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The 2024–25 season will be the 77th season in the history of FCSB, and the club's 77th consecutive season in Liga I.In addition to the domestic league, the team is scheduled to participate in the Cupa României, the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Europa League.
Football club FCSB Full name SC Fotbal Club FCSB SA Nickname(s) Roș-albaștrii (The Red and Blues) Short name FCSB Founded 7 June 1947 ; 77 years ago (1947-06-07) as ASA București Ground Arena Națională Capacity 55,634 Owner George Becali President Valeriu Argăseală Head coach Elias Charalambous League Liga I 2023–24 Liga I, 1st of 16 (champions) Website fcsb.ro Home colours Away ...
FCSB: Dinamo Tbilisi: 1–1 44,225 8 August 2013 UEFA Europa League: Astra Giurgiu: Trenčín: 2–2 1,440 21 August 2013 UEFA Champions League: FCSB: Legia Warsaw: 1–1 52,303 1 October 2013 Chelsea: 0–4: 36,713 22 October 2013 Basel: 1–1 23,899 26 November 2013 Schalke 04: 0–0 50,633 23 July 2014 UEFA Champions League: FCSB ...
(overall in Romania) Stadium Capacity Town/City Team League UEFA Category 4 (Elite) Stadiums 1 Arena Națională: 55,634 Bucharest: Romania national football team: FCSB: Romanian SuperLiga: 4 Steaua Stadium: 31,254 Bucharest: Steaua București: Romanian Liga II: 5 Ion Oblemenco Stadium: 30,983 Craiova: Universitatea Craiova: Romanian SuperLiga ...
The two most successful clubs in Romania, [note 1] they won a combined 95 honours: a record 61 for Steaua/FCSB (including two international trophies) and 34 for Dinamo București. It is the equivalent of Spain's El Clásico and France's Le Classique .
FCSB thereafter qualified for the following Champions League seasons after a ten-year break, and in 2007–08 FCSB again reached the group stage of the Champions League. Nationally, the club won two titles—in 2004–05 and 2005–06 —and the Supercupa României in 2006, the latter being the club's 50th trophy in its 59-year history.
This page was last edited on 17 November 2024, at 01:50 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Dinamo București was the first Romanian team to qualify into the European Champions Cup in the 1956–57 season of the competition and Universitatea Craiova was the last team from Romania to qualify in the 1991–92 season, before the competition changed its name to the UEFA Champions League. Romanian teams qualified to 35 of the 37 seasons of ...