Hubbry Logo
search
search button
Sign in
Historyarrow-down
starMorearrow-down
Hubbry Logo
search
search button
Sign in
FCU Olimpia Cluj
Community hub for the Wikipedia article
logoWikipedian hub
Welcome to the community hub built on top of the FCU Olimpia Cluj Wikipedia article. Here, you can discuss, collect, and organize anything related to FCU Olimpia Cluj. The purpose of the hub is to connect people, foster deeper knowledge, and help improve the root Wikipedia article.
Add your contribution
Inside this hub
FCU Olimpia Cluj

Key Information

Fotbal Club U Olimpia Cluj-Napoca, commonly known as FCU Olimpia Cluj, or simply as U Olimpia Cluj, is a women's football team from Cluj-Napoca in Romania. It is Romania's top women's football club, having won all league titles since its inception, and thus represents Romania year by year in the UEFA Women's Champions League. The club also gives a majority of the Romania women's national football team players.

History

[edit]

Founded on 7 July 2010[1] at the initiative of Mirel Albon, Clujana's coach, due to increasingly divergent views with his club's owners,[2][3] Olimpia started directly in Romania's top level women's league, as there was no second-level league at the time, and convincingly won the championship in its very first season. The team won all of its 24 matches which totaled a goal difference of 253–11 and wins as high as 26–0 and 27–0.[4] The title qualified them for the 2011–12 UEFA Women's Champions League. In addition they won the Romanian cup that year too.[5] They went on to win all of the league titles since, and most of the domestic cups.

Olimpia had a partnership with the Technical University of Cluj-Napoca, its rector, Radu Munteanu being for a period of time also Olimpia's chairman (president).[6] This partnership reflected in the team's name between 2012 and 2015. Since the 2018–19 season, the teams signed a partnership with FC Universitatea Cluj and has rebranded as "U" Olimpia Cluj.[7]

Chronology of names

[edit]
Period Full Club Name Short name
2011–2012 Clubul de Fotbal Feminin Olimpia Cluj-Napoca[8] Olimpia Cluj
2012–2015 Clubul de Fotbal Feminin Olimpia Universitatea Tehnică Cluj-Napoca[9][10] Olimpia UT Cluj
2015–2018 Clubul de Fotbal Feminin Olimpia Cluj-Napoca Olimpia Cluj
2018–present Asociația Fotbal Club Universitatea Olimpia Cluj[1] U Olimpia Cluj

Football Academy

[edit]

Together with the club in 2010 the Olimpia Women's Football Academy was established, supported by a partnership with the city and the council.[11] The goal of south-east Europe's first female football academy is to advance women's football in Romania.

Honours

[edit]

Leagues

[edit]

Cups

[edit]

Season by season

[edit]

  Champions   Runners-up   Third place   Promoted   Relegated

Season Division Tier Place Cup WCL
1 2010–11 Liga I 1 1st W
2 2011–12 Liga I, Seria Vest 1 1st W R32
3 2012–13 Liga I, Seria Vest 1 1st W R16
4 2013–14 Superliga 1 1st W Grp
5 2014–15 Superliga 1 1st W Grp
6 2015–16 Superliga 1 1st F R32
7 2016–17 Superliga 1 1st W Grp
8 2017–18 Liga I 1 1st QF R32
9 2018–19 Liga I 1 1st SF Grp
10 2019–20 Liga I 1 1st[a] QF* Grp
11 2020–21 Liga I 1 1st W 2QR
12 2021–22 Liga I 1 1st W 1R
13 2022–23 Liga I 1 1st F 1R
14 2023–24 Liga I 1 2nd W 2R
15 2024–25 Liga I 1 4th
  1. ^ not crowned as Champions

Current squad

[edit]
As of August 2021[12]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Romania ROU Sonia Bumbar
3 DF Romania ROU Cristina Botojel
4 MF Romania ROU Ioana Bortan (Captain)
7 MF Moldova MDA Carolina Țabur
9 MF Romania ROU Mihaela Ciolacu
10 MF Romania ROU Roxana Mirea
11 FW Romania ROU Mara Bâtea
12 GK Romania ROU Sara Câmpean
14 FW Romania ROU Adina Borodi
15 MF Romania ROU Andreea Pînzariu
16 DF Romania ROU Anamaria Salagean
17 DF Romania ROU Varo Helga
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 GK Romania ROU Alesia Moldovan
19 DF Romania ROU Noemi Vincze
20 DF Romania ROU Karina Bede
21 DF Romania ROU Simona Sigheartau
22 DF Romania ROU Maria Stamate
23 MF Romania ROU Oana Negrea
31 GK United States USA Erin Louise Seppi
44 DF France FRA Cloe Macuiba
77 MF Romania ROU Florentina Iancu
88 DF Romania ROU Daiana Onet
90 FW Romania ROU Carmen Marcu
99 FW Romania ROU Ioana Nicoleta Balaceanu

Club officials

[edit]

FC U Olimpia Cluj in Europe

[edit]

In their first participation they started in the qualifying round of the 2011–12 UEFA Women's Champions League. Already after two wins against Bosnian and Lithuanian opposition they qualified for the round of 32.[15]

UEFA Women's Cup / UEFA Women's Champions League
Season Preliminary stage Round of 32 Round of 16 Quarterfinals Semi-finals Final
2011–12 Bosnia and Herzegovina Sarajevo 1 France Olympique
2012–13 Portugal 1º Dezembro 1 Austria Neulengbach Italy Torres
2013–14 Serbia Spartak 1
2014–15 Republic of Ireland Raheny 1
2015–16 Slovenia Pomurje 1 France PSG
2016–17 Poland Medyk 1
2017–18 Scotland Hibernian 1 Sweden Rosengård

1 Group stage. Highest-ranked eliminated team in case of qualification, lowest-ranked qualified team in case of elimination.

Notable former players

[edit]

The footballers enlisted below have been called up or had international cap(s) for their respective countries at junior and/or senior level and/or more than 50 caps for U Olimpia Cluj.

References

[edit]
[edit]
Add your contribution
Related Hubs