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Andrei Sepci

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Andrei Sepci
Personal information
Date of birth (1911-10-07)7 October 1911
Place of birth Barnabas, Máramaros, Austria-Hungary[1][2]
Date of death 3 December 1992(1992-12-03) (aged 81)
Position(s) Goalkeeper
Youth career
1922–1927 Școala Sportivă Sătmăreană Satu Mare
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1927–1932 Olimpia Satu Mare
1932–1937 Universitatea Cluj 93 (1)
1937–1939 Tricolor Baia Mare
1939–1940 Victoria Cluj 22 (0)
Total 115 (1)
International career
1933–1935 Romania 4 (0)
Managerial career
1940–1946 Minaur Baia Mare
1946–1947 Explosivi Făgăraș
1948–1949 Concordia Ploiești
1949 Știința Cluj
1952 Petrolul Ploiești
1955–1959 Jiul Petroșani
1959–1961 Știința Cluj
1961–1962 Dinamo Bacău
1963 Știința Cluj
1964–1966 Știința Cluj
1970–1971 Universitatea Cluj
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 31 December 2019
‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of 31 December 2019

Andrei Sepci (7 October 1911 – 3 December 1992) was a Romanian footballer and manager.[3] He was the manager that guided Știința Cluj in its successful 1964–65 Cupa României campaign.[4][5]

Club career

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Andrei Sepci was born on 7 October 1911 in Barnabas, Máramaros, Austria-Hungary (now Ukraine), starting to play junior level football in 1922 at Școala Sportivă Sătmăreană Satu Mare, moving in 1927 at Olimpia Satu Mare where he played in the regional league.[1][5][6] In 1932 he went to play for Universitatea Cluj, making his Divizia A debut under coach Adalbert Kovács on 11 September in a 3–1 away win over AMEF Arad, the team reaching by the end of the season the final of the championship which was lost with 5–3 on aggregate in front of Ripensia Timișoara, Sepci playing in all 14 games of the campaign.[1][5][6][7] Even do he conceded five goals in the first leg of the final with Ripensia, the newspaper Gazeta Sporturilor praised his performance:"He was not to blame for any of the goals scored by Ripensia. If Universitatea still has a chance at a comeback, it is thanks to Sepci".[8] In the following season he helped the team reach the 1934 Cupa României final, being used by coach Adalbert Molnar in both games with Ripensia who won the cup.[6][9] On 8 December 1935 he scored the only goal of his career in a 5–0 win over CFR București.[6][10][11] In 1937 he went to play for two seasons in Divizia B at Tricolor Baia Mare.[1] Afterwards, Sepci returned to Divizia A football at Victoria Cluj where he made his last first league appearance on 26 November 1939 in a 2–2 with UD Reșița, having a total of 115 games with one goal scored in the competition.[1]

International career

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Andrei Sepci played four games at international level for Romania, making his debut on 4 June 1933 under coach Constantin Rădulescu in a 7–0 victory with Bulgaria at the 1933 Balkan Cup.[5][12][13][14] In the following two games, which were at the same competition he kept another two clean sheets in two victories against Greece and Yugoslavia, helping his side win the tournament, politician Alexandru Vaida-Voievod giving him a snuff box made of silver as a token of appreciation for not conceding any goals.[5][6] The tournament was known in Romania as the Balacaniada lui 13–0 (English: The Balkans of 13–0) and Sepci considered it his playing career's biggest accomplishment:"The best memory of my life as a goalkeeper? The Balkans of 1933. The golden dream of every goalkeeper: not to concede a goal. And this in three consecutive games: with Bulgaria (7–0), with Greece (1–0) and with Yugoslavia (5–0). I will never forget that day when the Bucharest students accompanied me to the North Station, while hundreds of enthusiastic people were waiting for me in Cluj, with ovations and flowers. I asked myself then: "Why are they celebrating me?" And I found out the answer later: because every time a hero must be found. For me, however, in the Balkans of 1933, all the players in the team were heroes (...) Many more years will pass, maybe my grandsons will grow up to be men in all the power of the word, but I will still continue to tell them and their children about the unforgettable Balkans of 1933, with its memorable record: 13 goals scored, zero conceded".[6][5][13]

