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Aurel Guga

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Aurel Guga
Personal information
Full name Aurel Guga
Date of birth (1898-08-10)10 August 1898[1]
Place of birth Temeskubin, Austria-Hungary
Date of death 7 November 1936(1936-11-07) (aged 38)
Place of death Timişoara, Timiş, Romania
Position(s) Forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1919–1920 Vulturii Lugoj
1920–1925 U Cluj
1925 Gloria CFR Arad
1926–1927 UCAS Petroşani
1927–1929 Jiul Lupeni
1929–1930 U Cluj
International career
1922–1928 Romania 12 (4)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Aurel Guga (10 August 1898 – 7 November 1936) was a Romanian football player. Regarded as one of the most talented and versatile players of the early 1920s, Guga was the first captain of the Romania football team.[2]

Early life

Born in Temeskubin (Cuvin) in what is now Serbia on 10 August 1898,[1] with other sources claiming that he was born in 1900,[2] Guga finished high school in Oravița, before moving to Lugoj.[2] Because of World War I he could not start playing football until 1919, when he was 21. He started at the local club, Vulturii Lugoj, but stayed only one year because he wanted to apply for the Commercial Academy from Cluj.[2]

Career

After his arrival in Cluj, he joined U Cluj, a club formed one year earlier by the "Sports Society of University Students". At the time, he only played with his team in local competitions since there was not any football championship at a national level. In January 1922, a Viennese newspaper dedicated a full-page article to him, calling him "an exceptional forward player".[2]

Sometime in October or November 1923, U Cluj got to play its first tournament abroad, at the invitation of the Grenoble municipality for the opening of their new stadium.[2] U Cluj first played in Lyon, with a local team, managing to win with 5-2; Aurel Guga scored three times. The next day, the French press wrote that "he is a world-class player".[2] Since there were rumors at the times about a friendly between the England national team and a team of selected players from the continent, Guga was proposed by the French to play for Europe.[2] In Grenoble, U Cluj beat the French, winning with 3-0, with Guga scoring twice.[2]

After he graduated from college in 1925, the press wrote that "the excellent international Romanian player will settle in Timișoara, very likely signing with one of the local teams."[3] However, there are no official documents to confirm that he actually played for Timișoara. Instead, in November, he started playing for Gloria CFR Arad, helping his team finishing second in the Regional Championship.[4] Sometime in March 1926, he joined UCAS Petroşani,[5] the vice-champion team at the time, but retired from all the competitions that season. From 1927 he had a two-year spell in Lupeni, playing for local Jiul, and in 1929, he returned in Cluj, to play for the last time for the club that made him famous.[2] In 1930, he was officially retired.

On 8 November 1936, Gazeta Sporturilor reported that the day before, Guga was involved in a car accident. He lost control of his car, fell into the Bega Channel, and drowned.[6]

As Ioan Chirilă recalls in his book:

Guga was one of the finest players this land ever gave, our land. And maybe the most complete. And the most modern.[7]

International career

Aurel Guga captained the first official match of the Romania national team, against Yugoslavia, a match won by the Romanian team with Guga scoring the winning goal.[2] He played six years for Romania, managing twelve caps and four goals.[8] He also captained nine out of twelve matches.

Scores and results table. Romania's goal tally first:

References

  1. ^ a b "Aurel Guga, FIFA Profile". FIFA. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "O singura data in trei secole" (in Romanian). Gazeta Sporturilor. 28 March 2011.
  3. ^ Gazeta Sporturilor (13 June 1925), p.1
  4. ^ "Arad - Categoria I-a", Gazeta Sporturilor (19 November 1925), p.3
  5. ^ "Romania - Bulgaria", Gazeta Sporturilor (April 1926), p.3
  6. ^ "A murit internaționalul Guga", Gazeta Sporturilor (8 November 1936), p.1
  7. ^ "Legendele Universitatii" (in Romanian). Universitatea Cluj. 12 July 2007.
  8. ^ "Aurel Guga, FRF Profile". FRF. Retrieved 8 September 2011.

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