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  1. Il Fotbal Club FCSB, denominato fino al 2017 Fotbal Club Steaua București (in italiano usualmente Steaua Bucarest) e conosciuto come Steaua, noto attualmente come FCSB, è una società calcistica rumena di Bucarest . Fondata nel 1947 - a seguito della liquidazione forzata del FC Carmen Bucarest - come sezione della polisportiva ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › FCSBFCSB - Wikipedia

    Fotbal Club FCSB (Romanian pronunciation: [fet͡ʃeseˌbe]), formerly named FC Steaua București, is a Romanian professional football club based in Bucharest. It has spent its entire history in the top flight of the Romanian league system , the Liga I .

    • Mihai Stoica
    • Valeriu Argăseală
    • George Becali
    • Iulian Ghiorghișor
  3. ro.wikipedia.org › wiki › FCSBFCSB - Wikipedia

    FCSB. FCSB este un club profesionist de fotbal din București, România, care evoluează în prezent în SuperLiga României. Clubul a purtat denumirea de FC Steaua București în majoritatea existenței sale, până în 2017, și a evoluat doar pe prima scenă a fotbalului românesc cu succese pe plan intern dar și internațional.

  4. The club which had acted as Steaua throughout this time was summoned to change their name and logo; presently, they are officially called SC FC FCSB SA and continue to play in Liga I. A further ongoing trial was initiated by CSA Steaua, claiming FC FCSB must pay almost 37 million Euros as compensation for having unlawfully used the ...

    • Mihai Stoica
    • Valeriu Argăseală
    • George Becali
    • Iulian Ghiorghișor
    • 1947–1950: Foundation and Early Years
    • 1950–1957: Cca Golden Team
    • 1957–1985: A New "Star"
    • 1990–2002: Post-Revolution Era
    • Successors
    • References
    • Further Reading

    On 7 June 1947, at the initiative of several officers of the Romanian Royal House, the first Romanian sports club of the Army was born through a decree signed by General Mihail Lascăr, High Commander of the Romanian Royal Army. The club was to be called ASA București (Asociația Sportivă a Armatei București – English: Army Sports Association), with ...

    In March 1950, CSCA changed its name to CCA (Casa Centrală a Armatei, English: "Central House of the Army"). Under the new name, the club would enter the high-life of Romanian football by winning their first Championship-Cup Double in 1951, just shortly after conquering their second national cup one year earlier after trailing 3–1 past Flamura Roși...

    In 1961, after having won the previous two national titles, CCA changed names once again (for the final time) to CSA Steaua București (Clubul Sportiv al Armatei Steaua – English: Army Sports Club Steaua). The name Steaua is Romanian for The Star and was adopted because of the presence, just like in any other Eastern-European Army team, of a red sta...

    The Romanian Revolution led the country towards a free open market and, subsequently, several players of the great 1980s team left for other clubs in the West. Gheorghe Hagi left for Real Madrid for a record $4.3 million transfer fee which stands up to this day for the national championship, Marius Lăcătuș to Fiorentina, Dan Petrescu to Foggia, Sil...

    FCSB

    Viorel Păunescu performed poorly as a president and soon the club was plunged into debt. Despite the title won in 2000–01, George "Gigi" Becali, another businessman, was offered the position of vice-president, in hope that he would invest money in the club. Becali eventually purchased 51% of the club's shares in February 2002 and turned the governing company into SA (Romanian equivalent for PLC) in January 2003. Later that year, he purchased another 14% of the shares and things moved in the s...

    CSA Steaua București

    CSA Steaua București reactivated its football section and entered a team in Liga IV in the 2017–18 season, the fourth tier of the Romanian Championship. The team's objective was to promote every year to the higher league, until it reached the Liga I, a timeline which coincided with the opening of the new Stadionul Ghencea.CSA Steaua currently plays in the second tier from where it cannot promote due to the National Sports Law passed in 2000.

    Vochin, Andrei (2001). Super Steaua. ProSport. ISBN 9730023263.
    Brancu, Constantin (1993). Din culisele supercampioanei. Tempus. ISBN 9739599311.
  5. Overview. Last updated: 22 May 2022. Source: Competitions. Liga I. Regular season. Table. Source: LPF (in Romanian) Soccerway. Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head points; 3) Head-to-head goal difference; 4) Head-to-head goals scored; 5) Goal difference; 6) Goals scored; 7) Play-off. [1] Results summary.