At the 1934–35 Balkan Cup which was hosted by Greece, Romania had to face Yugoslavia in the last game of the tournament which if won could have earned them the trophy, but its goalkeeper Anghel Crețeanu got injured, so coach Alexandru Săvulescu asked for Sepci and Vilmos Zombori to come for the game.[5] Sepci went on a plane that was piloted by Gheorghe Bănciulescu, but did not get to the game because the plane had to return because of engine problems.[5] When the plane was in the air and had those problems, Sepci wanted to jump off it with a parachute, Bănciulescu telling the press:"The real hero of the Balkans from Athens is Sepci, who, despite the cold, voluntarily and bravely undertook this flight, just to help his team. Before takeoff, I also installed his parachute and instructed him when and how to jump from the plane, if we were in danger. We were at an altitude of 1,000 meters when the engine began to cough and I had to make some complicated maneuvers to look for a favorable place to return to the ground. Suddenly, I look back and see that Sepci, parachute in hand, was ready to jump into the void. At the last moment I managed to pull him back, because on his face you could read the unmoved determination, sister to death. This moment saved the player's life as the parachute was so tangled on him that it would never have opened and Sepci would have crashed to his death on the ground".[5] Eventually Zombori played in the game with the Yugoslavs which ended with a 4–0 loss.[5] Sepci made his final appearance for the national team when coach Constantin Rădulescu sent him on the field at half-time in order to replace Crețeanu in a 2–2 with Greece at the 1935 Balkan Cup.[12][15]

Managerial career

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Andrei Sepci started coaching in 1940 at Minaur Baia Mare where he stayed until 1946 when he went for one year at Explosivi Făgăraș, then from 1948 until 1949 he coached Concordia Ploiești.[6] In the second half of the 1948–49 Divizia A season he was brought to Știința Cluj in order to replace Ștefan Cârjan, finishing the season on the 12th place.[6][16][17] In 1952 he coached Petrolul Ploiești for a short while, then he went to Jiul Petroșani for a few seasons, managing to maintain the club on the middle positions, away from relegation.[16][18] In 1959 Sepci returned to Știința Cluj, leading the team for two seasons, finishing on the fifth position in the first one and on the fourth in the second.[6][16][19][20] In 1961 he went to coach Dinamo Bacău for one year and a half, then returned for a third spell at Știința, leading the team in the first half of the 1963–64 season, being replaced with Mircea Luca for the second.[6][16][21] However, Sepci returned to the club in the following season, winning the Cupa României at the end of it after a 2–1 victory with Dinamo Pitești in the final.[5][6][16][22][23] He then led the club in the 1965–66 European Cup Winners' Cup, eliminating Austrian team, Wiener Neustadt with 3–0 on aggregate in the first round, but they got eliminated in the following round by Atlético Madrid.[6][24] From 1967 he worked at Știința's center for juniors and children, helping it win four junior level national titles, also having a last spell for the senior squad when he came in March 1970 and finished the season on the 11th place, also leading it all over the following season when the team finished on the 12th place.[6][16][25][26] Andrei Sepci has a total of 319 matches as a manager in the Romanian top-division, Divizia A consisting of 114 victories, 76 draws and 129 losses.[27]

Managing style

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Remus Câmpeanu, who was coached by Sepci at Știința Cluj described him:"He was a coach who talked a lot, individually, with us. Before the matches, he would spent half an hour or an hour talking with each one of us. He talked about our qualities, but also about our flaws, something he never did in full, face to face with others around. Under his hand, players have grown precisely because of this patience. In the games you could see that the team was playing a certain way. He knew how to ask the players what they could do."[6]

Death

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Andrei Sepci died on 3 December 1992 at the age of 81.[1][6][12]

