Andrei Cristea

Romanian footballer (born 1984) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Andrei Cristea (Romanian pronunciation: [anˈdrej ˈkriste̯a]; born 15 May 1984) is a Romanian professional football manager and former player, who is currently in charge of Liga II club Concordia Chiajna.[1]

Date of birth (1984-05-15) 15 May 1984 (age 41)
Place of birth Bacău, Romania
Height 1.79 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position Striker
Quick facts Personal information, Date of birth ...
Andrei Cristea
Personal information
Date of birth (1984-05-15) 15 May 1984 (age 41)
Place of birth Bacău, Romania
Height 1.79 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position Striker
Team information
Current team
Concordia Chiajna (head coach)
Youth career
–2002 FCM Bacău
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2002–2004 FCM Bacău 35 (7)
2004–2006 Steaua București 52 (10)
2006–2008 Politehnica Timișoara 35 (6)
2008Politehnica Iași (loan) 13 (6)
2008–2010 Dinamo București 48 (22)
2009Politehnica Iași (loan) 15 (7)
2011–2012 Karlsruher SC 11 (6)
2012–2013 Dinamo București 19 (1)
2013–2014 FC Brașov 29 (8)
2014–2015 Gabala 9 (0)
2015 Salernitana 8 (2)
2015–2016 Martina Franca 16 (3)
2016–2019 Politehnica Iași 103 (33)
2019 Universitatea Craiova 10 (1)
2019–2021 Politehnica Iași 49 (14)
2021–2022 Mioveni 13 (3)
Total 465 (129)
International career
2003–2006 Romania U21 14 (0)
2003–2010 Romania 10 (0)
Managerial career
2021 Politehnica Iași (player/coach)
2022–2023 ACS FC Dinamo București
2023 Înainte Modelu
2023–2025 Popești-Leordeni
2025– Concordia Chiajna
* Club domestic league appearances and goals
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Deployed as a forward, Cristea was known for his pace and his range of passing instead of his goalscoring abilities, and represented the Romania national team from 2003 to 2010.[2]

Club career

Cristea started football in his home town and made his debut in the Divizia A in 2001, for local club FCM Bacău.[3]

In the summer of 2004, Cristea transferred to Steaua București for a fee of $1 million.[4] However, he did not manage to earn a first-team place there, despite scoring two goals that eliminated Valencia CF in the 2004–05 UEFA Cup season. He was put on the transfer list in the summer of 2006.[5]

Cristea moved to fellow Liga I club Politehnica Timişoara, in a swap which saw Gigel Coman move to Steaua București.[6] After failing to impress at Politehnica Timişoara, he was loaned to Politehnica Iaşi for the second part of the 2007–08 season, where he had a great part in saving the team from relegation, with man of the match performances against CFR Cluj and his former team, Steaua București.[7]

Dinamo București

On 9 May 2008, Cristea signed a five-year contract with Dinamo București, just six days before turning 24. He called the transfer "a birthday present" and joined Dinamo after the summer holiday. He started scoring for the red and white team in the friendly games they played in pre-season. Cristea played only the first half on the season for Dinamo, netting two goals in eight matches and entering Dinamo's history by scoring the goal that brought the 1.000th victory of the team in all-time domestic championship, against Farul Constanta.[8]

Cristea again went on loan to Politehnica Iași, in the winter transfer window, where he was very well received and scored seven times in 15 games, goals which proved crucial in helping the team continue in the first division. Upon his return, he became a very important player, scoring goals that brought significant victories in Liga I and Europa League. He was the top scorer of the Romanian league in the 2009–10 season with 16 goals.[9]

Karlsruhe

On 16 January 2011, Karlsruher SC signed Cristea in the attempt of avoiding the relegation.[10][11] On 13 February, Cristea scored two goals against the leader of Second Bundesliga, Hertha BSC. These were his first goals on this new club.[12] On 27 February, he scored the last goal of the game in the 1–4 loss against FC Ingolstadt 04, after coming from bench.[12] On 11 March, Cristea scored the first goal of the match in Karlsruher SC-MSV Duisburg, 3–1 final score.[12] On 15 May, in the last round of the 2. Bundesliga, the he saved his club from relegation, scoring a brace in the 3–2 win against Union Berlin.[12] The next season Karlsruhe were relegated after a play-off and Cristea became a free agent.

