1989–90 FC Dinamo București season

FC Dinamo Bucureşti
1989-90 season
Manager Mircea Lucescu
Divizia A 1st
Romanian Cup Winner
Cup Winners' Cup Semifinals
Top goalscorer Florin Răducioiu, Claudiu Vaișcovici (14 goals)

The 1989-90 season was FC Dinamo Bucureşti's 41st season in Divizia A. In this season, Dinamo made the double, stopping Steaua's supremacy in Romania. In Europe, Dinamo reached the semifinals of the Cup Winners' Cup, where it is defeated by Anderlecht Bruxelles. It was a special season because of the Romanian Revolution of 1989. Dinamo dominated the first half of the season, winning the derby with Steaua, 3-0, on its ground. It was the first defeat for Steaua in the Romanian championship after 104 consecutive games. In the winter break, after the Revolution, Dinamo suffered administrative changes, for a few days having a different name - Unirea Tricolor.

In the final of the season, because of the Romanian national team's qualification at the 1990 World Cup in Italy, FRF decided that the teams shall not use the chooseable players. However, in the game between Dinamo and Farul, Răducioiu and Lupu, respectively Marian Popa had played, managers and coaches of both clubs (Vasile Ianul and Lucescu for Dinamo) were suspended for three months, and the match, won by Dinamo 2-1 was replayed. To stay on the bench next stage Lucescu registered as a player, and even took the field, becoming at 45 years old, the oldest player in league history.

Results

Divizia A
Round Date Opponent Stadium Result
1 23 August 1989 FC Argeş A 2-0
2 27 August 1989 Inter Sibiu H 6-1
3 9 September 1989 Steaua București A 3-0
4 17 September 1989 Petrolul Ploiești H 5-0
5 20 September 1989 Poli Timișoara A 1-0
6 1 October 1989 Corvinul Hunedoara H 3-0
7 4 October 1989 Jiul Petroșani A 2-0
8 14 October 1989 SC Bacău H 7-1
9 22 October 1989 Victoria București A 4-1
10 28 October 1989 FCM Brașov H 4-0
11 5 November 1989 U Craiova A 0-1
12 19 November 1989 Sportul Studențesc H 3-2
13 26 November 1989 FC Bihor A 2-0
14 29 November 1989 FC Olt H 4-0
15 3 December 1989 Flacăra Moreni A 2-1
16 5 December 1989 U Cluj H 6-1
17 10 December 1989 Farul Constanța A 3-0
18 25 February 1990 FC Argeş H 2-0
19 2 March 1990 Inter Sibiu A 0-1
20 15 March 1990 Steaua București H 2-2
21 25 March 1990 Petrolul Ploiești A 1-1
22 8 April 1990 Poli Timișoara H 3-0
23 21 April 1990 Jiul Petroșani H 3-0
24 29 April 1990 U Craiova H 5-3
25 5 June 1990 SC Bacău A 1-1
26 6 May 1990 Victoria București H 3-0
27 9 May 1990 FCM Brașov A 2-2
28 16 May 1990 Sportul Studențesc A 1-1
29 19 May 1990 FC Bihor H 6-1
30 27 May 1990 Corvinul Hunedoara A 0-1
31 23 May 1990 FC Olt A 3-0
32 30 May 1990 Flacăra Moreni H 2-1
33 2 June 1990 U Cluj A 1-0
34 7 June 1990 Farul Constanța H 4-1
Divizia A 1989-90 Winners
Dinamo Bucureşti
13th Title
Cupa României
Round Date Opponent Stadium Result
Last 16 27 February 1990 Jiul Petroșani Alba Iulia 2-0
Quarterfinals 11 March 1990 Poli Timișoara Hunedoara 3-1
Semifinals 11 April 1990 U Craiova București 4-3 (p)
Final 2 May 1990 Steaua București București 6-4
Cupa României 1989-90 Winners
Dinamo Bucureşti
7th Title