Honours

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Player

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Universitatea Cluj

Romania

Manager

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Universitatea Cluj

References

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  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Andrei Sepci at RomanianSoccer.ro (in Romanian)
  2. ^ Andrei Sepci at National-Football-Teams.com
  3. ^ Andrei Sepci at WorldFootball.net
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "Poveste de colecție despre "U" Cluj. Remus Câmpeanu și istoria unui meci vechi de 50 de ani. "Cum e să câștigi Cupa?…Dar de ce iubești pe cineva? Sunt lucruri care nu se pot explica"" [Story of collection about "U" Cluj. Remus Câmpeanu and the history of a 50 year old match. "How is it to win the Cup? ... But why do you love someone? There are things that cannot be explained"] (in Romanian). Prosport.ro. 3 April 2015. Retrieved 31 December 2019.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k "Andrei Sepci – legenda fotbalului clujean a învăţat abc-ul sportului cu balonul rotund la Satu Mare" [Andrei Sepci - the Cluj football legend learned the ABC of the sport with the round ball in Satu Mare] (in Romanian). Gazetanord-vest.ro/. 25 May 2021. Retrieved 31 December 2019.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Andrei Sepci" (in Romanian). 4everucluj.ro.
  7. ^ "Universitatea Cluj 1932–1933 season" (in Romanian). 4everucluj.ro.
  8. ^ "RETRO GSP. 87 de ani de când finala campionatului de fotbal a fost eclipsată de un derby de trap" [RETRO GSP. 87 years since the football championship final was overshadowed by a trot derby] (in Romanian). Gsp.ro. 9 July 2020. Retrieved 3 April 2024.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b "Romanian Cup - 1933-1934". RomanianSoccer. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  10. ^ "Imaginea uitată în arhivă » Dovada că Duckadam a marcat din penalty la câteva zile după ce apărase patru la Sevilla" [Forgotten archived image »Proof that Duckadam scored from a penalty just days after defending four in Sevilla] (in Romanian). Gsp.ro. 2 April 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
  11. ^ "Cine sunt portarii care au marcat în Liga 1 Betano! De la cine s-a inspirat Mirko Pigliacelli" [Who are the goalkeepers that scored in Betano League 1! From whom Mirko Pigliacelli was inspired] (in Romanian). Fanatik.ro. 29 January 2012. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Andrei Sepci". European Football. Retrieved 31 December 2019.
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b c "1933 Balkan Cup". European Football. Retrieved 31 December 2019.
  14. ^ "Romania 7-0 Bulgaria". European Football. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
  15. ^ "Greece 2-2 Romania". European Football. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
  16. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f "Andrei Sepci manager profile" (in Romanian). Labtof.ro. Archived from the original on 31 December 2019.
  17. ^ "Universitatea Cluj 1948–1949 season" (in Romanian). 4everucluj.ro.
  18. ^ "Fotbal C.S. Jiul Petroșani din istoria echipei de fotbal din anii 1955 – 1956" [Football C.S. Jiul Petroșani from the history of the football team from 1955-1956] (in Romanian). Gddhd.ro. 26 July 2012. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
  19. ^ "Universitatea Cluj 1959–1960 season" (in Romanian). 4everucluj.ro.
  20. ^ "Universitatea Cluj 1960–1961 season" (in Romanian). 4everucluj.ro.
  21. ^ "Universitatea Cluj 1963–1964 season" (in Romanian). 4everucluj.ro.
  22. ^ Jump up to: a b "Romanian Cup – Season 1964–1965". RomanianSoccer. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  23. ^ "Universitatea Cluj 1964–1965 season" (in Romanian). 4everucluj.ro.
  24. ^ "Universitatea Cluj 1965–1966 season" (in Romanian). 4everucluj.ro.
  25. ^ "Universitatea Cluj 1969–1970 season" (in Romanian). 4everucluj.ro.
  26. ^ "Universitatea Cluj 1970–1971 season" (in Romanian). 4everucluj.ro.
  27. ^ "Top 60 antrenori" [Top 60 coaches] (in Romanian). RomanianSoccer.ro. Retrieved 23 June 2022.
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