Initially, Cristea wanted to stay in Germany, where he had offers from Ingolstadt and Energie Cottbus,[13] but Dinamo approached him and he accepted to return to Bucharest where he had the chance to again work under Dario Bonetti.[14] On 22 June 2014, Cristea signed a one-year contract with Azerbaijan Premier League side Gabala FK.[15] In December of the same year Cristea had his contract with Gabala terminated.[16] Following his release he signed with Lega Pro side U.S. Salernitana 1919 until the end of the season.[17]

Politehnica Iași

After playing for Salernitana and Martina Franca in the Italian Serie C, in February 2016, Cristea returned to Romania to join his former team, Liga I club Politehnica Iași. He subsequently signed a one-and-a-half-year contract with the Moldavian squad.[18]

He scored 7 goals in 17 games in the second half of the 2015–16 Liga I and helped Politehnica Iași qualify for the 2016–17 Europa League qualifying phase for the first time in their history.[19] He then opened the scoring in a 2–2 draw against Hajduk Split in their first European game.[20] On 14 December 2018, in a game against Concordia Chiajna, Cristea scored a brace and reached 100 goals scored in the Romanian Liga I.[21]

On 27 September 2020, Cristea scored a hat-trick in a 5–2 league win over FCSB.[22]

International career

Cristea made his debut for the Romania national team on 11 October 2003, in a 1–1 draw against Japan.[23] Over the years he made ten appearances for the national team, until his retirement in 2010.[2]

Career statistics

Club

[24][25][9]

More information Club, Season ...
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League Cup Europe Other Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
FCM Bacău 2001–02 Divizia A 100010
2002–03 Divizia A 11110121
2003–04 Divizia A 23600236
Total 35710367
Steaua București 2004–05 Divizia A 287108[a]2379
2005–06 Divizia A 2431012[b]01[c]0383
Total 521020202107512
Politehnica Timișoara 2006–07 Liga I 28642328
2007–08 Liga I 702090
Total 35662418
Politehnica Iași (loan) 2007–08 Liga I 136136
Dinamo București 2008–09 Liga I 82221[a]0114
2009–10 Liga I 2916237[d]13820
2010–11 Liga I 114314[d]2187
Total 4822761236731
Politehnica Iași (loan) 2008–09 Liga I 157157
Karlsruher SC 2010–11 2. Bundesliga 116116
Dinamo București 2012–13 Liga I 191000000191
FC Brașov 2013–14 Liga I 29820318
Gabala 2014–15 Azerbaijan Premier League 90002[d]0110
Salernitana 2014–15 Lega Pro 82001[e]193
Martina Franca 2015–16 Lega Pro 16300163
Politehnica Iași 2015–16 Liga I 177177
2016–17 Liga I 3511212[d]11[f]04013
2017–18 Liga I 329223411
2018–19 Liga I 19610206
Total 1033353211011137
Universitatea Craiova 2018–19 Liga I 10100101
Politehnica Iași 2019–20 Liga I 32732358
2020–21 Liga I 17700167
Total 4914325216
Mioveni 2021–22 Liga I 13010140
Career total 465129271336631531149
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  1. Appearances in UEFA Cup
  2. Two appearances in UEFA Champions League, ten appearances in UEFA Cup
  3. Appearances in UEFA Europa League
  4. Appearance in Cupa Ligii


International

[9][26]

More information National team, Year ...
Appearances and goals by national team and year
National teamYearAppsGoals
Romania 200330
200410
200520
200910
201030
Total100
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Honours

[9]

Player

Steaua București

Politehnica Timișoara

Dinamo București

Salernitana

Individual

Coach

Popești-Leordeni

References

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