Romanian Cup final

2 May 1990
17:00
Dinamo Bucureşti 6 4 Steaua Bucureşti
Răducioiu  3' (42), 82'
Mateuț  39'
Sabău  47'
Lupu  56'
Dumitrescu  22'
Lăcătuș  68'
Rotariu  70'
Ungureanu  85'
Stadionul 23 August, Bucharest
Attendance: 30,000
Referee: Mircea Salomir (Cluj-Napoca)
DINAMO:
GK Bogdan Stelea
DF Anton Doboș  57'
DF Mircea Rednic
DF Ioan Andone
DF Michael Klein
MF Ionuț Lupescu
MF Ioan Ovidiu Sabău
MF Dorin Mateuț  65'
MF Dănuț Lupu
FW Claudiu Vaișcovici
FW Florin Răducioiu
Substitutes:
DF Daniel Timofte  57'
MF Ionel Fulga  65'
Manager:
Mircea Lucescu
STEAUA:
GK Daniel Gherasim
DF Lucian Ciocan
DF Adrian Negrău
DF Alin Artimon  57'
DF Nicolae Ungureanu
MF Daniel Minea
MF Zsolt Muzsnai
MF Iosif Rotariu
MF Ilie Dumitrescu
FW Marius Lăcătuș
FW Gavril Balint  57'
Substitutes:
MF Ilie Stan  57'
FW Gheorghe Pena  57'
Manager:
Anghel Iordănescu

Cup Winners' Cup

First round

13 September 1989
17:30
Dinamo Tirana 1 0 Dinamo Bucureşti
Canaj  52'
Qemal Stafa, Tirana
Attendance: 25,000
Referee: Tadeusz Diakonowicz (Poland)

26 September 1989
15:30
Dinamo Bucureşti 2 0 Dinamo Tirana
Mateuţ  8'
Mihăescu  13'

Dinamo Bucureşti won 2-1 on aggregate

Second round

18 October 1989
20:00
Panathinaikos F.C. 0 2 Dinamo Bucureşti
Răducioiu  57'
Mateuţ  66'
Olympic Stadium, Athens
Attendance: 50,000
Referee: Dieter Pauli (West Germany)

1 November 1989
14:00
Dinamo Bucureşti 6 1 Panathinaikos F.C.
Rednic  21'
Mateuţ  31', 48'
Sabău  40', 50'
Klein  89'
Samaras  34'

Dinamo Bucureşti won 8-1 on aggregate

Quarterfinals

7 March 1990
15:00
Dinamo Bucureşti 2 1 Partizan Belgrade
Răducioiu  18', 57' Spasic  68'
Stadionul Dinamo, Bucharest
Attendance: 12,000
Referee: Dusan Krchnak (Czechoslovakia)

Dinamo Bucureşti won 4-1 on aggregate

Semifinals


Anderlecht Bruxelles won 2-0 on aggregate

Squad

Goalkeepers: Costel Cîmpeanu (10 games/0 goals), Sorin Colceag (1/0), Bogdan Stelea (22/0).

Defenders: Ioan Andone (20/2), Anton Doboș (21/1), Florin Jelea (1/0), Michael Klein (23/2), Adrian Matei (10/0), Alpar Meszaros (15/1), Cornel Mirea (12/0), Iulian Mihăescu (24/7), Alexandru Nicolae (5/0), Mircea Rednic (19/1), Adrian Slave (1/0), Mihail Țicu (3/0).

Midfielders: Ionel Fulga (7/3), Claudiu Jijie (1/0), Constantin Lazăr (11/2), Ionuț Lupescu (29/4), Dănuț Lupu (22/6), Dorin Mateuț (22/9), George Radu (5/0), Ioan Ovidiu Sabău (24/5), Mihai Stoica (7/0), Daniel Timofte (20/8).

Forwards: Marian Damaschin (5/1), Nicu Glonț (1/0), Mircea Lucescu (1/0), Marian Năstase (3/0), Florin Răducioiu (24/14), Claudiu Vaișcovici (21/14), Cezar Zamfir (21/6).

Transfers

In the summer break, Dinamo brought Daniel Timofte from Jiul Petroșani and Anton Doboș from U.Cluj. Left the team Lică Movilă to Flacăra Moreni, Bogdan Bucur to Inter Sibiu, Rodion Cămătaru to Racing Charleroi and Dumitru Moraru to Vålerenga. Other two players, Viscreanu and Marcel Sabou, went to Spain. In the winter break, came to Dinamo Alexandru Nicolae from Victoria, Constantin Lazăr from Chimia Râmnicu Vâlcea and Mihai Stoica from FC Argeş.

References

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