Wikipedia

Gino Iorgulescu

Gino Iorgulescu
Gino Iorgulescu.jpg
Personal information
Full name George Iorgulescu
Date of birth 15 May 1956
Place of birth Giurgiu, Romania
Position(s) Centre back
Youth career
1971–1973 Dunărea Giurgiu
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1973–1975 Dunărea Giurgiu 32 (0)
1975–1989 Sportul Studenţesc 324 (49)
1976–1977 → Progresul București (loan) 28 (6)
1989–1990 Beerschot VAC 2 (0)
National team
1981–1986 Romania[a] 49 (3)
Teams managed
1999 Național București (caretaker)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

George Iorgulescu (born 15 May 1956), widely known as Gino Iorgulescu, is a retired Romanian football defender. He is the current chairman of the Romanian Professional Football League.

Career

He was born in Giurgiu and debuted in Divizia A with Sportul Studenţesc in 1975. He played the majority of his career in this club, and won the league silver medal in 1986. He retired in 1990, having spent one season in Belgium.

Iorgulescu made his debut for Romania in 1981 against Switzerland, and represented his country at Euro 1984.[1] He played his last international match in 1986, and got 48 caps and 3 goals in total.[1]

Career statistics

Season Club Country Matches Goals
Youth Dunărea Giurgiu Romania N/A N/A
1973/74 Dunărea Giurgiu Romania 31 0
1974/75 Dunărea Giurgiu Romania 1 0
1975/76 Sportul Studenţesc Romania 1 0
1976/77 Progresul București Romania 28 6
1977/78 Sportul Studențesc Romania 32 12
1978/79 Sportul Studențesc Romania 32 8
1979/80 Sportul Studențesc Romania 31 7
1980/81 Sportul Studențesc Romania 31 3
1981/82 Sportul Studențesc Romania 26 3
1982/83 Sportul Studențesc Romania 32 4
1983/84 Sportul Studențesc Romania 30 4
1984/85 Sportul Studențesc Romania 25 2
1985/86 Sportul Studențesc Romania 21 1
1986/87 Sportul Studențesc Romania 19 1
1987/88 Sportul Studențesc Romania 23 1
1988/89 Sportul Studențesc Romania 21 3
1989/90 K. Beerschot V.A.C. Belgium 2 0

Notes

  1. ^ Including one appearance and one goal for Romania's Olympic team.[1][2]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Gino Iorgulescu". European Football. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  2. ^ Gino Iorgulescu at National-Football-Teams.com

External links



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