşti Theatre, Gara de Nord and Griviţa Railway Yards .

Currently, the stadium should be in the middle of a repair process, that determines two stands to be completely shut, reducing its capacity to 10000 seats.

Near the stadium is the Sala Polivalenta Rapid (Rapid Polivalent Hall) which belongs to CS Rapid Bucharest (Rapid's sections for volleyball, handball, basketball and so on).

Major honors

Anthem

In 1980, after an amateur football game played by the journalists of the Flacăra Magazine on the Giuleşti Stadium, two of them (Adrian Păunescu and Victor Socaciu) decided to reward the generosity of being accepted on the field. The lyrics were written in less than half an hour, while Victor Socaciu was finding the melody line. It was first rendered after only a few days at the stadium's loudspeaking station, at the beginning of the next official fixture.

Since then, four of the verses were removed, some to accommodate the clubs' name change and some because of their political connotations.

The anthem grew in popularity during the spring of 2006, along with the club's performance in the UEFA Cup. In the same period, a version sang by the players was released.

Here is the translated version of the official Rapid anthem:

We are everywere at home,
The gates open in front of us,
No team is as beautiful
And loved like Rapid.
Rapid, Rapid, fight if you love us, Rapid, Rapid, go go Rapid-Giuleşti!
The heart beating in our chest,
When needed, it's a cannon
For only one justice,
Let the best team win!
Rapid, Rapid, fight if you love us, Rapid, Rapid, go go Rapid-Giuleşti!
Don't give up for a moment,
Learn this refrain,
Our team's anthem,
The voice of the train wheels.
Rapid, Rapid, fight if you love us, Rapid, Rapid, go go Rapid-Giuleşti!

Notable former players

Year of debut at Rapid in parenthesis

Current squad

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Romania ROU Dănuţ Coman
4 DF Belgium BEL Philippe Léonard
5 DF Romania ROU Ionuţ Cristian Stancu
6 FW Portugal POR Vasco Matos
7 FW Brazil BRA Cesinha
8 MF Romania ROU Stefan Grigorie
9 FW Serbia SRB Ranko Despotović
10 MF Romania ROU Emil Dică
11 FW Cameroon CMR Pierre Boya
12 GK Romania ROU Andrei Daniel Marinescu
13 FW Romania ROU Lucian Dorin Răduţă
14 DF Romania ROU Dănuţ Perjă
15 MF Romania ROU Costin Lazăr
16 MF Romania ROU Ovidiu Herea
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 MF Romania ROU Nicolae Grigore
19 FW Romania ROU Daniel Pancu
20 FW Romania ROU Lucian Burdujan
21 DF Romania ROU Cristian Săpunaru
23 DF Romania ROU Marius Constantin
24 DF Romania ROU Vasile Maftei (captain)
25 DF Montenegro MNE Vladimir Božović
27 FW Romania ROU Ionuţ Dobroiu
29 FW Romania ROU Mugurel Buga
30 FW Portugal POR João Paulo
99 GK Brazil BRA Elinton Andrade
MF Romania ROU Romeo Stancu

Squad Changes during the 2007/08 Season

In
Out

Trivia

  • The crimson color was chosen when Grigore Grigoriu's wife hand-made the first jerseys. She had to wash them and the other option, white, meant too much work for her.
  • Rapid qualified in the 1940 final of the Mitropa Cup only through a draw, after both games against Gradjanski HSK Zagreb ended 0-0. The penalty shoot-out wasn't invented yet.
  • On 15 May, 1938, Rapid qualified in the finals of the Romanian Cup, after defeating Venus Bucureşti 2-1. In the evening, after the celebration, four players from Rapid were retained by police, supposedly on the orders of Gabriel Marinescu, honorable chairman of Venus and chief of the Bucharest police force. The next day, Rapid manager Bauer Ardeleanu asked for a replay, claiming that Rapid won only because referees were unfair. Venus accepted and the jailed players were freed. Baratki and Auer, two of the four, pledged to score two goals each. On 21 May they fulfilled their promise, and Rapid won again, 4-2.
  • Rapid is the team holding the record of audience for a second league match in Romania. It happened in 1980, against F.C. Progresul Bucuresti, when Rapid lost 1-3 in front of over 50000 fans. That year, Rapid missed promotion by two points, just behind the same Progresul Bucuresti.
  • When Rapid promoted in 1983, its first goal was announced as "After six years and 38 minutes, Rapid scores!". This reflected the common view that Rapid was unfairly relegated and they wished to blank-out the six years spent in second league.
  • Rapid is the first Romanian team to reach a European inter-club cup final. Rapid went undefeated up to the 1940 Mitropa Cup final (an early precursor of the European Cup), which was never played because of the World War II.

External links

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