翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Adrian Mayes
・ Adrian McAdam
・ Adrian McCoubrey
・ Adrian McKinty
・ Adrian McLaren
・ Adrian McPherson
・ Adrian McQuillan
・ Adrian Melott
・ Adrian Metcalfe
・ Adrian Michaels
・ Adrian Middle/High School
・ Adrian Miedziński
・ Adrian Mierzejewski
・ Adrian Mifsud
・ Adrian Mihai Ionescu
Adrian Mihalcea
・ Adrian Mikhalchishin
・ Adrian Mills
・ Adrian Minune
・ Adrian Miroiu
・ Adrian Mitchell
・ Adrian Mole
・ Adrian Mole and the Weapons of Mass Destruction
・ Adrian Molin
・ Adrian Monck
・ Adrian Monger
・ Adrian Monk
・ Adrian Moore
・ Adrian Moore (composer)
・ Adrian Moorhouse


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Adrian Mihalcea : ウィキペディア英語版
Adrian Mihalcea

Adrian Mihalcea (born 24 May 1976 in Slobozia) is a former Romanian football striker.
==Career==
Mihalcea spent many years playing with one of the top Romanian teams, Dinamo Bucharest, where he won the Romanian First Division championship in 2000 and the Romanian Cup in 2000 and again in 2001.
Mihalcea started the 2001 season for Dinamo Bucharest in excellent form, scoring 11 goals in 14 league matches, and earned 5th place in the competition for the 2001 Romanian Footballer of the Year award. This performance attracted the interest of Italian Serie B side Genoa 1893, and Mihalcea signed for the club in January 2002. The following season Mihalcea scored 9 goals in Serie B and was Genoa's leading goalscorer for the campaign. In summer 2003, he was sold to fellow Serie B club Hellas Verona and enjoyed another good season scoring 5 goals in 20 league matches for his new club.
After the experience in Italy, a return to Dinamo Bucharest in 2004 was disappointing, with Mihalcea struggling for goals as the team narrowly missed out on the Romanian championship. They saved the season and managed, with Mihalcea one of the team's captains, to win the Romanian Cup. He scored only one goal that season, against Sportul Studenţesc.
Mihalcea was sold again at the end of that season, in the summer of 2005, this time to South-Korean club Chunnam Dragons, but he only played 5 games without scoring there and because he could not adapt to the Asian style of life and football he came back home. He was free of contract for about 2 months and trained alone in Bucharest, at his ex-team Dinamo Bucharest's stadium. At the beginning of March 2006 he signed a 3-month contract with Romanian side FC Vaslui. At this point he was no longer in the attention of the Romanian national football team.
In the summer of 2006, Mihalcea moved to Cypriot side Aris Limassol in an attempt to resurrect his career. He started by scoring 16 goals in 24 matches, more than he had scored in the previous 5 years. He continued his consistent good form by scoring 12 goals in 25 matches in the next season. Following the relegation of Aris in the Cypriot second division, AEL Limassol showed interest in the striker and transferred him in the summer of 2008. After Aris returned to Cypriot first division, Mihalcea came back, and scored 8 goals in 28 matches in the 2009-2010 season, also being named captain of the team. He was very respected at Aris for being one of its best scorers.
In the summer of 2010 he signed with Liga I team Astra Ploieşti, coming there as a free agent because his contract in Cyprus had ended. In the winter of 2010 he moved to the league winning side Unirea Urziceni.
He ended his career at Unirea Slobozia, in Liga II. He helped the team maintain its place in the second division in 2012-13 season, and in June 2013 he announced his retirement, citing his desire to start his coaching career.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Adrian Mihalcea」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.